In a wintery 10-day stretch of 2019, Brian Cashman tried a bold new strategy for elevating his pet science project, the New York Yankees.
On Feb. 15, he signed Luis Severino, the team's looming ace, to a four-year $40 million pact.
On Feb. 25, he secured Aaron Hicks, the apparent CF reincarnation of Bernie Williams, to seven years at $70 million.
Just like that - boom! - the Yankees had secured two future stars to cost-conscious deals, the kind of frugality adopted by small market powers, such as Tampa and Atlanta. Instead of capturing free agents on the open market, they'd sign their own rising stars to long-term deals. Cashman was a man with a plan!
And it quickly turned to shit.
Today - Outcome Day - let's give the juju gods an A-plus for literary irony, as Severino returns and Hicks disappears, (along, perhaps, with arguments to sign Anthony Volpe or Harrison Bader to long-term deals.)
Gone is Hicksy, and - honestly, how can we not feel a pang of regret? For nine years, we cheered the guy, through ups and downs, despite a continuous rain of injuries. This season, he gave off a lingering sense of being kept around only to justify Cashman's mistake - a hole from which he could not climb out of. Maybe he can resurrect his career somewhere else, though we all know the Hicksian continuum: Start cold, get hot, get hurt... repeat.
For the record, Hicks outdid catcher John Ryan Murphy, whom we traded to Minnesota, straight up. But in the end, we'd have probably been better off with Murphy, a serviceable backup catcher who retired in 2020, and who never carried a millstone contract. Over eight years, Murphy ended with a career .215 batting average and 18 HRs. (Hicks' numbers over nine: .230 with 110 HRs.)
As for Setback Sevy, we last saw him in the 2022 AL championship series - remember that one? when Houston swept us? He was coming off his final a regular season game, when he flirted with a no-hitter against Texas, only to be removed by Aaron Boone due to a pitch count. Our hopes were high. It was just Game II. Anything could happen. We needed a shut down starter. Sevy pitched into the sixth, giving up three runs. We lost, 3-2.
The wheels on the bus go round and round. Today is Outcome Day, when we see the results of Cashman's strategic plan, forged on a cold stretch of 2019.
Yep,
ReplyDeleteBrian tried the small market move and failed.
He also tried the over pay for free agents big market move and failed.
He also tried the trade for other teams top pitchers and failed.
He also tried to corner the international free agent market and failed.
He also tried the "build the farm" and mostly failed.
He also tried the...
Methinks a pattern I see...
It's entirely possible that the problem is not the method but the man making the decisions. :)
So I looked it up because someone here will inevitably be mistaken about Hicks and next moves:
ReplyDeleteNew York has seven days to trade Hicks or place him on waivers, and given his contract there is little chance he will be claimed. New York owes Hicks $7,620,968 for the remainder of this year’s $10.5 million salary plus salaries of $9.5 million in each of the next two seasons and a $1 million buyout of a 2026 team option.
True Doug True
ReplyDeleteSo absolutely True
Maybe we can trade Hicks to the Mets. I mean, they signed Sanchez and actually promoted him to the big club.
ReplyDeleteIn an interesting bit of trivia,
ReplyDeletethe Yanks are on the Peacock Network in MLB's insatiable appetite for streaming dollars and Judge is not playing.
HAHAHAHAHAH.
They deserve it.
This time Boone resting a guy after a great prior game is actually a good thing for real fans.
Judge getting thrown out at the plate. Then getting up a bit stiffly, it seemed. Not a good send. You'd think the coach would be more careful when Judge is running the bases. He gets hurt for any significant amount of time, any chance of playoffs goes down the toilet. You'd think they'd learned from the last injury, when they dodged a big ass bullet.
ReplyDeleteSo Baboone resting Judge today might be because he's stiff from yesterday. I hope not, but again, not good.
MLB continues to fuck up everything. Whoever heard of an 11:30 start? Next time, will they do a Midnight Mass playoff game on Halloween? Everyone can dress up. I'd go as Dracula, Prince of Darkness.
ReplyDeleteBoonie just got tossed…
ReplyDeleteThe 11:30 start is insane. It's more of MLB trying to find a comfortable place to put their games when football starts again.
ReplyDeleteI have Extra Innings and MLBTV and I still have to pay for today's game on Peacock, BS
ReplyDeleteThe 11:30 AM start was supposed to attract younger viewers…
ReplyDeleteNo one will claim Hicks during the waiver period, but afterwards a team can sign him for the pro-rated amount of the minimum MLB salary, $720k in 2023. The Yankees must pay the difference thanks to Cashman’s stupidity.
ReplyDeleteThis whole thing with Peacock, 11:30am start is just ridiculous The lords of BB would sell their own mothers for a few extra bucks.
Show them the green and they’ll bark like trained seals.
From twitter:
ReplyDeleteRiver Ave. Blues
@RiverAveBlues
·
1h
You have to subscribe to four different services to watch the next five Yankees games.
SUN - Peacock
MON - off-day
TUES - YES
WEDS - Amazon Prime Video
THURS - YES
FRI - Apple TV+
Yep, make games as difficult and expensive as possible to watch. What could possibly go wrong?
ReplyDelete@ Horace/NYK27..That's why everyone that loves sports, movies, premium channels such as HBO, etc. PPV and thousands of other stations in America and around the world should either subscribe to an IPTV service (about $12.00/month) or buy an IPTV box for a one time charge $300-350)and never pay another dime. Steinbrenner will never get another penny from me. I cut the cord 3 years ago and only wish that I'd done that even sooner.
ReplyDeletePay to watch the Yankees?
ReplyDeleteNonsense! Don’t be suckers!
Get a VPN and then stream from livetv.sx
I’ve been using it quite successfully this year. And it’s a crazy site: Baseball, hockey, NBA, cricket even.
Stop wasting your money guys.
BTW, livetv.sx is FREE
ReplyDeleteBarren Hicks was a very poor contract extension. He hit .248 with 27 Hrs, the same year Gardy hit 28. The ball was supped up, and lots of Punch and Judy Hitters were hitting homers. Any Yankee fan worth their salt, knows that Hicks was never a good player. Genius Cashman who I hear did loads of good. Sure, a large payroll and no, yes no World Series appearances. Well worth the 25 million Hal bestowed on The Genius.
ReplyDelete@ ranger_lp "The 11:30 AM start was supposed to attract younger viewers…"
ReplyDeleteWhen I was young, I usually was up real late on Saturday nights. In fact, wouldn't go to bed on Saturday night. Usually went to bed at 5 or 6 AM on Sunday mornings, didn't get up before 3 PM on Sunday afternoon.
Is it just me, or is the timing of the Hicks dfa job really strange? Why now? It should have been done YEARS ago. (Yeah, the long signing should've never happened, but just talking about the dfa right now.) What goes on inside the Yankee front office? I'd love to know why now.
ReplyDeleteIt's probably some crazy reason that no one would ever think of, unless you work in the Yankee front office where Alice In Wonderland is the official office work manual.