Sunday, February 4, 2018

What to do with Cashman's last $12 million

Conventional wisdom says "Cooperstown" Cashman has about $22 mill to blow between now and October, and remain under the luxury tax (salary cap) threshold. He'll need $10 mill for mid-season trades and waiver wire geezers, which leaves us with $12 mill to spend this winter... which is, like... now!

So... what does he do?

Buy a big-ticket vet for $12 mill? Or two for $6 mill, etc? What mathematical equation should Cash employ for that last chunk of mad money?

Generally, we don't speculate on trades. Waste of time. You can't predict baseball, and you can't predict Cashman. Last winter, nobody saw the Yankees signing Matt Holliday until the Yankees signed Matt Holliday. These rumors about Yu Darvish? Ridiculous. So let's not try to name names. Here is how I wish the money could be spent. (Note: These are "in-a-perfect-world" scenarios; it's tougher than it looks.) 

$4 million on a LH bullpen specialist. It sure would be nice to enter the season with a solid lefty, rather than hold LOOGY tryouts all summer, only to realize that Chasen Shreve can't cut it. 

$4 million on a LH-hitting corner infielder. He'd play 1B and 3B, maybe with some pop. Lately, we've signed two glove-only infielders. It'd be nice to find a Chris Carter, just in case Doug Bird turns out to be the player who never plays. Everyone wants Miguel Andujar to play 3B, but what if he's a spring training washout and needs three more months in Scranton? An insurance policy, but not a mortgage.

$4 million on a reclamation spot starter. He could be the sixth starter, a Freddy Garcia type who is surviving on pure guile, and who sees the Yankees as a career capstone. Once upon a time, his name was Bartolo. Yes, we want a Bartolo, even if there is only one Bartolo. It'd be worth $4 million to take a wild chance on finding the next Bartolo.

Of course, the fear is that $12 mill buys Todd Frazier, who automatically takes over at 3B, despite being destined to hit .210. I hope Cashman realizes that signing Frazier would crush the still-evolving Yankee youth movement, bottling up player development throughout the system and leaving players like Andujar depressed and disillusioned. Once a guy gets tagged as a Brigadoon Refsnyder, he's done in the Yankee system. (And while it's true that Brigadoon didn't do much with Toronto late last summer, I still believe he'll cobble out a decent MLB career.)

Spread the money around, Cash. Diversify, and the Yankees will reap the best dividends. 

9 comments:

HoraceClarke66 said...

DOUG Bird?

Boy, there's a blast from the past! Went 8-1 for us in long relief and as a spot starter, 1980-81, before we traded him for Rick "Mr. Fitness" Reuschel. Also surrendered Munson's massive, game-winning home run in the 1978 playoffs. Always liked that guy.

Wise word, Duque, wise word.

Here on American football's big day, the Times is running...mostly football. Can't fault them for that.

Our tally remains: Soccer 18, Yankees 2 on the year, Soccer 3, Yankees 1 on the month...with the Winter Olympics up next. Oy.

Carl J. Weitz said...

Yeah, Yankees definitely need better LHR pitchers than Shreve and LeBlanc, so a few million there.

I think maybe 8-10 million could get both Neil Walker and Adam Lind to play every infield position. Walker would start if the 2 rookies didn't produce or were stashed the first few weeks at Scranton to push their arbitration eligibility back a year as well as injury insurance. Or any combination of the above.

Then we would be set.

Anonymous said...

ONE OF MY FAVORITE YANKEE MEMORIES IN MY LIFE, INCLUDED DOUG BIRD.

PLAYOFFS AGAINST K.C....

WE WERE TRAILING, IT WAS GETTING LATE...

THURMAN HIT WHAT I THOUGHT TO BE A LINER TO LEFT THAT MIGHT BE CAUGHT.

IT JUST KEPT GOING.

AS HE CROSSED HOME PLATE TO PUT US IN THE LEAD, I REMEMBER THE FEELING.

THE WORD "HERO" CROSSED MY MIND.

I NEVER FORGOT THE FEELING.

Anonymous said...

I AGREE WITH CARL WEITZ....

NEIL WALKER AT A RATE, WOULD MAKE A LOT OF SENSE FOR US.

HoraceClarke66 said...

Great moment, ALL-CAPS!

That game, too, the home plate ump had blown a call badly, calling Piniella out when he was safe (you can imagine how Sweet Lou took that).

Apparently, when Munson crossed the plate, he looked at the ump and said, "Saved your ass!"

He sure did.

Munson's playoff performances, 1976-78, and Reggis's, 1977-78, I think are surpassed only by Ruth and Gehrig, 1926-28, 1932.

HoraceClarke66 said...

I have to disagree on Neil Walker, I'm afraid.

We got Toe, we got Wade.

If our rookies somehow sink instead of swimming, let's Wade on our Toe!

Rufus T. Firefly said...

Munson was my favorite player. still remember the day he died. On the way to Saratoga.

Anonymous said...

HOSS.... I REMEMBER IN 2016 WATCHING SO MANY MET GAMES (BECAUSE I HATE THEM SO MUCH), NEIL WALKER KEPT HITTING HOMERS, GETTING PRETTY BIG HITS AND DRIVING ME NUTS.

SINCE THEN HE WAS INJURED, NEEDED SURGERY, AND HAS BEEN LOST FOR ABOUT A SEASON AND A QUARTER.

IF HE IS IN FULL HEALTH, I RATHER HAVE NEIL WALKER, BASICALLY AS A BACKUP, (REMEMBER, HE SWITCH HITS AND IS BETTER FROM THE LEFT SIDE), THAN TODD FRAZIER, WHO WILL START, AND WHO I STILL INSIST WE ARE GOING TO WIND UP WITH.

WALKER WOULD BE WAY CHEAPER, PROVIDE A LEFTY BAT, BUT PERHAPS MORE IMPORTANTLY, WOULD ENSURE BOTH KIDS (GLEYBER AND ANDUJAR), WIND UP PLAYING MOST OF THE SEASON.

IN MY MIND, SIGNING TODD FRAZIER PUTS AND END TO ANDUJAR, AND IT MAY BE FOR GOOD.

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