This is what we got yesterday.
Two amazing wins.
One amazing comeback, and one amazing start from an overly hyped phenom.
There is hope.
Now we need the vaccine.
This is what we got yesterday.
Two amazing wins.
One amazing comeback, and one amazing start from an overly hyped phenom.
There is hope.
Now we need the vaccine.
He strained something. Tightness in both legs, they say. Huh, I say. The team says Hicks won't miss much time. Huh, I say. We've heard that before...
What drama. What resurrection. Gary Sanchez's heroic, bases-loaded blast in Game Two followed his epic earlier failure, which ignited dark cynicism across the usually hopeful Yankee Radio Network, driven by Jeep. "I just don't get it," grumbled Suzyn, bitterly, after Gary in Game One hit a first-pitch pop fly to left, failing to move the runner to third in a critical situation. Even The Master chimed in darkly, lamenting the lack of discipline - or diligence - or something even worse. This was quickly forgotten after Gio Urshela singled in the winning run. And several hours later, in the nightcap, our two bellwethers of the booth expressed jubilation over Gary's grand slam, both suggesting his season from Hell is about to change. Suzyn, who adopts every Yankee as a biological son, noted giddily that the first guy to greet Gary was Eric Kratz, whom he replaced. A happy family, that's all she wants. And no mother can be happy unless all her children are safe.
And then there was Deivi Garcia who - (yes, I'll say it) - looked every bit like "Little Pedro," as the Gammonites love to suggest. Of course, they said the same of Luis Severino and Manny Banuelos. Little Deivi ripped through the first nine Mets so quickly that his name couldn't even trend on Twitter. He just threw strikes. And for the first time, this godforsaken mini-season might work to our advantage: It's perfect for a young pitcher like Garcia, who would normally face an innings limit by mid-September. Even if he goes the rest of the season - which is unlikely, frankly - he'll have a hard time racking up more than 50 MLB innings. At the worst, he looks like a bullpen asset, leading to Britton and/or the ever-morphing El Chapo.
So, today, we face Scylla and Charybdis - the trade deadline and the Tampa Rays, in that order. Long ago, I gave up predicting Cooperstown Cashman's deals. He never follows the rumors. But I couldn't help but notice this weekend that Tampa - the best run organization in baseball - dealt 32-year-old Jose Martinez to the Cubs for young prospects, even in a pennant slog. The Rays never stop rebuilding. They always look to trade a player with a past for a player with a future. The Yankees would be smart to do the same. How many more salary dumps do we need?
Every day, Boston jettisons another oldster. Yesterday, it was Mitch Moreland. Today, Jackie Bradely Jr. will be gone by dinner time. Next year, they will rebound. Let's just hope Cash doesn't do something incredibly stupid. (Yesterday's effort probably made it impossible for him to trade Garcia, but Clarke Schmidt is still out there.) It's one thing to watch Tampa cruise past us, but I'd hate to see Boston win another ring before we even make it a world series.
Hey, was yesterday the fulcrum point of 2020? Dare we believe?
As Yankee backup catcher Eric Kratz solemnly marched to the plate, the vaunted YES team of Michael Kay, David Cone and Paul O'Neill pondered whether the Yankees should pinch hit for him... and bring in Gary Sanchez.
Kay seemed particularly adamant that Sanchez - the official starting catcher of the New York Yankees - should get a shot. After all, the 2020 season seemed to be balancing on a pebble, and Sanchez was the undisputed better hitter, right? Why not use the better hitter? Neither Cone nor O'Neill disagreed, though both seemed strangely muted.
I believe they were hearing fans across the vast Yankiverse collectively shrieking at their TVs: NO, NO, NO, NOOOOO SANCHEZ!
You can't predict baseball, Suzyn, but here's one, anyway: Had the Yankees pinch-hit Sanchez, he would have fanned for the 38th time this season, leaving Frazier to likely die on third. Maybe we would have won later. Maybe not. But Sanchez ranks 14th in the AL for strikeouts, despite coming to the plate far fewer times than any of the leaders. The Yankees needed a ball put into play, and Sanchez was the least likely hitter on this team to do so.
Thus, the most important at bat of the season thus far was relegated to the 40-year-old Kratz, who was signed off the scrap heap last month.
