Yesterday,
the public tarring and banning of Alex Rodriguez formally began. It will peak this evening on 60 Minutes, when Anthony Bosch tells the free world about injecting A-Rod with steroids. This will be even uglier than the Golden Globes. Meanwhile, the Yankees just banked $25
million - actually more, without A-Rod's bonuses. Meanwhile, though, the 2014 team looks like a muddled mess of a meltdown.
The outfield
bulges at the seams with old and/or fragile players. The pitching staff is a
roll of the dice. (Seriously, are we supposed to think that Sabathia
and Kuroda, both a year older, are still aces? Are we supposed to expect Nova to
become a star? Be real) And the infield – well – the infield is Milwaukee on the Hudson.
At 1B,
Teixeira will always be a wrist tweak away from Lyle Overbay returning to New York. At second, Brian Roberts is the Yankees
version of the Make a Wish Foundation. At third, dear God, it’s anybody’s guess. (Remind
me again why we released David Adams?) At shortstop, God bless him, is the
Captain, battling the ravages of age and injury.
Between now and April Fool's Day, there will
be trades. Fear them, the way rabbits fear wolves. Our situation nearly demands that Brett Gardner must go, and last year, after
Robbie, he was our best position player. Not only that, but Gardner is a gamer. When you find one, you want to keep them. Finally, no GM ever trades
with the Yankees unless it’s highway robbery: Their fan bases hate the
Yankees too much. Yes, Cashman wrangled Nick Swisher a few years ago – but for
every gain (never forget that Wilson Betemit, whom we traded for Swish, had a
fine career), there is an Austin Jackson and Ian Kennedy out there, jabbing the needle into our sides.
A salary
dump deal? Sure! We can always get another Vernon Wells. Why not just keep the
one we had?
Right now,
there is a possible solution to the infield mess, and it’s time has come. Derek
Jeter should move to 3B, where the stress on his ankle will be far less. His
range at SS has diminished, with an infamous numbers-cruncher study a few years
ago claiming he covered the least ground of any SS in baseball. We have a good field-no hit SS in Brendan Ryan. But we have nobody to play 3B. It makes sense. The only
thing standing in the way of it is Jeter.
Playing 3B
extended Cal Ripken Jr.’s career by several years. It could do the same for
Jeter. In the past, to even suggesting such a move has been greeting as
blaspheme by the blogger trolls of the Yankiverse. But if this team looks like
it was built by committee, it has been: Hal and Hank, Cashman and Fred
Horowitz. We might as well add Jeter to the panel.
Everything could change. Maybe we'll sign Tanaka (though I'd watch Boston very carefully.) Right now, though, 2014 looks like a disaster. When you don’t have a farm system, there really isn’t
much you can do.
excuse my ignorance but isn't Jeets an employee? I don't get it. If your boss tells you to do something, you do it or you find another job. If Jeter finds himself on the lineup card playing 3B, he plays 3B. He's our Captain. A team leader should also be a team player. Just pencil him in at third. If he refuses to paly and pulls a "Posada", so be it. How he handles the transition will tell us something about the man.
ReplyDeleteI don't think Derek's an employee the way the clubhouse toilet-cleaner is. I think he's more of a contractor. Plus, one word from him and Yankee fans would descend on the Yankee Stadium office suites and rip the limbs off everything in a suit. I know I would. So the brass have to be careful.
ReplyDeleteel duque--I will see you and raise you. If Jeter really cared more about helping the team than feeding his already-bloated ego, he would retire.
ReplyDeleteThe so-called Captain could take a cue from a Yankee with true class and dignity, Joe DiMaggio, by simply adapting the Jolter's own retirement speech:
"I told you fellows last spring I thought this would be my last year. I only wish I could have had a better year. But even if I hit .350, this would have been the last year for me. I feel I have reached the stage where I can no longer produce for my ball club, my manager, my teammates, and my fans the sort of baseball their loyalty to me deserves. I've played my last game of ball."
Another reason for Jeter to retire: for all his faults, Eduardo Nunez would be a more productive third baseman, offensively and defensively, than the decrepit Jeter, and not by a small margin.
ReplyDeleteJeter's swollen ego--abetted by the Yankees brass's night sweats about his "intangible" commercial value--has become a millstone on this already-creaky franchise.
OK Eduardo. We get it, you want to play.
DeleteMy God, while I don't wholeheartedly agree with Anonymous, I think he has a point. It takes courage and grace to know when you're done, and Jeter might well be done.
ReplyDeleteNow watch, he'll come back this year, in the Golden Glove, and hit .310.
win the Golden Glove, that is
ReplyDeleteEduardo Nuñez is one I of the worst players the yankees have pampered he just plain out suck I've seen many through out the years and he is top 5 worst. stop waiting on this guy if he were any good teams would be all after the yanks not even mention one trade assets are available
ReplyDeleteWilson Betemit had a fine career? That's a joke, right?
ReplyDelete