Sunday, March 19, 2023

Another lousy day in Paradise, as the giant humongous of seaweed drifts ever closer

One of these days, that big floating Gargantua of seaweed - larger than New Jersey and twice as garlicky - will reach the gold-gated beachfronts of Florida, signifying the end of spring training, as we know it.

It will march ashore on the tide of a major Yankee trade - or at least a mini-deal assigned massive relevance by the YES echo chambers. Forgive my Chicken Little impersonation, but I believe an earthquake is imminent. By this time next week, the Yankees will have made decisions that shall affect not just the '23 season, but their long term health and welfare. 

The issues at hand:

1. The Florial Arrangement. Estevan Florial, that is. He'll either claim the fifth OF spot or disappear like the Babadookian ghosts of Bubba, Yangervis and Zolio. Right now, the Yankees are playing him every day. This spring, he's third the number of At-Bats. He's not exactly killing it: .182. Does he stay or does he go? And if the latter, what will they get in return? Probably some 18-year-old dirt leaguer who will be filed into the farm system like the Arc at the end of that first Indiana Jones movie. 

2. The Volpe Conundrum. SS Anthony Volpe has 37 ABs this spring, most on the Yankees - while his competition, Oswald Peraza (25 ABs) watches, along with a breathless coven of Gammonites. Yesterday, the NY Post reported on how Volpe's long, pesky lead off first-base rattled a Blue Jays pitcher into surrendering a double to Aaron Judge. Every sentence secretly screamed "JETER-JETER-JETER." Volpe has captured the fantasies of the Yankiverse. But is that a good thing? He's 21. And, realistically, how does he fit into this team? If they start him at SS, it demands a trade: IKF, Gleyber, Oswald, Oswaldo, Donaldson the Untradeable, (who is batting .200)... somebody. And if they send him to Scranton, the sighs of resignation will be louder than even Donaldson's boos. 

3. The Left Field Cryptid. Yesterday, Willie Calhoun caught a long fly and made a sharp throw, signs that his legendary glove of granite might have softened, and that perhaps he is a viable LF. Calhoun also doubled; he's hitting .367 in 30 ABs, fourth highest on the team. (The team leaders in ABs, in order: Volpe, Oswaldo Cabrera, Florial, Calhoun and Hicks the Untradeable.) Also yesterday, Rafael Ortega - playing CF - went 0-3. If Calhoun or Ortega makes the team, it likely means trading somebody.  I can't imagine what they'd get for Hicks, but it would fit in my shirt pocket.

4. The Spot Starter Mystery. As always, it's up for grabs. Like every team, the Yankees need pitching, pitching, pitching, and excuse me if Matt Krook doesn't look like the next Ramiro Mendoza,  the gold standard for emergency starters. After Gerrit Cole, here are the ERAs of our current rotation - (and we warn viewers that the following report contains incidences of violence): Nasty Nestor (13.50), Domingo G (8.71), Setback Sevy (10.64) and Clarke Schmidt (4.63.) It's too soon to run for the hills. But outings like this would kill the bullpen by May 15.

So, the continent of brooding seaweed drifts ever closer. Some scientists claim it was always there, that the planet is simply adjusting. We didn't notice it until last week. Soon, it will arrive. The landscape is about to change, just in time for Opening Day. 

8 comments:

AboveAverage said...

In his boldest move of the pre-season, Professor Cashmanheimer and his newly acquired team of baseball scientists have formed the JUST KINDA-NORTH EAST OF MANHATTAN PROJECT. Their first mission: to airdrop Hicks and Donaldson into the undulating mass of Florida-bound seaweed. We all know Josh’s and Hicksy’s efforts won’t have any impact, but it sure will be a blast watching YES’s deep sea/underwater coverage. Especially watching wetsuit wearing Michael Kay and Meredith Marakovits swimming around in Yes-Mo’

JM said...

At this point, Cashman could trade IKF for Bebe Rebozo. Gleyber for Wilbur, Mr. Ed's owner. Play Volpe and Peraza--wherever--and sit Donaldson. Put Waldo in left or right or third or short on any given day. Who the hell cares? Just get rid of the infield logjam and keep conducting LF tryouts into the season and see if anyone sticks. Or two anyones.

It's the indecision that's maddening. We can assume that several deals are in the works, and the Genius is weighing the possibilities. But you know what they say about "assume."

Right now, nothing is real. And nothing to get hung about.

AboveAverage said...

Daryl Strawberry - forever. . .

AboveAverage said...

Or Strawberry, Daryl - forever.

Hell, it’s still early and raining again here in NorCal.

My sump pump is in better shape than I am . . .

AboveAverage said...

More reps and less water retention, if you know what I mean . . .

BTR999 said...

I know you won’t believe this, but it seems that Kahnle suffered a setback. After his first throw session in rehab, he felt pain and stiffness in his arm and will be shut down. He’s thrown all of 13 innings over the last 3 seasons, so this should come as no surprise to anyone, except Cashman apparently. Ignorance and Arrogance are a dangerous combination.

The Hammer of God said...

Kahnle was just a financial signing where they wanted to throw away some money. If you look at it from that point of view, this whole damned debacle begins to make sense.

Hinkey Haines said...

BTR is right: it’s Ignorance & Arrogance now. Remember when it was Mystique & Aura? Those days are long gone…