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Post by jiminy on Jan 25, 2024 10:24:45 GMT -5
NY Daily News | Peter Sblendorio: The 2025 Hall of Fame ballot will have two former Yankees, both with very good chances in their first shot. Ichiro Suzuki is as much of a guarantee as any player in the last five years — he is one of the greatest hitters the sport has ever seen. CC Sabathia has a decent shot as well, but perhaps not as secure as Suzuki. but depending on how it shakes out, the Yankees will have another player with their cap on getting a plaque very soon. Check out Noah in the morning on other former Yankees who will be up for future ballots.
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Post by donniebaseball23 on Jan 25, 2024 12:16:49 GMT -5
NY Daily News | Peter Sblendorio: The 2025 Hall of Fame ballot will have two former Yankees, both with very good chances in their first shot. Ichiro Suzuki is as much of a guarantee as any player in the last five years — he is one of the greatest hitters the sport has ever seen. CC Sabathia has a decent shot as well, but perhaps not as secure as Suzuki. but depending on how it shakes out, the Yankees will have another player with their cap on getting a plaque very soon. Check out Noah in the morning on other former Yankees who will be up for future ballots. Ichiro is a lock. C.C.'s 250+ wins and 3000+ K's make him a strong candidate, but his 3.74 ERA and lack of really dominant seasons might be held against him.
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Post by bomberhojoe on Jan 25, 2024 12:32:36 GMT -5
I have what may be a dumb question. Nothing new for me. Who is C-Mac? Chris McMonigle He is a sports commentator on WFAN in New York. Thanks for clearing that up.
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Post by Max on Jan 25, 2024 13:24:27 GMT -5
Joey Gallo makes $5MM a year. What a world. Poor Rob Deer was born 3 decades too soon.
Dave Kingman too.
He didn't strikeout much, but in my opinion in today's MLB, Johnny Ellis would have been a starting Catcher.
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Post by jiminy on Jan 25, 2024 15:24:57 GMT -5
He is back! Yankees, Luis Torrens Agree To Minor League Deal www.mlbtraderumors.com/2024/01/yankees-sign-luis-torrens-catcher.htmlThe Yankees have agreed to a minor league contract with catcher Luis Torrens, per the team’s transaction log at MLB.com. Presumably, he’ll be in camp as a non-roster invitee this spring. Torrens, 27, has spent time in the big leagues in each of the past five seasons, suiting up for the Mariners, Padres and Cubs in that time. He had a solid run with the ’21 Mariners, popping 15 home runs and hitting .243/.299/.431 over a career-high 378 plate appearances, but he’s generally struggled at the plate since. In 196 trips to the plate over the past two MLB seasons, Torrens carries just a .229/.286/.307 slash. The Yankees are plenty familiar with Torrens, as they’re the organization that originally signed him as an amateur free agent out of Venezuela back in 2012. The Padres plucked Torrens out of the Yankees’ system in the 2016 Rule 5 Draft even though he’d never played above A-ball. A then-rebuilding San Diego club succeeded on keeping Torrens on its Major League roster all season, thus acquiring his long-term rights. He spent nearly all of the 2018-19 seasons in the minors, hitting quite in well in Double-A, but was traded to the Mariners alongside Ty France, Andres Munoz and Taylor Trammell in the 2020 swap that sent Austin Nola and Dan Altavilla to the Padres. Overall, Torrens is a career .227/.289/.354 hitter in the bigs and a .246/.311/.486 hitter in Triple-A. He has at times shown the ability to be an above-average hitter relative to his position, and at his best he draws interesting ratings from Statcast in terms of his batted-ball profile. From 2020-22, Torrens averaged a hearty 91 mph off the bat and saw a sizable 45.7% of his batted balls travel at velocities of 95 mph or greater. But he’s also been too strikeout prone, sports a below-average walk rate and puts the ball on the ground far too often (49.9%) for someone who’s ranked in the 26th percentile of MLB players in terms of sprint speed (per Statcast).Defensively, Torrens has some encouraging traits and also some red flags. He’s thwarted a huge 37% of stolen base attempts against him in his professional career but also consistently delivered negative marks for framing. It’s not a surprise to see the Yankees add some more catching depth. New York traded backup catcher Kyle Higashioka to the Padres as part of their deal to acquire Juan Soto, and they’ll face a decision on Ben Rortvedt this spring given that he’s out of minor league options. With prospect Austin Wells and veteran Jose Trevino already on the 40-man and likelier to make the roster, Rortvedt could be squeezed out, and Torrens adds some depth in the event that he’s claimed by another club. If not, he can join Rortvedt and Carlos Narvaez as catching options in Triple-A Scranton, where he could also see occasional action at first base — a position where Torrens has tallied 482 innings between the majors and minors.