Across the Yankiverse, and maybe in the dark pits of the Yankee brain trust, I believe a decision has been quietly made on our future catcher. And it's not Gary Sanchez.
The words of a terrified man.
Before I kick Sanchez harder, a few thoughts: He seems a fine teammate. I've seen him on the mound with his arm around a rattled pitcher, and the world stands still. And he was never going to meet the expectations raised by his incredible rookie season. He's played with injuries, which at times made him look like he wasn't hustling. I get it. And like Cashman, I want him to turn it around.
But I remember years ago, when the Yankees obtained John Mayberry, the former slugger, in the gruesome twilight of his career. He couldn't hit, and as the season went down the drain, I began rooting for him to strikeout, so the team could move on. If Mayberry homered, it re-set the clock on his demise, and he'd get another 100 at-bats. It was like having a good day in hospice: You'd celebrate, but why kid yourself?
I'm starting to get that feeling about Sanchez. And we won yesterday by keeping him on the bench.
The Yankees are on a non-covid, "normalized" version of a 19 game losing streak ( 2.7 x 7 ).
In any world with which I am familiar, fans would be so boisterous and angry that even the dull and mutant ownership of this franchise would be forced to respond.
Specifically, the question must be raised:
Have Cashman and Boone done a good enough job acquiring, developing and utilizing talent to make this a world class, competitive franchise? To win number 27 or 28?
Clearly, they have not.
Soon, we shall begin hearing excuses that a short season, and seven inning double headers, are the reason. (the Yankees have now lost more double headers in one week than they lost all of last season).
Cashman has skated for years, on the basis of finding scrap heap players like Urshela, Tauchman and Voit. He gets credit for "no brainers" like Gerrit Cole. and DJ LeMahieu.
But he is still trotting out underperforming relics like Sanchez, Hicks and more recently Gardy. Even Gleyber Torres was looking like a failure at shortstop, and it took away his hitting. The team is saddled with Stanton forever, and likely Judge will be the same. And they won't even think of dealing them.
Boone is doing nothing right. Tanking no chances. Trying no new approaches. And losing. Day after day after day.
We have no depth at first, short, third, center, catcher or on the mound. King is wrong. Schmidt is right. And yet, who pitches?
And Cashman has his trigger on sending away more untested young guys for old failures.
Cashman and Boone need to be replaced. Monday morning. First light.
I'll be the first to admit that I know far from everything there is to know about baseball. I was a decent athlete back in the day and a good football player, but I was never the first guy picked when choosing up sides for a sandlot baseball game.
That said, I did play organized sports for 12 years, all the way through college. I know something about being a good teammate and having your head in the game.
Gary Sánchez has neither.
In one of last night's games, Sánchez was at the plate when Wacha served up a wild pitch on Ball 3. Clint Frazier, standing on third, alertly broke for home.
And what did Sanchez do? Did he flash his the-catcher-is-the-game-runner leadership skills and face the plate and coach the runner as to whether he should slide or not? No, he didn't.
Watch for yourself: Sánchez looked at Frazier, looked to see where the ball ended up, apparently concluded that Frazier would score with no issues, and then .... he did nothing else.
He didn't help out his teammate by coaching him. He didn't stay for a moment to congratulate his teammate on scoring a run. Gary Sánchez concluded that no further effort was required on his part so he simply waddled up the first base line to earn his base on balls. Think about what someone like Brett Gardner or Didi Gregorius would have done in the same situation. They would have been excited for the run and for their teammate and would have helped him out to finish the play.
Look, I know this isn't the biggest on-field gaffe ever committed in the history of baseball (e.g., "Merkle's Boner"), but I do know that Sánchez could have gotten involved, could have kept his head in the game, could have offered encouragement and congratulations in the form of a hearty clap-clap-clap. As the video shows, he didn't do any of those things.
<Sarcasm>
He's not a great teammate but at least we've got his bat.
</Sarcasm>
UPDATE
One day later, same situation: Frazier is on third, the catcher is at bat, and a wild pitch is thrown. Only this time, watch how Kratz locates the ball and then assists the runner.
That's what a guy whose head is in the game does.
Admit it: Last night's best Yankee hope vanished around 7 p.m., when it stopped raining. At that point, with the tarp re-rolled and no push for a protest cancellation, the Death Star had no choice but to trot out another dead lineup for a dead journey in this increasingly dead season. We are head-down in the water, as Tampa disappears on the horizon, and the hot young, pool boy breaths of Toronto tickle our cold, dead butt sores. And I mean that, literally.
