Saturday, October 10, 2020

Sometimes you just have to tip your cap and call those sidemouthed, krill-swallowing, bat-clawed aquatic freaks your daddy.

By HoraceClarke66

 

As many here already know, I despise the Tampa Bay Rays’ style of play. I think their endless succession of anonymous, interchangeable pitchers and even position players will ultimately be the end of the game as we know and love it, removing as it does all the individualism from baseball.

 

But at least the Rays know what they are. That is, a franchise focused on maximizing profits while minimizing payroll. They do this very, very well, and they will no doubt go on doing it until they wear the good people of Tampa and St. Petersburg down to the point where they will build them a sparkling new, multi-billion-dollar stadium, replete with luxury suites.

 

Or until somebody else does. Las Vegas Rays, anybody?

 

Your New York Yankees, by contrast, have no good idea of what they are. Is the team seeking to win it all, every year, as it always claims? Or just to contend enough to keep the big bucks flowing?

 

Does Hal Steinbrenner think of himself as his father’s son? An international soccer mogul?  What?

 

Whatever the case, once again his Yankees—our Yankees—have fallen short of even reaching the World Series. This is not a surprise. What eases the sting of this defeat at least a little is the fact that all of us know they were just as likely to lose to the Cheatros in the ALCS. There was only a ghost of a chance that they would beat a team as good as the Dodgers in the World Series.

 

This year marks the 8th straight season in which the Yankees played in the postseason without winning the Series, all under the guidance of Brian Cashman. The previous franchise record of 7 straight playoff seasons with no ring was set under…Brian Cashman.

 

We can bitch about this or that player, or this or that move by Ma Boone. But the core problem is depressingly familiar: Brian Cashman has failed to provide the team with enough pitching. 

 

It’s always the same problem. In 1998, Cashman inherited the deepest pitching staff in baseball. At first he enhanced that staff, making a bold trade for Roger Clemens in 1999, and signing Mike Mussina for the 2001 season.

 

But even by 2001, he’d begun to seriously mismanage or neglect the most important part of a baseball team. Letting Jeff Nelson go to Seattle probably cost NYY the 2001 World Series. Letting over 700 career wins, in the form of Pettitte, Clemens, and Wells, walk off the team with nothing in return after 2003, cost the Bombers the 2004 pennant, and maybe several flags after that. 

 

And on and on and on. Even in their last championship year, the Yanks were reduced to throwing their starters on short rest in the World Series, as Cashman had passed on signing Pedro Martinez for peanuts to prop up the staff. 

 

At first, this incompetence was evident mostly in the postseason. But it has slowly but surely eroded the team’s overall standing even in the regular season.

 

Since 2009, the Yankees have won just three division titles. Their average number of wins—disregarding this season—has dropped from 100 a year, 1996-2001, to 92 a year, 2010-2019.

 

This slow decline is likely to continue under Mr. Cashman. Why would it not?

 

Oh, don’t worry. He’s not going anywhere soon. 2020 provided the perfect year for him. He can claim any number of excuses for not reaching the World Series—again. The whole crazy season, the whacky, nightly playoff set-up in San Diego.

 

He will point to how well Giancarlo Stanton did in the postseason, and how stoutly his big free-agent acquisition, Gerrit Cole, pitched. He’ll point out well his deals for LeMahieu and Voit and Gio have worked out, and didn’t Torres look terrific in the seven playoff games the Yankees managed?

 

He will tell us how next year this team is finally set it up to put it all together.

 

Don’t believe it. There will be less pitching than ever.


15 comments:

Publius said...

Non-availabilty of Sevy, Paxton, German and Kanhle is biggest story of Yanks 2020. They were a couple arms short, Hoss, as always.

Anonymous said...

HC66 Your disparagement of the Rays organization--all scattershot ad hominem impressionism and zero actual baseball critique--reeks of pettiness and sour grapes. All the Rays do is win--win during the regular season and win big games during the postseason, unlike the pitifully inept and mismanaged Yankees. They do this with the lowest payroll in baseball--that is a testament to their smarts and ingenuity, not a fault. I find their brand of baseball refreshing--innovative, strategically deft and creative, their lineup filled with dynamic young athletes instead of lumbering chess pieces of the Cashman preference. Your notion that the Yankees suffering only from a lack of pitching rather than a deeply diseased organizational incompetence is a self-serving myth that you concoct to rationalize your continued fealty and addiction to this inept corporate enterprise.

You post above isn't as bad as "you will be missed," but it's close.

celerino sanchez said...

What will it take to fire Cashman? Does he have to kill someone or worse? put up a Trump sign in his front yard? denounce BLM? Chapman is around for 2-3 years, Stanton until the world ends (according to AOC). 20+ years, billions of dollars and 1 WS win and what 2 appearances? I don't want hear about Voit and Urshela, lets talk about Jaret Wright, El;sbury, Pavano, Kei Igawa, Kevin Youklis, Jose Contreras, Kenny Rogers, do I need to continue. Get someone in here who has a different perspective, it can't get worse. Or has the "NEW" Yankee fan simply given up on winning championships and is happy with the playoff participation awards

Anonymous said...

Don't worry, we will get to spend the winter with endless stories of the hunt for Trevor B., the lost swing of Sanchez and his resurrection, Sevy's fantastic recovery from surgery, German will be back well rested and the need to keep the payroll low. The better game would be to reflect back on all the changes in the world since the Yanks last won.
What is the over and under in how many days it will take for Hal to say that win can win with a low payroll and must keep under the luxury tax threshold, so we can't re-sign the Batting Champ and Estrada/Ward can play a mean 2b?
Godot

ranger_lp said...