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Post by fwclipper51 on Jan 25, 2024 16:29:08 GMT -5
NY Daily News | Peter Sblendorio: The 2025 Hall of Fame ballot will have two former Yankees, both with very good chances in their first shot. Ichiro Suzuki is as much of a guarantee as any player in the last five years — he is one of the greatest hitters the sport has ever seen. CC Sabathia has a decent shot as well, but perhaps not as secure as Suzuki. but depending on how it shakes out, the Yankees will have another player with their cap on getting a plaque very soon. Check out Noah in the morning on other former Yankees who will be up for future ballots. I see Billy Wagner, CC and Ichiro getting into the Hall of Fame next year. Clipper
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Post by fwclipper51 on Jan 25, 2024 16:32:48 GMT -5
He is back! Yankees, Luis Torrens Agree To Minor League Deal www.mlbtraderumors.com/2024/01/yankees-sign-luis-torrens-catcher.htmlThe Yankees have agreed to a minor league contract with catcher Luis Torrens, per the team’s transaction log at MLB.com. Presumably, he’ll be in camp as a non-roster invitee this spring. Torrens, 27, has spent time in the big leagues in each of the past five seasons, suiting up for the Mariners, Padres and Cubs in that time. He had a solid run with the ’21 Mariners, popping 15 home runs and hitting .243/.299/.431 over a career-high 378 plate appearances, but he’s generally struggled at the plate since. In 196 trips to the plate over the past two MLB seasons, Torrens carries just a .229/.286/.307 slash. The Yankees are plenty familiar with Torrens, as they’re the organization that originally signed him as an amateur free agent out of Venezuela back in 2012. The Padres plucked Torrens out of the Yankees’ system in the 2016 Rule 5 Draft even though he’d never played above A-ball. A then-rebuilding San Diego club succeeded on keeping Torrens on its Major League roster all season, thus acquiring his long-term rights. He spent nearly all of the 2018-19 seasons in the minors, hitting quite in well in Double-A, but was traded to the Mariners alongside Ty France, Andres Munoz and Taylor Trammell in the 2020 swap that sent Austin Nola and Dan Altavilla to the Padres. Overall, Torrens is a career .227/.289/.354 hitter in the bigs and a .246/.311/.486 hitter in Triple-A. He has at times shown the ability to be an above-average hitter relative to his position, and at his best he draws interesting ratings from Statcast in terms of his batted-ball profile. From 2020-22, Torrens averaged a hearty 91 mph off the bat and saw a sizable 45.7% of his batted balls travel at velocities of 95 mph or greater. But he’s also been too strikeout prone, sports a below-average walk rate and puts the ball on the ground far too often (49.9%) for someone who’s ranked in the 26th percentile of MLB players in terms of sprint speed (per Statcast).Defensively, Torrens has some encouraging traits and also some red flags. He’s thwarted a huge 37% of stolen base attempts against him in his professional career but also consistently delivered negative marks for framing. It’s not a surprise to see the Yankees add some more catching depth. New York traded backup catcher Kyle Higashioka to the Padres as part of their deal to acquire Juan Soto, and they’ll face a decision on Ben Rortvedt this spring given that he’s out of minor league options. With prospect Austin Wells and veteran Jose Trevino already on the 40-man and likelier to make the roster, Rortvedt could be squeezed out, and Torrens adds some depth in the event that he’s claimed by another club. If not, he can join Rortvedt and Carlos Narvaez as catching options in Triple-A Scranton, where he could also see occasional action at first base — a position where Torrens has tallied 482 innings between the majors and minors. The Yankees should be able to use Catcher Ben Rortvedt in a trade, rather than put him on waivers and losing him this spring. Clipper
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Post by jiminy on Jan 25, 2024 19:39:56 GMT -5
NY Daily News | Peter Sblendorio: The 2025 Hall of Fame ballot will have two former Yankees, both with very good chances in their first shot. Ichiro Suzuki is as much of a guarantee as any player in the last five years — he is one of the greatest hitters the sport has ever seen. CC Sabathia has a decent shot as well, but perhaps not as secure as Suzuki. but depending on how it shakes out, the Yankees will have another player with their cap on getting a plaque very soon. Check out Noah in the morning on other former Yankees who will be up for future ballots. I see Billy Wagner, CC and Ichiro getting into the Hall of Fame next year. Clipper Sounds about right.
