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Post by domeplease on Oct 26, 2022 16:59:19 GMT -5
Rizzo opting out because he knows if the Yankees don't sign Judge it's another wasted season.
Could Anthony Rizzo Be The Answer For The Guardians At First Base?
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Post by chiyankee on Oct 26, 2022 17:52:22 GMT -5
Rizzo opting out because he knows if the Yankees don't sign Judge it's another wasted season.
Could Anthony Rizzo Be The Answer For The Guardians At First Base? Does anyone really see Cleveland ponying up 17 to 20 million per year for Rizzo? I don't.
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Post by domeplease on Oct 27, 2022 13:15:30 GMT -5
The Biggest Questions Facing the Yankees This Offseason.
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Post by desousa on Oct 27, 2022 14:20:38 GMT -5
Could Anthony Rizzo Be The Answer For The Guardians At First Base? Does anyone really see Cleveland ponying up 17 to 20 million per year for Rizzo? I don't. I don't either. I don't see them paying any free agent that much money.
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Post by domeplease on Oct 27, 2022 14:24:58 GMT -5
Yankees beat writer predicts SF Giants will sign Judge, Turner, and Rizzo.
Yankees biggest threat to sign Aaron Judge appears hellbent on pursuit
This Yankees Free Agent Has Unfinished Business in New York
Aaron Judge isn't the only Yankees outfielder entering free agency this offseason.
There's another that doesn't feel fulfilled after a brief stretch in pinstripes.
Andrew Benintendi, a rental acquired ahead of the trade deadline this summer, told Greg Joyce of the New York Post that he's open to returning to the Yankees this offseason.
After an injury ended his season prematurely, holding him out for the postseason, Benintendi doesn't believe he was able to show Yankees fans what he's truly capable of.
"You get traded over and you want to help the team get far in the playoffs,” he said. “I started off slow. I don’t know, I just feel like I didn’t play my best baseball when I was here, healthy.”
There are no guarantees that Benintendi will be back, though. The veteran added that he will "listen to every team" this offseason.
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Post by domeplease on Oct 27, 2022 17:16:34 GMT -5
Yankees beat writer predicts SF Giants will sign Judge, Turner, and Rizzo.
Yankees biggest threat to sign Aaron Judge appears hellbent on pursuit
This Yankees Free Agent Has Unfinished Business in New York
Aaron Judge isn't the only Yankees outfielder entering free agency this offseason.
There's another that doesn't feel fulfilled after a brief stretch in pinstripes.
Andrew Benintendi, a rental acquired ahead of the trade deadline this summer, told Greg Joyce of the New York Post that he's open to returning to the Yankees this offseason.
After an injury ended his season prematurely, holding him out for the postseason, Benintendi doesn't believe he was able to show Yankees fans what he's truly capable of.
"You get traded over and you want to help the team get far in the playoffs,” he said. “I started off slow. I don’t know, I just feel like I didn’t play my best baseball when I was here, healthy.”
There are no guarantees that Benintendi will be back, though. The veteran added that he will "listen to every team" this offseason.
An interesting read...
New York Yankees reset: Spend big on Judge, don't rule out Ohtani
Benintendi, Taillon Open To Yankees Return; Team Unlikely To Pursue Free Agent Shortstops.
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Post by nyborn on Oct 29, 2022 6:26:50 GMT -5
New coach perhaps? Please. I doubt it, it was his first year and the team improved from the WC loss to ALCS. My bad, wasn't sure when you said "...was his first year...". I meant Boone, the manager. I guess we are going to give Boone a sixth chance. If no big injuries happen next year (and Judge is back), he has no excuses.
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Post by domeplease on Oct 29, 2022 12:35:19 GMT -5
Previewing The 2022-23 Free Agent Class: Starting Pitcher.
Offseason Outlook: New York Mets
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Post by domeplease on Oct 29, 2022 14:35:01 GMT -5
Previewing The 2022-23 Free Agent Class: Starting Pitcher.
Offseason Outlook: New York Mets
Things are not looking up in the Yankees Universe right now. The team looked lifeless for much of the second half, got swept by the hated Houston Astros in the American League Championship Series, and is at risk of losing Aaron Judge in free agency because they could not ink him to an extension before the season. Controversy over Aaron Boone’s and Brian Cashman’s return have dominated the post-ALCS discourse. And after thirteen years without an American League pennant, let alone a World Series, fans are in the mood to see big changes.
We’ve talked a lot already about our negative feelings as the long night of winter descends upon the baseball world. But as disappointing as the end of the season was and the team’s apparent meh-ness about it appears to be, 2022 wasn’t all bad. In fact, as we head into the offseason, there are many reasons why I will still dream of spring training. Here are those that inspire me the most.
The Baby Bombers 2: Electric Boogaloo
You know what’s more fun than watching a young kid make his major league debut and make an immediate impact? Watching two young kids make their major league debuts and make immediate impacts. Getting the call from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre in late August and early September, respectively, Oswaldo Cabrera and Oswald Peraza gave fans a lot to be excited for (even if neither of them was actually given a legitimate shot at taking over either the shortstop job from Isiah Kiner-Falefa or the third base one from Josh Donaldson).