Can't blame a buzzer for Rolaids this time...

Cashman f'd up game 2 and the momentum shifted.

Pitching needs to be addressed...you can't have Rolaids out there for more than 16 pitches. Everybody can hit 99 MPH now. Yanks haven't had good draft choices for years since they have been regular season competitive and in the playoffs. Paxton, Tanaka and Happless should be gone. See what the young arms can do. German and maybe Severino (Sevy end season) will be back. Montgomery and Garcia shows promise. Get a pitcher for Sanchez in a deal. Don't resign Gartner. Hicks and Voit need surgery no doubt. Start there.

Publius said...

Agree with anon about the Rays. Hoss may not like it, but they play good, tough, smart baseball. They manage their resources well, and they are resilient. They're the Dodgers with less money.

Anonymous said...

I gotta agree with Hoss that the Rays style of baseball is soul-less and boring. But they do it well, no question. Incredibly, I find myself hoping that the Cheatstros will beat the Tampons in the ALCS. Then, hopefully, the Cheatstros will lose the WS in the most agonizing way imaginable.

The Hammer of God

Anonymous said...

Pitching was the main reason for the loss of this series, but also this lop-sided lineup. The Rays had five lefty hitters in their lineup vs 2 for us. I can't remember ever seeing any team going into a playoff game against a tough right handed pitcher with 7 right hand hitters in its lineup. As stupidly as Boone managed this series, the imbalance wasn't his fault.

Notice that the Rays only threw right handed pitchers in this last game. They had the former Cy Young winner sitting on the bench b/c he was a lefty. Notice that they pinch hit Brosseau for Choi. The right hand hitter (2 for 2 in the game) got the game winner against our lefty closer. It certainly was fitting for the Tampons that the guy whose head was the center of attention during that fracas turned out to the Yankees' undoing.

And Cashman doesn't believe that lefty-righty makes any difference in today's baseball. I guess Casey Stengel didn't know what the hell he was doing back then. I guess Kevin Long didn't know what the hell he was doing in this series. Cashman's stupidity makes me want to puke.

The Hammer of God

JM said...

All I can do this winter is wonder what the staff would have done if Severino, German, Kahnle, and even a healthy mediocre Paxton had been pitching this year. Those four would have knocked the worst of the bullpen off the roster.

If I get tired of that daydream, I can throw in a full healthy season for Judge and Stanton. And a catching team of Higgy and Kratz, without all the wasted at bats and passed balls of you know who.

Just fantasy, like Hoss's virtual season.

HoraceClarke66 said...

Publius, Hammer, I thought I WAS complimenting the Rays, by saying they know who they are, and play accordingly.

What I don't like is the style of baseball that so reduces the role of the pitcher. The pitcher is the hero of a baseball game, much as the quarterback is the hero of a football game.

The heroic role of the starter has been reduced for a long time, of course, but at least then you had the heroic closer. Now—you're moving more and more toward a series of interchangeable, anonymous pitchers throwing each throwing two innings or so.

This reinforces all of the worst trends in the game today.

With pitchers always going short, there is no reason to really learn how to PITCH. Just throw hard. Batters are thereby encouraged to just swing for the fences all the more. They won't succeed most of the time, but they have more of a chance than they would trying to put together three or four hits in a row against guys who are all throwing 99.

The beauty of baseball, the true uniqueness of the sport, is that it is an individual game within a team game.

You take away those elements—you make the players more and more interchangeable—you devalue more and more of the skills and erase more and more of the strategy—you make the game more and more just flamethrowers facing guys swinging from the heels, with an extreme shift in place so that no mere hits get through—and you kill its appeal.

Contrary to what the lords of MLB like to believe, baseball is NOT home run derby. The more it becomes so, the more it will be game you might as well play yourself on Xbox.

Anonymous said...

I couldn't agree with you more, Hoss. This last game was the ultimate glorified home run derby. Three homers in a 2-1 game. A whole bunch of hard throwing pitchers and a whole lot of swinging going on. Unfortunately, we swung and missed more than they did. It was boring, soul-less and tedious. As some others have said before, in future, I think I'll just look at the box scores the next day. And MLB wonders why fans are losing interest. Haha.

The Hammer of God

smurfy said...

I, too, think your last commentary should be framed, and hung in the GM's office.

However, I don't believe the Yanks ( and Cashman) should be blamed for mediocrity (seen from behind): the stacked drafting presents the problem for teams that try, but fail. And several years were devoted to buildinga minor league development process that would obviate the need to depend on past heroes. So, cut them a break, they have developed Sevvy and German and Montgomery and now Deivi.

And the Rays may be anonymous, but look at how famous the Cheatros have become, individually. I can only admire their game savvy: stolen bases on flame throwers that can't be bothered to throw to first? That's only practical wisdom, even if hero fixation is frustrated. Scmart.

Anonymous said...

The staggering incompetence of the Yankees' "brain trust" in two lines--benching one of the team's best players in a key series in favor of one of the team's WORST players based not on what they did all year but on what each did in the last week of the season. No other team in either league would be capable of perpetrating such a folly--not even the Mets.

Frazier's 2020 OBP/SLG/OPS/OPS+ slash line:

.394/.511/.905/149

Gardner's 2020 OBP/SLG/OPS/OPS+ slash line:

.354/.392/.747/108

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