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Post by jiminy on Jan 25, 2024 19:44:32 GMT -5
He is back! Yankees, Luis Torrens Agree To Minor League Deal www.mlbtraderumors.com/2024/01/yankees-sign-luis-torrens-catcher.htmlThe Yankees have agreed to a minor league contract with catcher Luis Torrens, per the team’s transaction log at MLB.com. Presumably, he’ll be in camp as a non-roster invitee this spring. Torrens, 27, has spent time in the big leagues in each of the past five seasons, suiting up for the Mariners, Padres and Cubs in that time. He had a solid run with the ’21 Mariners, popping 15 home runs and hitting .243/.299/.431 over a career-high 378 plate appearances, but he’s generally struggled at the plate since. In 196 trips to the plate over the past two MLB seasons, Torrens carries just a .229/.286/.307 slash. The Yankees are plenty familiar with Torrens, as they’re the organization that originally signed him as an amateur free agent out of Venezuela back in 2012. The Padres plucked Torrens out of the Yankees’ system in the 2016 Rule 5 Draft even though he’d never played above A-ball. A then-rebuilding San Diego club succeeded on keeping Torrens on its Major League roster all season, thus acquiring his long-term rights. He spent nearly all of the 2018-19 seasons in the minors, hitting quite in well in Double-A, but was traded to the Mariners alongside Ty France, Andres Munoz and Taylor Trammell in the 2020 swap that sent Austin Nola and Dan Altavilla to the Padres. Overall, Torrens is a career .227/.289/.354 hitter in the bigs and a .246/.311/.486 hitter in Triple-A. He has at times shown the ability to be an above-average hitter relative to his position, and at his best he draws interesting ratings from Statcast in terms of his batted-ball profile. From 2020-22, Torrens averaged a hearty 91 mph off the bat and saw a sizable 45.7% of his batted balls travel at velocities of 95 mph or greater. But he’s also been too strikeout prone, sports a below-average walk rate and puts the ball on the ground far too often (49.9%) for someone who’s ranked in the 26th percentile of MLB players in terms of sprint speed (per Statcast).Defensively, Torrens has some encouraging traits and also some red flags. He’s thwarted a huge 37% of stolen base attempts against him in his professional career but also consistently delivered negative marks for framing. It’s not a surprise to see the Yankees add some more catching depth. New York traded backup catcher Kyle Higashioka to the Padres as part of their deal to acquire Juan Soto, and they’ll face a decision on Ben Rortvedt this spring given that he’s out of minor league options. With prospect Austin Wells and veteran Jose Trevino already on the 40-man and likelier to make the roster, Rortvedt could be squeezed out, and Torrens adds some depth in the event that he’s claimed by another club. If not, he can join Rortvedt and Carlos Narvaez as catching options in Triple-A Scranton, where he could also see occasional action at first base — a position where Torrens has tallied 482 innings between the majors and minors. The Yankees should be able to use Catcher Ben Rortvedt in a trade, rather than put him on waivers and losing him this spring. Clipper It is not a given that Wells will win the left-handed catching matchup with Trevino out of spring training. In addition, there are rumors that Cole prefers working with Rortvedt.