Last night, our third and fourth batters - the comedy team of Hicks and Sanchez - were both hitting below .200. The bottom five featured aging cast-offs - the singer-songwriters Mercer and Kratz - and former future stars - Andujar/Wade/Estrada. Then there is the bullpen - dear God, wasn't this supposed to be a strength? - waiting like the Babadook to pop out of the bushes and shank any lead that somehow came our way. Oh, the humanity!
The Yankees have now lost seven straight - nearly 12 percent of this mini-Cooper season. In an honest year, we would be facing the statistical equivalent of a 19-game losing streak - the kind of meltdown from which few teams escape. Normally, such a fiasco would provoke a human cry to throw in the towel and tank the season, to chase future prospects and high draft picks - you know, like Boston is doing. But we know that won't happen. Nope. The worst is yet to come.
In past seasons, the Yankees have often floundered in May, the painful second month, as their veteran inner tubes slowly adjusted to the league. Often, they would right the leaky ship by July-August, in time for the stretch. Consider the case of Chad Green, who last year was savaged so wickedly in May that he needed a month in Scranton to rework his psyche. Yesterday, Green gave up three towering homers along with a three-run lead. This week, he has no Scranton option. There is no International League. There is only the Mets, licking their chops for another go.
Last night, the YES propagandists cheered news that DJ LeMahieu and Kyle Higashioka will soon return from injuries. Excuse me if I fart. LeMahieu raises hope, but Higashioka is another nope... and all the positives added together are still crushed by the bad news: Aaron Judge will likely miss two weeks - returning with a handful of games left - and Gleyber Torres - our most critical cog - will miss three to six weeks. In other words, he's probably done.
Hey, did I mention that we have no closer? Well, we have no closer. Did anybody last night think Aroldis Chapman - after missing 10 days - would hold a one-run lead? When he walked the lead-off batter, the game was over. (Oh, and by the way, did you notice that the Mets have a base-stealing specialist, Billy Hamilton? With a 28-man roster, it's quite doable. But not for the Yankees, though. They need 15 pitchers - for a seven inning game.) El Chapo proved himself to be in withering, October walk-off form. We have him for two more years, at $16 million per. Did I mention that we have no closer? Well, we have no closer.
So, here we are:
In other words, we have learned nothing from the last 11 years.
Pray for rain.
(Seriously, how many humans have ever heard the word, " cachinnate ?")
Does John Sterling ever use it in game coverage? Does Suzyn?
Probably Mustang and El Duque know it.....that will make me cachinnate.
2. Maybe Brantly should hook up with Eric Kratz, our current backup, who is 4 for 11 on the season. Kratz has more doubles (2) than Sanchez, who has - drum roll, please - one... (the loneliest number that you ever know.) Gary is hitting .139 in 72 at-bats. He leads the team with 34 strikeouts, nine more than Luke Voit, who is second. Fun Fact: Gary also leads the team in Hit By Pitches, with three. (He not only can't catch wild pitches, he can't dodge them, either.)
3. Aaron Judge's apparent re-injury is by far the most distressing Yankee event thus far in 2020. (Until this, the first was the notion that Trump was going to throw out a ceremonial pitch.) Judge has gotten off to a great start. This was going to be his year, the season he cemented his legacy as the face of the Yankees. Instead, he now looks like Giancarlo II - a career "what-if...?" If this sounds harsh and unfeeling, well, I don't know how else to put it: The guy did interviews last week, saying he was ready and raring to go, that he didn't need to be on the IL. Then he returns for five innings and pulls up lame.
4. The last five losses exposed glaring weaknesses - most notably our LACK of depth (formerly the team's great strength.) Last year's "Next Man Up" elevation of Urshela, Tauchman, Maybin and Voit now looks like a lucky, one-shot deal. This year, neither Wade (.185) nor Estrada (.222) nor Ford (.163) have stepped up. The bottom of the lineup is Death Valley, and every day, Cashman patrols the scrap heaps for still-pulsing cadavers.