Although it took his bat a bit of time to round into form, Cabrera electrified the fanbase from his first day with the team with his elite defense, flashing the leather at shortstop, third base, left field, and right field. In limited time, Peraza showed off a smooth glove at shortstop and impressed with the bat too. Unless one of them is traded this winter (which is always a possibility) I expect both of them to be key components of the 2023 Yankees, and I, for one, am excited for that — not only because I think they can be really good players, but they were also just plain fun. Cerberus in the Rotation
It feels like every year, the Yankees have question marks in the starting rotation. This winter is no exception. Jameson Taillon is an impending free agent, Frankie Montas was flat-out awful since coming over from Oakland at the trade deadline, Luis Gil is recovering from Tommy John surgery, Clarke Schmidt and Michael King spent the season as relievers, and Domingo Germán has been consistently inconsistent. Chances are, Brian Cashman will do something this winter to add an arm — given his previous acquisitions of James Paxton and Jameson Taillon, probably a question-filled young pitcher with injury-related question marks, two years of team control, and “James” somewhere in his name.
But you know what I feel really good about? Gerrit Cole, Nestor Cortes, and Luis Severino. Yes, they all have question marks of their own. Can Cole figure out how to reduce his home run rate, which turned a borderline Cy Young season based on his strikeout rate into one in which he was merely very good? How will pitching more than 150 innings for the first time since 2018 affect Cortes? Can Sevy stay healthy? All of these are important questions. But when all three are on the mound, the Yankees have one of the league’s best three-headed monster atop the rotation.
Not a bad foundation to begin building on, I think.
Downsizing & Upgrading the Bullpen
During the Baby Bomber years, the Yankees have invested heavily into their bullpen. They signed (or re-signed) Aroldis Chapman, Zack Britton, Adam Ottavino, Darren O’Day, and Justin Wilson as free agents. They traded for David Robertson, Tommy Kahnle, Britton, Scott Effross, Miguel Castro, and Lou Trivino. And that’s on top of a pitching staff that had developed Dellin Betances, Chad Green, Jonathan Loáisiga, Michael King, Luis Cessa, and Clarke Schmidt, among others. Because of this continued investment and reinvestment, the Yankees bullpen leads MLB in fWAR with 33 over this span, six more than the second-place Dodgers. A dominant set of relievers has been one of the team’s defining features.
Unfortunately, this investment comes with a downside: over the past two years, the Yankees have spent a combined $60 million on Chapman and Britton. While both were elite relievers and key components of the 2017-2020 teams, the last two seasons have seen both pitchers battling injuries, and when they have been on the mound, they’ve simply been bad. Fortunately, both pitchers’ contracts end this season ... conveniently freeing up $30 million at the same time that Aaron Judge hits free agency.
(Look, Cashman — it’s clear that this was your plan, just add enough zeroes to get him to sign on the dotted line already)
On top of that, these last two years have shown that the Yankees don’t need to spend heavily on the bullpen to maintain its dominance. King and Loáisiga were two of the league’s most dominant relievers this year and last year, respectively, and neither of them requires the big bucks that the two former closers received. Holmes and Peralta were acquired via low-level trades, and both became lockdown relievers in pinstripes. Last season, Stephen Ridings came out of nowhere and suggested that he could become the next Betances (although he struggled with injuries in 2022). This year, Ron Marinaccio put his name on the map with a big season of his own and Greg Weissert turned some heads in a cameo appearance. While the closer’s role was up in the air at the end of the season, there’s reason to believe that the Yankees can continue to develop a dominant bullpen without investing a large amount of salary.
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Post by kaybli on Oct 29, 2022 16:49:06 GMT -5
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Post by rizzuto on Oct 29, 2022 17:15:54 GMT -5
Arenado opting out will make Rafael Devers a very rich man. Should the Yankees lose Aaron Judge, Devers must be in play for the Yankees. He just turned 26 years old and would thrive in Yankee Stadium. He's not great defensively, but he isn't a liability either.
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Post by inger on Oct 29, 2022 18:45:36 GMT -5
Arenado opting out will make Rafael Devers a very rich man. Should the Yankees lose Aaron Judge, Devers must be in play for the Yankees. He just turned 26 years old and would thrive in Yankee Stadium. He's not great defensively, but he isn't a liability either. Yeah. But he IS Rafael Devers. Why couldn’t there be someone else we could run down?
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Post by anthonyd46 on Oct 29, 2022 18:55:46 GMT -5
I doubt it, it was his first year and the team improved from the WC loss to ALCS. My bad, wasn't sure when you said "...was his first year...". I meant Boone, the manager. I guess we are going to give Boone a sixth chance. If no big injuries happen next year (and Judge is back), he has no excuses. I meant Boone it was the first year of his new contract.
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Post by rizzuto on Oct 29, 2022 20:07:59 GMT -5
Arenado opting out will make Rafael Devers a very rich man. Should the Yankees lose Aaron Judge, Devers must be in play for the Yankees. He just turned 26 years old and would thrive in Yankee Stadium. He's not great defensively, but he isn't a liability either. Yeah. But he IS Rafael Devers. Why couldn’t there be someone else we could run down? Left-hander, 132 OPS+ or better three of the last four years (the one he didn't was 2020), always in the top ten in hits, punishes fastballs and mistakes, hates to make an out, plays hard and runs hard.
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Post by inger on Oct 29, 2022 22:00:35 GMT -5
Yeah. But he IS Rafael Devers. Why couldn’t there be someone else we could run down? Left-hander, 132 OPS+ or better three of the last four years (the one he didn't was 2020), always in the top ten in hits, punishes fastballs and mistakes, hates to make an out, plays hard and runs hard. Yeah. He’s got it all. And he kills us. Maybe better to embrace him…
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