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Post by jiminy on Jan 25, 2024 19:58:05 GMT -5
Looking for contributions in unexpected places for the Yankees bullpen Will one of these relievers pitch their way onto fans’ radar in 2024? www.pinstripealley.com/2024/1/25/24049516/relievers-on-the-fringes-of-the-yankees-roster-luis-gil-nick-burdi-yerry-de-los-santos-nick-ramirezI like writing about pitchers. Not necessarily just the good ones — the interesting ones, the forgotten ones, the ones you don’t think about until they’re suddenly sitting in your bullpen. Few teams manage to pull bullpen aces out of thin air quite like the Yankees do, whether it be through internal development or finding a diamond in the rough on the trade or free agent market. A few weeks ago, Estee Rivera took a look at some of the “homegrown” candidates for a breakout in the Yankees bullpen next summer. Here, I’m going to do the same, except coming from the opposite direction. These are the afterthoughts; the returnees from injury; the non-roster invites and minor league signings that you don’t even know are on the roster until they’re in the majors with a 1.26 ERA. There are a lot of names to choose from, but if I had to guess at who 2024’s Ian Hamilton might be, I’d probably put my money on one of these names. Luis Gil This isn’t the first time we’ve written about how Gil shouldn’t be written off, as Andrés Chávez called him a “dark horse” for a rotation spot just a few weeks ago. All of his points stand firm here: he’s talented, he has MLB experience, he’s finally healthy, and he’s on the 40-man roster. No matter what role it’s in, Gil will almost certainly have a chance to make an impact in some regard in 2024. Personally, I just think it’s almost certainly going to be in the bullpen. It’s really tempting to see if pitchers as gifted as Gil can stick as starters, but between his strike-throwing issues, his health issues. and the fact that he only has two real pitches, I’d just cut to the chase and stick him in the back of the bullpen. Because he has stuff that’ll play in the back of a bullpen, for sure. It seems like teams can spit out hurlers who throw in the high 90s with a biting slider with ease these days, but it’s still a small number who have shown even to an extent as limited as Gil that they can do it against quality MLB hitters. He’ll need to prove his health before anything else, but it’s worth taking a moment to watch that video and remind ourselves what he looked like when he first made the leap in 2021. If anything of that pitcher still remains, it’s hard to not to think there’s a path to making him a contributor next summer. Yerry De Los Santos You know it’s the dog days of the offseason because I just cranked up MLB Film Room and binge-watched five appearances from Yerry De Los Santos, a 26-year-old right-hander formerly of the Pittsburgh Pirates who signed a minor league deal with the Yankees in November, and I am simply enthralled. It’s a package that very much resembles what Jimmy Cordero brought to the table when the Yankees brought him in on a minor league pact. It’s a big sinker that, while falling a little short of Clay Holmes’ bowling ball, has some pretty heavy drop and run to it, and he can push it all the way up near the top of the velocity scale. Like Cordero, he pairs it with a slider, one that seems mostly gyro-oriented in nature but with a lot of inconsistency in how much up-down movement it generates on any given pitch. That stuff was good enough for a 3.33 ERA and 54.2 percent grounder rate in 22 appearances last season, but the performance wasn’t enough to stop him from hitting the waiver wire when the Bucs needed to make some 40-man roster room. His mechanics up there are not pretty — there could be a lot more fluidity and athleticism in his torso and hip separation through his leg plant, and my untrained eye doesn’t love the angle that his upper body rotates at, either. If some of those kinks can be ironed out and he can start hitting spots consistently, though, the Yankees could have another sinkerballing monster on their hands. Nick Burdi Stuff isn’t the issue with Burdi. It’s never been. Burdi was a second-round pick out of Louisville in 2014, but he was the first pure reliever off the board, with only 22 starters being selected before him. That should tell you enough about the kind of talent he’s working with. Unfortunately, he’s also an excellent example of why teams don’t like using high draft picks on relievers, no matter how electric, as he’s simply been unable to stay healthy for more than a few months at a time. Between 2016 and 2022, he appeared in just 43 professional games (16 in the majors), none of which came after 2020. He finally managed a hard-earned return to the mound in 2023, when he appeared in 23 games for the Cubs’ Triple-A affiliate, and three for the big club. Even with all that time off, the electricity was still there in 2023. His ERA with Triple-A Iowa was just 3.86, but he struck out 35 hitters (with 15 walks) in just 21 innings. His fastball still crackled at an even 98 mph in his brief MLB cameo. Yeah, uh, that’s some hot stuff! He pairs it with a biting side-to-side slider that’s drawn whiffs 44 percent of the time hitters have swung at it in the big leagues. Probably the most confident prediction I’ll make in this article is that if the Yankees can keep Burdi healthy, he’ll wind up getting some high-leverage innings in the Bronx this summer. Nick Ramirez Ramirez was with the team last year, so this isn’t quite the same thing as the other three, but his performance last year shouldn’t be discounted. I’ve written about him a couple times here, first over the summer, then his postseason report card, and not much has changed. Diametrically opposed to Burdi, the stuff that Ramirez brings to the table is wholly unexciting, but he has a combination of lefty funkiness and unorthodox pitch traits that both make it easy to see why the Yankees brought him in, and make me think the 2.66 ERA he posted in 32 apperances last year is, while not sustainable, not totally a fluke, either. He still has options remaining, so he probably won’t make the Opening Day roster, but with Wandy Peralta not currently in the fold, there are a lot of ground-ball-oriented-lefty innings to fill. Victor González seems likely to get the first crack at them, but it wouldn’t be absurd to see Ramirez get a shot at it as well. I have my doubts that the ink is dry on pitching staff changes for the coming season. Even with Marcus Stroman in tow, it feels as if the rotation and bullpen is still just a little bit short, maybe by just a name or two. Whether another big name joins the fray or just a few smaller ones, there will be plenty of rough for Matt Blake and the team’s pitching dev group to attempt to find a diamond in.