5. Almost every MLB trade rumor in captivity has Miguel Andujar going somewhere, usually for a rag-armed bullpen inner tube. Miggy's two hits Wednesday raised his average to - gulp - .160. Two years ago, when he chased DiMaggio, who could have expected his stock to now be so low, so horrible? In this fractured market, we might receive pork and beans. His Yankeeography is a slow-motion disaster.
6. When Aaron Boone mentions Michael King as a viable starting option this weekend, from where is he getting his information? The CDC? The FDA? Infowars? King's ERA is 6.59 - worse than JA Happ. In 13 innings pitched, he's given up 10 runs. If the Yankees blow this series, they could find themselves being tailgated by Toronto, trapped in a hole from which they cannot emerge. And they're turning to King? This is bad. This is real bad.
7. On the pitching staff, our most pleasant surprise - maybe the only one - is Jonathan Loaisiga. His ERA - 2.77 - is only behind Mean Chad Green, and the absent Zack Britton and Tommy Kahnle. But but but... in his second time around the order, Johnny Lasagna seems to lose a tick. He looks more like a closer than the starter we desperately need. Over his career, he's also been extremely fragile. How many innings should we pile on him? We might soon get an answer, and it won't be a pleasant surprise.
8. In comments to the Gammonites, Boone keeps ignoring Clarke Schmidt and Deivi Garcia as starter options for this weekend. The only conclusion? Neither must be pitching well at the alt-site in Scranton, or is something else in play? Are the Yankees protecting them in anticipation of a trade? (God help us.) Or, I wonder if hamstrings have been popping in Moosic, as they are in NYC? If a gonad tweaks in the forest, does anybody yelp?
9. The canceled games in the aftermath of Kenosha remind us of how fragile this dark season remains. Any trade must take into account the very real chance that there will be no World Series, or that one infection could wipe out our post-season. Meanwhile, a large segment of the U.S. population is being told the pandemic is over, and that fans should return to the bleachers. (Considering the proposed Lysol cure, maybe some fans should be called "bleachers?") Wash your hands, everybody. We're barely halfway through the 2020 season. The rocky roads lie ahead, and I don't mean ice cream.
Over 14 innings - the modern twin bill - I never once could shed the stark certainty that Atlanta would win. Scores didn't matter. You could feel it. The Yankees were destined to lose both games, and the only real question was whether we'd suffer a no-hitter.
Truth be told, I didn't think Mean Chad Green would blow game two. (You can't predict baseball, Ivanka.) I figured that honor of Goat would go to Aroldis Chapman, who hasn't pitched since the political oil cans started bellowing at us. Anyone who has followed El Chapo's ongoing Yankeeography knows that he will return in a storm surge of sweat, walks and wild pitches. In this deluge, he is capable of blowing any lead. Our next brutal, out-of-body loss - surely against the Mets this weekend - will feature a hideous mental snapshot of The Water Cannon bursting with bodily fluids, as the winning run crosses the plate. Mark these words: The worst is yet to come.
Today, the Yankees possess the sixth best record in the AL. If the playoffs began this weekend, they would face the White Sox in a best of three series in Chicago. That would mean Lucas Giolito in game one.
Fortunately, the Yankees are fading at such a rate that they will face the top-seeded As or miss the post-season altogether. See, everybody? I'm not all gloom and doom!
It's becoming almost impossible to imagine the 2020 Yankees winning anything substantial. The death of this team is its inability to score without the home run. We have a collection of free swingers that would make Becki Falwell flinch. They never modify their approach. They never go to the opposite field. They cannot bunt, probably because they never practice it. They do not move base runners. They cannot react to an over-shift - again, because they surely never practice it. And in the case of their star player, Aaron Judge, they represent a collection of athletes so tightly wound that they cannot stay on the field.
No horror show account of 2020 can be complete without mentioning Judge. The crowning achievement of yesterday's debacle - the worst Yankee day of 2020, thus far - was Judge's five-inning appearance, before tweaking a gonad while running to second base. The Yankees say he might go back on the IL. Why, why, why would we expect anything less?
Maybe I'm over-reacting. But right now, it wouldn't bother me if the Yankees, at this weekend's trade deadline, pulled a Mookie Betts. Some team with an actual shot might cough up a prospect or two for Judge, or - even better - take Giancarlo Stanton and his Ruthian contract off our hands. A week ago, such talk would be blaspheme. Now, why not? Does anyone feel that this team, this organization, is moving in the right direction? If we're going to flounder, let's do it with Cliff Frazier, Miguel Andujar, Clarke Schmidt and Deivi Garcia. Let's see what happens. If we fail, at least 2020 will end in September, rather than October.
