Wednesday, January 31, 2018

Missing out on Shoehi Ohtani could be the best thing that happens to the Yankees in 2018

In 2018, the Los Angeles California Angels of Anaheim may rewrite the future of baseball. Their planned six-man rotation may break the mold for pitching staffs everywhere and rejigger the foundations of the game. Historians may someday look back on 2018 as the year when baseball finally stepped up and saved future generations of starting pitchers by scrapping the cruel, outmoded, elbow-tearing, shoulder-blowing, gonad-tweaking, gassy, pockmarked, spirit-befouling five-man rotation.

Or not.


The fact is, the Angels will try the six-man not out of long-term philosophy but because Shoehi Ohtani - the Japanese Babe Ruth - wants to hit and pitch, and nobody thinks he'll hold up by throwing every fifth day (especially since Japanese pitchers usually go once a week.) Ohtani - baseball's best prospect, say the rankers and listers - is reshaping the Angels' infrastructure in ways no rookie heretofore has done. Yesterday, their former ace, Garrett Richards, told a radio barker that he supports the six-man plan, even though it will affect his routines. 

In other words, it will all work out... hopefully.

And maybe it will. As everyone knows, nothing succeeds like success! Iif Ohtani proves to be the hitter and pitcher that he's reputed to be, all cogs will turn greasily in the Angels' machinery, and everyone will take home a door prize. But the more the Angels balance their future on a two-way rookie, the more Yankee fans should be relieved that Ohtani chose to play closer to home.

Okay, I know what you're thinking: I'm still crabbing over the fact that Ohtani snubbed the Yankees. There's a kernel of truth to that. I spent most of 2017 dreaming of the new Babe Ruth in our lineup. But we can't blame Ohtani for his choice, and he did an honorable thing by announcing his desires early. It didn't enhance his bargaining position to rule out the Yankees, Cubs, Mets and Redsocks. We can't gripe. And one last thing: Consider the ramifications if Ohtani had chosen the Yankees.

1. Giancarlo Stanton would probably be an Angel, Dodger, Met or - gulp - maybe a Redsock. He was definitely leaving Miami.

2. We'd still have too many outfielders and, in fact, less flexibility, because Ohtani would be our full time DH. Clint Frazier would still be the odd-man out.

3. We'd now be the experimental forerunners of the six-man plan (which we might do anyway) but with less options.

4. We'd be far less likely to go with three rookies - Glyber Torres and Miguel Andujar being the others - in the lineup. Without Giancarlo's $25 million salary, we would almost assuredly sign a 3B - the Toddfather? - or a starter. 

It's no foregone conclusion that Ohtani will hit and pitch well in the majors. But in mellow LA, who gives a crap? Last year, the Angels went 81-81. The city's newspaper is facing a civil war. If we had signed Ohtani, we'd be balancing a pennant race on a rookie's unprecedented workload. Maybe he'll do what no player since Babe Ruth - or Deion Sanders - has done. But I wonder how far Ohtani can go. As the 2018 Yankees take shape, with possibly two rookies in our infield, we won't lack for excitement. 

Nothing against Ohtani, but thank God we didn't sign him. 

5 comments:

  1. The pace of history is far too slow. Let's speed it up.

    I think MLB should expand team active rosters by roughly 150 players. These extra players will all be pitchers. Each pitcher will start one and only one game per season.

    This will no doubt save tens of thousands of young arms from the hideous abuse of five- and six-inning outings every fifth, sixth, or fourteenth day.

    Of course, there may not be enough pitching to go around, but that's OK. The Yankees can sign Todd and a bunch of other likable scrapheapers to toss some innings.

    As for the payroll issue, I'll leave that up to the Players' Union and owners to work out. I'm sure they'll come up with something simple, fair, and amenable to all. As they always do.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Preach, Duque, preach!

    Ohtani would have been intriguing, but alarm bells started going off in my head—they often do, hence the tin-foil hat—when everybody had to hand in a written essay on why they liked him so much.

    The mysterious elbow troubles only cemented by belief that we dodged a bullet. We've been doing a lot of that this postseason—let's hope it continues.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Meanwhile, a big Times piece on the continuing controversy over how the World Cup ended up in Qatar for 2022 completed a January in which Soccer absolutely pasted the Yankees, 15-1.

    In other words, the New York Soccer Times ran a major soccer piece on an average of almost once every two days, with all sorts of wire service paragraphs on various European games thrown in as well.

    Really, they ought to just become a soccer periodical.

    ReplyDelete
  4. It's said that Tanaka is way better on 6 days as well. And wasn't it suggested last year that CC should be on one as as well? I wouldn't mind a 6 man rotation if it keeps the pitchers sharp enough to be one ERA point lower than their normal.

    ReplyDelete

  5. I really want the world to know about this great man who brought back happiness into my life again after my husband left me and the kids 3 years ago for another women online when i contacted Dr Believe he cast a love spell for me within 48 hours my ex husband start calling me and begging for forgiveness for everything that have happened between us. I was so happy to have my family back together with love again here is the email of Dr Believe via believelovespelltemple@gmail.com a man with the great powers you can also call him or add him on Whats-app: +2348156148821
    God bless you
    I am very grateful for your help in my marriage.


    ReplyDelete

Members of the blog can comment. To receive an e-mailed invitation, write to johnandsuzyn@gmail.com. And check spam if it doesn't show up. (Google account required.)

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.