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Post by posadafan24 on Jan 25, 2024 20:02:44 GMT -5
Looking for contributions in unexpected places for the Yankees bullpen Will one of these relievers pitch their way onto fans’ radar in 2024? www.pinstripealley.com/2024/1/25/24049516/relievers-on-the-fringes-of-the-yankees-roster-luis-gil-nick-burdi-yerry-de-los-santos-nick-ramirezI like writing about pitchers. Not necessarily just the good ones — the interesting ones, the forgotten ones, the ones you don’t think about until they’re suddenly sitting in your bullpen. Few teams manage to pull bullpen aces out of thin air quite like the Yankees do, whether it be through internal development or finding a diamond in the rough on the trade or free agent market. A few weeks ago, Estee Rivera took a look at some of the “homegrown” candidates for a breakout in the Yankees bullpen next summer. Here, I’m going to do the same, except coming from the opposite direction. These are the afterthoughts; the returnees from injury; the non-roster invites and minor league signings that you don’t even know are on the roster until they’re in the majors with a 1.26 ERA. There are a lot of names to choose from, but if I had to guess at who 2024’s Ian Hamilton might be, I’d probably put my money on one of these names. Luis Gil This isn’t the first time we’ve written about how Gil shouldn’t be written off, as Andrés Chávez called him a “dark horse” for a rotation spot just a few weeks ago. All of his points stand firm here: he’s talented, he has MLB experience, he’s finally healthy, and he’s on the 40-man roster. No matter what role it’s in, Gil will almost certainly have a chance to make an impact in some regard in 2024. Personally, I just think it’s almost certainly going to be in the bullpen. It’s really tempting to see if pitchers as gifted as Gil can stick as starters, but between his strike-throwing issues, his health issues. and the fact that he only has two real pitches, I’d just cut to the chase and stick him in the back of the bullpen. Because he has stuff that’ll play in the back of a bullpen, for sure. It seems like teams can spit out hurlers who throw in the high 90s with a biting slider with ease these days, but it’s still a small number who have shown even to an extent as limited as Gil that they can do it against quality MLB hitters. He’ll need to prove his health before anything else, but it’s worth taking a moment to watch that video and remind ourselves what he looked like when he first made the leap in 2021. If anything of that pitcher still remains, it’s hard to not to think there’s a path to making him a contributor next summer. Yerry De Los Santos You know it’s the dog days of the offseason because I just cranked up MLB Film Room and binge-watched five appearances from Yerry De Los Santos, a 26-year-old right-hander formerly of the Pittsburgh Pirates who signed a minor league deal with the Yankees in November, and I am simply enthralled. It’s a package that very much resembles what Jimmy Cordero brought to the table when the Yankees brought him in on a minor league pact. It’s a big sinker that, while falling a little short of Clay Holmes’ bowling ball, has some pretty heavy drop and run to it, and he can push it all the way up near the top of the velocity scale. Like Cordero, he pairs it with a slider, one that seems mostly gyro-oriented in nature but with a lot of inconsistency in how much up-down movement it generates on any given pitch. That stuff was good enough for a 3.33 ERA and 54.2 percent grounder rate in 22 appearances last season, but the performance wasn’t enough to stop him from hitting the waiver wire when the Bucs needed to make some 40-man roster room. His mechanics up there are not pretty — there could be a lot more fluidity and athleticism in his torso and hip separation through his leg plant, and my untrained eye doesn’t love the angle that his upper body rotates at, either. If some of those kinks can be ironed out and he can start hitting spots consistently, though, the Yankees could have another sinkerballing monster on their hands. Nick Burdi Stuff isn’t the issue with Burdi. It’s never been. Burdi was a second-round pick out of Louisville in 2014, but he was the first pure reliever off the board, with only 22 starters being selected before him. That should tell you enough about the kind of talent