Sooner the better. Calgon, where are you?
That's 35 innings of baseball, pretty much non-stop.
There's no way Gary, Hicks, and Gardy could play more than one or two games each. That would give a lot of guys some at-bats and also chances to impress in the field. Hell, I bet Frazier and Miggy could play three or four out of five if called on. Tauchman, too. Not to mention the great opportunities for our young pitchers to come up and shine, before being sent back down in favor of someone older and more mediocre.
If we start at 8:00 a.m., we should be finished by midnight. Maybe 1:00 or 2:00 on Sunday morning. And then everybody gets a nice rest until Tuesday, or whenever it's not raining and the other team hasn't tested positively for Covid.
Whaddya say, sports fans?
Ernie would be so proud.
Comrades, The Abyss is licking its chops.
Three double-headers in five days. Twenty-two games in 19 days. A dead reckoning in Tampa. The trade deadline.
Yep. The Abyss sees us, and it's rubbing its tummy.
Today, we pitch Gerrit Cole and, I believe, Masahiro Tanaka. Friday, Jordan Montgomery and Whomever. Saturday, it's either JA Happ or the cast of "This Is Us." Sunday, it's John D. and Katherine T. MacArthur, who are working to bring about a more just and verdant world. Monday, we press REPEAT.
Somewhere in between, we might promote Clarke Schmidt and/or Deivi Garcia from the Scranton refugee camp. Or we might sign Dopey Dildox from the Korean Beach League. Monday - the dreaded annual trade deadline - everything culminates with a showdown in Timbuktu - yes, Tampa - a team that recently mocked us in our own stadium. Yes, The Abyss has a knife and fork in hand, a napkin on its lap, and a Nicholas Sandmann smirk. A week from now, the fog will have lifted.
The next few days will either set us on course toward the playoffs, allowing us to keep our farm system intact. Or it will crush our pitching staff and push Cooperstown Cashman into trading for other teams' mistakes, binding our next few seasons into bloated contracts and aging spare tires. Every year, we go through the same tired exercise, looking for saviors that do not exist. We spend five years nurturing a young prospect, then trade him and assure ourselves that he was never any good.
This is surely the last site on the Internet to invoke Yankee hyperbole. There is no cooler set of heads in the Yankiverse, no more astute gathering of scientific minds, than those who meet here to empirically discuss our chances. Other sites get nervous. Not here. We maintain that steady hand on the till, never getting rattled, always assessing reality with cool, clear eyes.
That's why it's so critical to recognize that, if we flop this week, we are fucking dead - I mean dish-rag dead, I mean soiled and slurped, done and dug, fling the dirt on us, hit the the "Cremation" button and fling us into the ocean - and I'm talking about the 2020 decade, not this Tom Thumb of a season.
The next week, folks. Three doubleheaders and a trade deadline.
The Abyss awaits us.
Don't get me wrong: Mercer - having played nearly 900 games over a nine-year career - could be a valuable infield piece, in a Luis Sojo kinda way. He'll cover the right base and make the routine plays. Can he bunt over a runner? We sure can use such a guy. There might also be some contractual voodoo at work: Mercer, who was waived by the Tigers last week and elected free agency, is a pure transaction. Once Gleyber Torres and DJ LeMahieu return - (assuming that they will; remember the words of Al Franken: When you assume, you make an "ass " out of Uma Thurman) - Mercer can disappear, no strings attached, no hard feelings. Sometimes, that's a nice way to go.
But the Yankees have two young shortstops - Tyler Wade and Thairo Estrada - both with special talents. Wade can run. Estrada can hit HRs. Both have unexplored ceilings. Both need a chance. And here is the question: In the eyes of the Yankees, are neither better than Mercer?
Listen: Mercer is no slouch. Last year, in 74 games with Detroit, he hit .274 with 9 HRs. On the Yankees, that would have been a godsend. But last year was Mercer's best season since 2013, when he hit .285 for Pittsburgh. This year, he had appeared in three games, sentenced to back-up duty on a team going nowhere. So they waived him. Mercy killing.
