Tuesday, July 23, 2024

Should the Yankees abandon pretense and simply bat Soto and Judge, numbers one and two?

Yesterday, as his BA dipped its toes into Lake Mendoza, Benjamin Kimball Rice looked - as rice is known to be - rather cooked. He laid off a few tough pitches, battled to a 3-2 count, then watched Canseco-like as a fastball bisected the plate. He didn't protest. He just marched to the dugout, to solitude.  And somewhere in the sky, Rice's numbers clicked down to an even .200.

Frankly, it's been unfair to Rice, now with 95 MLB at bats, having him hit leadoff for a stumbling team mired in its personal misery dome.  

On June 17, Rice was still learning the lusty secrets of Scranton, where he'd hit 3 HRs in 11 ABs, mostly playing catcher. The Yankee brain trust noticed that he was hot, pushed a few buttons and brought him up to play 1B, a position he'd barely begun to learn. You could say they had no choice. DJ LeMahieu was floundering, and they had nobody else. Rice handled it well. He hit three HRs in one game and belted what should have been the game-winner HR against Baltimore, which - in an alternate reality - is a future Yankee Classic. Shoulda been, anyway. 

We knew he couldn't be Judgian forever, and now the slump is here. His next AB could put Rice below .200, a symbolic event that will haunt him on the Jumbotron in every turn through the order.

I wonder...  why are the Yankees even bothering with a traditional leadoff man, perched in front of Juan Soto and Aaron Judge? Right now, nobody else on the team shows a pulse. (Maybe Austin Wells, but he's no leadoff hitter.) Last week, Luis Severino made headlines by seeming to mock his old team, saying they only had two hitters in the lineup. Sevy wasn't ripping us. He was simply telling the truth. 

Right now, the bottom of the Yankee batting order is a shit show train wreck in a dumpster fire clown car. If anyone gets a hit, it only matters because it means the lineup is circling closer to Soto and Judge. Aaron Boone might as well bat them #1 and #2. Why lose a close game with a .200 hitter at the plate while Soto and Judge wait on deck?  

Of course, Giancarlo Stanton should return soon, maybe tonight, but I have to wonder: If the guy can't run, how much can he contribute? He's far more likely to hit a double play ball than a double. 

Yesterday, we scored nine runs. When the Yankees are hot, they certainly can pour it on. Not complaining - when the bullpen is as shaky as ours is - an eight-run lead might just be what it takes. 

But no matter what the line score says, Sevy put it quite succinctly: The Yankees have two hitters. They might as well get the most they can from Soto and Judge. They have nothing else. 

12 comments:

BTR999 said...

I put forth that proposition weeks ago. Apparently judge and Soto do not favor it, and the wimpy Boone exerts no authority.

Rice is 4-44 with 21 strikeouts since his 3 hr game and needs to be taken out of the lead-off spot immediately. We need a first basement and I don’t mean J.D. Davis. Cashman needs to pull of a deal pronto or promote T.J. Rumfield (.287 BA, .798 OPS) from
SWB.

This roster has more holes than Swiss cheese, and it’s all cashman. That he’s still endorsed by ownership tells you all you need to know about this franchise.

BTR999 said...

James Paxton, anyone?

8-2 with a 4.43 ERA, has been DFA’d by the Dodgers.

Wouldn’t be the worst move, and more to ownership’s liking, it wouldn’t break the bank.

Pocono Steve said...

The lineup is so effed up, that I've wondered if the Yankees couldn't bat--go ahead and laugh (I do)--STANTON first. Sure, he's no traditional leadoff hitter, but at least he'd have protection from Soto, and, given that he's likely to begin his return by swinging only at pitches well outside of the strike zone for weeks, he would more likely be given pitches to hit.

I know--nuts, but it's one of the signs of the times.

13bit said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
13bit said...

The batting order does not matter. Traditional player stats do not matter. In-game moves do not matter. And "clutch" certainly is not a thing, nor is baseball IQ.

The only thing that matters is Brian. Brian knows all. Calls all the shots - via his platoon of pimply-faces pubey proles who sit in the basement with their computers - and Boone is his meat puppet.

Brian owns this whole organization, top to bottom, and everything that happens comes under his purview. If they were to somehow win it all again one of these years - and they won't - I'd be the first to acknowledge it and say, "Sure, the moron got lucky."

But that won't happen. Brian "If I only had a brain" Cashman simply does not know baseball. And even though we all know that, hey, you can't predict baseball, Suzyn, I can predict t this: Brian is a forever loser.

TheWinWarblist said...

I am becoming more and more angry. I know you love me when I'm angry.

Fuck CashBrain.

AboveAverage said...

“Why do we lose, Gleyber?

So we can learn to win, Sir?

No No No No No

Why do WE lose, Gleyber?

Because of Mr Hal, Mr Cash and Mr Boone, Sir?

PRECISELY!”

Carl J. Weitz said...

There's a good reason why the Yankees hit 5 HRs yesterday, including DJL's first this year.

I'll have to check my astrological charts, but I believe the moon was in the seventh house and Jupiter aligned with Mars. Unfortunately, the planets have transited from those positions, so don't expect another offensive outburst like that until a more fortunate setup occurs.

JM said...

I was pleasantly surprised by DJ's home run. I don't know if it means anything or if he starts to hit again, even gradually, but it was good to see. Even if it was first row.

Duque, you point out, like many have, that Stanton can't run. Before he got hurt, he was on his way to a great season. His BA was climbing, he was hitting almost .300 with RiSP, he had 20-something home runs. For a guy who can't run, he did an awful lot of damage. If we could find a couple more guys who can't run like him, I'd take them in a heartbeat.

Along with DJ, also nice to see Volpe hit. And Oswaldo had a nice, timely double. When the team outside of Soto and Judge get even a modicum of hits, we score like the dickens.

And let's not forget: the key to the fantastic opening run we had until mid-June was starting pitching. Yesterday, we got some. The game is fun when that happens, the pressure is off. (The bullpen was otherworldly during that stretch run, also. Can we get rid of Ferguson now? Maybe Cousins?)

Yesterday was just proof that baseball is, indeed, a team sport. Two guys are not a team. Giving up a pile of runs in the first few innings is a very weak link. But when these knuckleheads fire on even four or five cylinders, they can win. A lot.

Now they just have to do it.

ranger_lp said...

If you don't have a good starting pitcher every day, you lose more than win...and that's what's been happening. And one can only hope that some of our players have ended their prolonged slumps...

TheWinWarblist said...

Oh, don't get too excited about DJ's HR. It only managed to go 368 feet. That's not going to cut it.

BTR999 said...

Just 4 laffs, check out tonight’s lineup.