he’s working with. Unfortunately, he’s also an excellent example of why teams don’t like using high draft picks on relievers, no matter how electric, as he’s simply been unable to stay healthy for more than a few months at a time. Between 2016 and 2022, he appeared in just 43 professional games (16 in the majors), none of which came after 2020. He finally managed a hard-earned return to the mound in 2023, when he appeared in 23 games for the Cubs’ Triple-A affiliate, and three for the big club. Even with all that time off, the electricity was still there in 2023. His ERA with Triple-A Iowa was just 3.86, but he struck out 35 hitters (with 15 walks) in just 21 innings. His fastball still crackled at an even 98 mph in his brief MLB cameo. Yeah, uh, that’s some hot stuff! He pairs it with a biting side-to-side slider that’s drawn whiffs 44 percent of the time hitters have swung at it in the big leagues. Probably the most confident prediction I’ll make in this article is that if the Yankees can keep Burdi healthy, he’ll wind up getting some high-leverage innings in the Bronx this summer. Nick Ramirez Ramirez was with the team last year, so this isn’t quite the same thing as the other three, but his performance last year shouldn’t be discounted. I’ve written about him a couple times here, first over the summer, then his postseason report card, and not much has changed. Diametrically opposed to Burdi, the stuff that Ramirez brings to the table is wholly unexciting, but he has a combination of lefty funkiness and unorthodox pitch traits that both make it easy to see why the Yankees brought him in, and make me think the 2.66 ERA he posted in 32 apperances last year is, while not sustainable, not totally a fluke, either. He still has options remaining, so he probably won’t make the Opening Day roster, but with Wandy Peralta not currently in the fold, there are a lot of ground-ball-oriented-lefty innings to fill. Victor González seems likely to get the first crack at them, but it wouldn’t be absurd to see Ramirez get a shot at it as well. I have my doubts that the ink is dry on pitching staff changes for the coming season. Even with Marcus Stroman in tow, it feels as if the rotation and bullpen is still just a little bit short, maybe by just a name or two. Whether another big name joins the fray or just a few smaller ones, there will be plenty of rough for Matt Blake and the team’s pitching dev group to attempt to find a diamond in. I wouldnt expect much from gil in regards to the majors . I mean did he even pitch much last season?
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Post by Max on Jan 26, 2024 11:05:53 GMT -5
The Yankees should be able to use Catcher Ben Rortvedt in a trade, rather than put him on waivers and losing him this spring. Clipper
With 5 Catchers on their 40 man roster I expect at least 1 of them to get traded. Even more so now that the Yankees signed Torrens.
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Post by bomberhojoe on Jan 26, 2024 11:37:33 GMT -5
NY Daily News | Peter Sblendorio: The 2025 Hall of Fame ballot will have two former Yankees, both with very good chances in their first shot. Ichiro Suzuki is as much of a guarantee as any player in the last five years — he is one of the greatest hitters the sport has ever seen. CC Sabathia has a decent shot as well, but perhaps not as secure as Suzuki. but depending on how it shakes out, the Yankees will have another player with their cap on getting a plaque very soon. Check out Noah in the morning on other former Yankees who will be up for future ballots. I see Billy Wagner, CC and Ichiro getting into the Hall of Fame next year. Clipper Ichiro is a no doubt, but Wagner and CC will be close calls, in my opinion. When I think of Wagner and CC, I don't immediately say yes, and that has always been my grading system. If it's not an immediate yes, they don't belong. However, based on those already in, both are better than others enshrined.
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Post by jiminy on Jan 26, 2024 12:47:06 GMT -5
Aaron Judge was named MLB Network's #1 centerfielder in baseball right now
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Post by jiminy on Jan 26, 2024 12:53:02 GMT -5
Oswaldo Cabrera's winter stats in La Guaira: 98AB .267AVERAGE 0HR 2RBIs .349OBP
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