Mercer hits RH. That pits him especially against Estrada. Considering the epidemic of injuries faced by the Yankees, they can use every warm body they can find. In that regard, Cashman was smart to sign Mercer.
Still, if we see him at SS, it will be hard to dispel the mounting dread that this year - as different as it has been - is turning out to be like all the others. And it will probably end that way, too.
And MLB, right on top of things, has seen fit to schedule them with a day off today. How did they know?
Making up missed games this year will be a walk in the park.
So it is good to be rested.
My concern is that some burned-out hurricane will work its way up the east coast and cause more postponements.
At least we didn't drop down to third place and, we think, no one got injured.
Okay, before we again wail about the injuries - the unfairness of the juju gods - imagine this lineup...
Tauchman lf (Our SB threat.)
Judge rf (No-brainer.)
Voit 1b (No-brainer II.)
Urshela 3b (Still hitting.)
Frazier/Ford dh (Can one get hot?)
Hicks/Gardy cf (Both on downward trajectory; fingers crossed?)
Sanchez c (Is he really better than Kratch?)
Wade ss (No other choice.)
Estrada 2b (Ditto.)
The key here is Tauchman at the top. WTF not? Why do we insist that Hicks will suddenly start hitting, as he did for half a season in 2017? And though he's on fire right now, Voit is simply too slow a base-runner to lead off. Let him protect Judge in the order. This season is rapidly aging: If a player has not started hitting by now, should we reasonably think he will?
And then there is Miguel Andujar. Insert sigh here. Frankly, until somebody pops another gonad - probably tomorrow - we have no seat on this bus for the Migster. He can't play 3B. He can't play LF. He isn't hitting enough to DH. With the trade deadline approaching, his value continues to plummet. At this point, he might bring us little more than bullpen lug nut. And if we deal him, he could easily become the Voit/Urshela/Tauchman story for another team, a star player for the next decade. Still, short of an injury to Urshela, he has almost no path to real playing time. What a loss.
Thus, we should fear the worst: Andujar and a prospect for some overpriced inner tube, a Sidney Ponson who will contribute 15 to 25 lackluster innings and then disappear by Thanksgiving. Does the name Sonny Gray strike a familiar note?
We are entering the most terrifying week of this miniature season: The trade deadline - our annual Pearl Harbor. Here is when Cooperstown Cashman traditionally trades our future for someone else's past. Even if it seems like a good deal at the time, it generally levels off. In this case, no matter who we obtain, we could fall in the playoffs' first round, because there is no truth in a three-game set. There is only summary judgment, swift and final.
One possible advantage: Right now, we should get back LeMahieu, Gleyber, Stanton and Paxton, or at least some of them. (You cannot trust what the Yankees say; they simply lie, and I seriously doubt Paxton will return.) Meanwhile, we need either Frazier, Ford, Hicks, Gardner or Sanchez to heat up. One or two might. That would make a huge difference.
But be afraid. Cashman is working the phones. Be very afraid.
Maybe more than a few.
At some point.....something might happen.
Wake me when it does.
Thanks.
Luke Voit is the AL MVP.
Congratulations to Clint Frazier for being voted the @MontefioreNYC Doing More Player of the Week. pic.twitter.com/8U9wPdxwTC
— YES Network (@YESNetwork) August 22, 2020
The Yankees have shown what they can do when all their pieces are on the board.
We have also recently experienced some clear mis-moves leading to a sweeping failure.
And it should by now be obvious that we can never keep all these pieces on the board.
Time to trap the AL East in a different way. An unsuspecting way.
Time to make dramatic moves using unknown and, more importantly, unexpected players.
Some might say: "out with the old, in with the new." I say; lay the damn trap.
This is the time of year ( Aug 31 trade deadline ) when we have to fear Cashman. He always exposes our Queen either short-term or long term. This year he needs to "shock and awe" by trading unforeseen players for unforeseen players. Lure the opposition into lethargy.
Get rid of Chapman; Hicks; Sanchez ;Paxton: Stanton; Happ and a few other of the "done and dusted. " Take youth and speed.
Attack with a new army. Entice the enemy into blurry overconfidence, then surround and pierce the King.
This is the moment for radical change.
If not, it is going to be a frustrating and awful year. Again.
Around the midway mark of every season, baseball traditionally takes a few days off for the all-star game, the home run derby, and serious, morning-to-night drinking.
