Wednesday, September 20, 2023

Closing the book on Clarke.

 

It would be possible to say that Clarke Schmidt has shown signs—well, more accurately, occasional inklings—of developing into a good, middle-of-the-rotation starter in 2023...save for the fact that he turns 28 this winter.

Clarke almost got out of last night with what passes for a decent performance by a major-league—or at least, Yankees—starter these days, allowing two runs (only one earned) in five innings.

But not quite. With two out, nobody on, and an 0-2 count on Yankees nemesis George Springer, Schmidt threw a borderline pitch that the ump called a ball. Clarke was halfway to the dugout by that time, and it was clear he was not happy. Three pitches later, Springer was on first with a walk. Two pitches after that, and Bo Bichette, another of the BJs merry underachievers, had put the ball in the seats, and that concluded your YES entertainment for the evening.

Hey, it would be forgivable if Schmidt—who looks a little like a cross between an extra on Gomer Pyle and the Star Trek crew member who gets eaten first on the new planet (didn't those guys ever do some surveillance?)—were a mere 21-year-old stripling, his emotions raw.

But he ain't. Instead, it's clear that Clarke has developed neither maturity nor endurance, nor much of a fastball, at that age when it's almost time for major-league players to start on the downhill schneid.

Schmidt was a typically weird, Cashman pick to begin with—in fact, the Yankees' FIRST pick in the 2017 draft. Sure, he'd been a starter with a leading college program, at South Carolina, but what he had done there was hardly overwhelming:  2-2, 4.81 in his freshman year; 9-5, 3.40 as a sophomore. 

He got off to a great start in his junior season, going 4-2, 1.34, in 9 starts...when his arm gave out and he had to be derailed for Tommy John surgery. Which for Brian Cashman was like waving catnip before a tabby.

By 2017, it had been TEN YEARS since Cashie had picked first another pitcher requiring TJ surgery—plus repair of a broken hip—the late, unlamented Andrew Brackman, who by this time had been out of organized ball for 4 years, without winning a single game in the majors.

But far be it for Brian Cashman to ever learn something from experience. Clarke was his for a mere $2.184 mill in bonus money, and Schmidt's long, slow travail through the minors was on.

Perhaps the most amazing thing about our Schmidtie is how FEW innings he's thrown. He still has more on the college level—229—than anywhere else. Over his whole minor-league career, he was 8-11 in 185 innings but, not being named Estevan Florial, he was brought up anyway, to see what he had.

This was a good decision, at least, but the answer was: not much.  

Clarke is now 9-9, 4.65 this season, and 14-15, 4.35 through the 221 1/3 innings he's pitched in the show. He gives absolutely no indication of ever being more than a serviceable middle reliever—not anything like what a No. 1 draft pick is supposed to be.

But don't expect this to deter The Brain. Schmidt will no be projected as our No. 2 or 3 starter next year, when we can expect that maybe, just maybe, he might pitch into the sixth inning. And even keep his cool on the playing field. And right now, no doubt, Cashman is combing hungrily through the lists of college students on the TJ list...









43 comments:

  1. He's okay and young. The Yankees will stick with him.

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  2. He's no Clark Kent, that's for sure.

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  3. "... like waving catnip before a tabby."

    We need to use that a lot. A LOT.

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  4. The guy is ok as a fifth starter. You just need to find the 2-3-4 starters. And who could forget the Killer B's.

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  5. JM, that was my original headline choice!

    And hey, even as a kid, I could never understand how Lois Lane could be that stupid.

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  6. Maybe so, Celerino—though he's already close to aging out. And that's what you get for a first-round pick?

    Schmidt is the sort of pitcher we used to mock on other teams. "Hey, look, the Mets signed Steve Trachsel! Yeah, that'll get 'em past the Braves!" "Hey, the Sox picked up El Guapo. Who runs that team?"

    Now, the joke is on us.

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  7. @ Hoss, I was thinking along the same lines a few days ago. That this guy is "already close to aging out". I don't think that our pitching coaches are going to get this guy to develop any further. He might be much better on another team that knows what it's doing. He's had something of a breakthrough year, but I don't see him ever taking the next step on the Yankees. It might be time to sell on this guy too, before he falls on his face and corrodes next year. Along with Gleyber Torres. This winter would be the time to do it.

    They're probably not winning next year. Time to make some moves this winter and shoot for 2025.

    And yes, I don't know what Cashman's problem is making crazy stupid draft selections. Always picking surgery candidates or rehabilitation jobs. This pick hasn't been a total bomb, but it looks like it's getting near time to cut the losses and get out of Dodge.

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  8. But,but the analytics says that he has some crazzzy spin on his curveball, and, and...

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  9. Austin Wells is batting cleanup.

    Spank me harder; I've been a very bad Commentariat memeber.

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  10. Hey, is the game on somewhere? Anywhere?

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  11. Better to be King for two innings then a Schmuck for a life time

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  12. JM,

    It's on Amazon, but I can get it on the mlb streaming site

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  13. Well pitched game and/or holy crap these Yankees cannot hit at all.

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  14. so much for that well pitched game, WinWar

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  15. Send joggie gleyber out with mikee.

    Oh, and give Ca$hole the rug treatment on the way out the door.

    This team is atrocious.

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  16. Walk walk walk tank tank tank tank tank tank.

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  17. The Master said earlier (I believe sarcastically) that Chapman was one of those low batting average hitters. His average was above all but two of the Yankee starters.

    Maybe he *wants* to be fired.

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  18. Going into the bottom of the 9th, a total thus far of 25 strikeouts, 8 walks...and 8 hits.

    Wow, what a thriller. Sure wish I had spent a bundle to be there. I could use a good evening's sleep.

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  19. Hoss, unfortunately, you'd have to pay A LOT to have a seat comfortable enough to sleep in.

    I am constantly recalling the ol' perfesser's line "Can't anybody here play this game?"

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  20. The Yankees are currently 2 games ahead of a team that is so bad they fired their GM during the season.


    And NOBODY else.

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  21. Now we're really tanking like a tank contender. Alas and alack, too much for too long.

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  22. This game is awful. AWFUL!

    I swear to god, I wish the season would just end tonight.

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  23. Yes they hired their GM, but their GM is still so much better than CashBrain.

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  24. Yes they FIRED* their GM. FIRED for fuck sake.

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  25. The clean up hitter goes yard!! Tank it my brother!!

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  26. Winny - did you want that picture I shot of you at the ballpark?

    You'd love it.

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  27. In the tankathon, the Yankees might end up 6-3 in the last nine. 3 in Toronto and 6 prego jars.

    We can only hope they slouch to the occasion and split with the prego's .

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  28. Glassman with a gift, then gives it right back.

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  29. Glassman on a 2-39 roll! Go, Mikee, go!

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  30. Yes AA, I'd love that photo. Both Bitty and LJB can give you my number.

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  31. HIT STRIKES HARDLY!! I snorked cola outta my nose!

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  32. The bullpen has become bullshit.

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  33. Winnie,

    I thought you usually snorked coke INTO your nose. I must have been doing it wrong back in the 70s.

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  34. Martian had TJ surgery?

    Maybe Ca$hole will make him a pitcher.

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  35. You can also blow coke up someone's butt if you're deeply in love. Don't ask me how I know. It was the early 80s.

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