This year, thanks to the doorknob-licking Mets - (in a pandemic, are strip clubs really worth it?) - the Death Star has a weekend to ponder several existential questions about life and society. Where the hell is Martin Buber when we need him? So, anyway, just wondering...
1. Why, why, WHY... WHY THE FUCK are we once again being carpet-bombed by injuries? Last winter, we changed trainers. We might as well have changed deodorants. For the last two years, we've seen rolling waves of players - like California blackouts - overwhelm the injured list. We thought it was a statistical aberration, the roll of cosmic dice, a practical joke played upon us by the juju gods. We thought it would end, you know, just go away one day, like a miracle, right?
Well, Aurec Goldfinger wouldn't think so. As he told Bond: Once is happenstance, twice coincidence and three times, enemy action. This, my friends, is enemy action. So, you ask... who is the enemy?
We are.
I suggest this Picketts' Charge of injuries stems from the types of players the Yankees love to collect: Vets who were once all-stars, who have big contracts, and who are pushing their bodies to achieve skill levels that no longer exist.
Some players extend their careers by redefining themselves, either by adding new pitches or adjusting their swings. And some players just try to throw harder or swing harder. And they hurt themselves.
Jason Giambi once the New York experience to rock star status. He had one great year as a Yankee and then began to wilt. At the end, he was a dead pull swinger barely capable of hitting his weight - nothing like the power-to-all-fields slugger he'd been eight years earlier. Nobody ever accused him of not trying. His body simply couldn't do what it once had done.
The Yankees keep collecting stars like Giambi. Their attempts to win every year are commendable. I hate franchises who purposely tank, who try to finish last, and who then congratulate themselves for rebuilding. But at some point, the Yankees must stop absorbing players in the twilight of their careers. You know their names: Stanton, Paxton, Chapman, Britton, etc., maybe Gardy, though he's a special case.
At some point, the Yankees must do what every other team does: Trade aging players for youth.
Frankly, I was dismayed last winter when they re-signed Aroldis Chapman. I don't oppose Hal Steinbrenner spending money. But wouldn't we be better off finding and developing a young closer? Isn't it a sure thing that, in two years, Chapman will be regularly failing?
Next winter, a perfect place to start changing our ways: Gary Sanchez.
2. Where, where, WHERE THE FUCK would we be without last year's scrap heap pickups: Luke Voit, Gio Urshela and Mike Tauchman?
Right now, the 2020 Yankees are their team. Our vaunted depth has dwindled down to Tyler Wade and Thairo Estrada - two guys who deserve a month to show their stuff. But will they get a shot? Or will the Yankees - see above - trade for a veteran?
Finding useful position players has been Cooperstown Cashman's greatest success. Unfortunately, this year, Yankee scouts cannot comb the minor leagues for spare parts. We need to find replacements on the taxi squad in Scranton. Do we have them?
3. Will these games even matter? The cancelled Mets series reminds us how fragile this season remains. As schools reopen across America, will the virus explode into a second wave? And if so, are the playoffs fundamentally doomed?
Obviously, we don't know the answers. But this we do know: The Yankees almost surely will qualify for the post season. They have too good a team to fall completely out of the race, which will probably allow a few sub-.500 teams to reach the post-season.
Thus, come October, the Yankees will face a best-of-three playoff round. Repeat after me: "Ugh." And without fans in the seats, aside from the chance to sleep in their own beds, their home field advantage will be almost nothing.
Anything can happen in a best-of-three. We can go in with baseball's best record and go out with 18 innings of hapless, free-swinging strikeouts and two bombed relievers. What happened in August won't matter. Best of three. Ugh.
If players like LeMahieu and Gleyber can return with enough time to hone their bats, these games - and maybe these injuries - don't matter.
Soon, we'll hit the point where a hamstring ends a player's season. We're not there yet, but it's coming. And if these injuries don't start disappearing, we're dead. We just don't know it yet. So... what was on the list for this weekend? Heavy, morning-to-night drinking? Sign me up.
We were supposed to recover from the Tampa horror by playing the Mets who, ordinarily, are at our level of incompetence.
Now, Covid has shut that down. Who went to the strip club and when?
So, instead of " getting right back on the horse " as they say, the Yankees get to stew for days and days over how Tampa has our number. Gleybar can ice his leg and remember his bad throws Others can remember striking out with the bases loaded. Thoughts become nightmares.
I think it is becoming clear why there is no help coming this year from our minor league system.:
How is anyone going to get " major league " ready hitting wiffle balls off a tee in a public park down by the river in Scranton? Seriously, it would be better if our " alternative site were in Japan somewhere.
I think MLB should be flexible and let the Yanks play the Cardinals They have about 20 games to catch up and we need the work.
Which reminds me: in a Covid year is there a required minimum number of games a team must play to qualify for the year end tournament? If a team is 4-1 in mid-September ( best winning % ), do they still get a slot in the playoffs?
Baseball has already passed the date by which I predicted they would have to fold their tents ( 8/15) , so I give them credit.
But with hot spots still flaring up, I continue to worry.
Okay - (sigh) - anybody out there? Can you hear me? If you can hear this, take a deep breath. Breathe in... breathe out. Ahh...
Now, a temperature check: Ninety-nine point two. Close enough. Finger in the Pulse Oximeter: Eighty eight. Hmm. Let's try later. Look, if you're reading this, let's assume you're alive. Okay? Breathe in... breathe out...
In this fart of a season, the Yanks have now played 26 games.
In a normal year, 26 games puts us into late May. The kids are in school, the trees are budding, and we haven't even bought the beer for Memorial Day. And in a normal year, brace yourself: Because this is when the Yankees always collapse.
Yes, we get humiliated. We are blown out in Fenway, or on the West Coast, or anywhere but Baltimore. This prompts everyone on this blog to proclaim the season over, the Yankees dead, and to scream that Gary Sanchez must be traded for a can of Alpo. (The Sanchez thing is a rather new tradition, but you get the point.)
But the truth is, in a normal year, the long grind ahead is our best buddy, because by mid-August, every team of over-achievers will be knuckle-dragging, and we'll be catching fire.
Normally, by late August, the Yankees have played 100 games, and the crises of mid-May are laughable, compared to the tough week ahead. By then, the Yankees would have dealt with a wave of injuries - yes, what we're seeing is normalcy - by promoting kids from Scranton or visiting the vast Triple A scrap heap. By now, the Yankees would be enjoying the fruits of a few "once-around-the-league" newcomers.
But it's not mid-May. It's late August, and - get this: Gio Urshela and Gleyber Torres lead the Yankees with 78 at-bats apiece. Seventy-eight. Yep, not one Yankee has yet come to the plate 100 times. How do you judge anybody on such a small sample size? (Miguel Andujar has three times been kicked back and forth, and he has - gulp - 21 at-bats.)
This year? Well, we're probably fucked. This week brought our annual collapse: Dropping three at home, while losing several stars to injuries. Wanna see kids enjoying their first taste of the bigs? Look to Baltimore or Tampa, or anywhere but the Bronx.
This year, the Yankees have no rookies, aside from rotating bullpen lug nuts who collectively make up the roster's last man. This year, the Yankees have fielded a veteran team, the kind that could shrug off a May crisis, knowing the long haul was in their favor. But the joke is on us. This year, there will be no 100th game in August. This year, the wheels won't necessarily fall off over-achieving teams.
From now on, every Yankee injury is a season-killer. And every slump guarantees an off-year.
But if we are mentally in late May, the best part of 2020 might still be coming.
If James Paxton is out, we could soon see Clarke Schmidt, the former first-round pick. And if Schmidt isn't throwing well in Scranton, we might glimpse Deivi Garcia, the new next-Pedro. Will they succeed? Fuck if I know. But Tampa just gave us an old-fashioned whupping, and we never even heard of half their pitchers. Maybe it's time for a little less Ottavino and a little more Schmidt.
If Gleyber goes down - God forbid - we might see Kyle Holder, reputed for years to be the best fielding SS in our system, and one of the finest in the minors. Could he go a month before pitchers find his flaws? Fuck if I know. But remember: this year, once-around-the-league goes a lonnnng way.
If - no, when - Aaron Hicks tweaks something, could we see Estevan Florial, the former phenom, before he is dealt for a 30-something salary dump? Could he be a breath of fresh air? Fuck if I know. But it would be fun to see.
After winning, watching rookies has always been the best part of fandom. Maybe, just maybe, this week's collapse will bring some youngsters our way. Because only they can save us from The Abyss.