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Post by jiminy on Apr 16, 2024 9:36:16 GMT -5
NYYStats: Yankees age 25 or younger with 12+ H, 3+ HR and 10+ RBI in his first 10 games of a season
Oswaldo Cabrera (2024) Derek Jeter (1999) Bobby Murcer (1969) Roger Maris (1960) Mickey Mantle (1956) Bill Skowron (1955) Bill Dickey (1932) Lou Gehrig (1927)
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Post by jiminy on Apr 16, 2024 9:38:38 GMT -5
James Smyth: Luis Gil tonight for Yankees vs Blue Jays
5.0 IP, 3 H, 3 R, 3 ER, 7 BB, 6 K
Unique Box Score Line a first among the more than 1.1 million MLB pitching lines in the regular season or postseason since 1901 (thanks @baseball_ref@Stathead)
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Post by jiminy on Apr 17, 2024 9:20:07 GMT -5
Baseball Prospectus | Tim Jackson: As we’ve seen Anthony Volpe swing at less than 15 percent of the first pitches he has seen, other hitters have taken the opposite approach. Jackson’s analysis states that across the league, most hitters are swinging at the first pitch they see nearly a third of the time. This number has grown from last year. It’s always interesting to see how a hitter departs from the norm, especially one that is moving in the opposite direction across the league.
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Post by jiminy on Apr 17, 2024 9:20:44 GMT -5
New York Daily News | Gary Phillips: DJ LeMahieu is expected to start a rehab assignment in the coming days. He told Phillips there are no more boxes to check in his return process. LeMahieu also suspected that he wouldn’t need more than five games before he’d make a return to the Yanks’ lineup. When he comes back, the leadoff spot likely will not be his anymore, meaning LeMahieu’s likely a. bottom third of the lineup hitter.
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Post by jiminy on Apr 18, 2024 9:11:19 GMT -5
James Smyth: MLB Youngest Players to Reach 500 RBIs Since 1977 (Years.Days) (h/t @yankeespr)
24.139 Miguel Cabrera 24.198 Ken Griffey Jr 24.254 Albert Pujols 24.291 Alex Rodriguez 25.038 Andruw Jones 25.165 Adrian Beltre 25.175 Juan Soto
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Post by jiminy on Apr 18, 2024 9:58:43 GMT -5
MLB Trade Rumors | Steve Adams: The Yankees were one of the teams targeted the most in the latest Rule 5 Draft, and it makes sense to check in and see how their former prospects are doing as they could be returned to them if their new organizations aren’t pleased with their results. Currently, the two active players to watch are Mitch Spence, who has been solid for the Oakland A’s bullpen, and Matt Sauer, who hasn’t seen much action for a Royals team that has surprised many to this point. If his roster spot gets put in jeopardy later in the year, he’d have to pass through waivers before the Yankees would get him back, but there’s a possibility there. (Carson Coleman was also taken from the team, but he’s been on the Rangers’ IL the whole time so there isn’t much to report on there).
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Post by jiminy on Apr 18, 2024 10:00:23 GMT -5
YankeesMuse: Juan Soto’s career resume:
World Series Champion 2022 HR Derby Champ 3x All-Star 4x Sliver Slugger Batting Title 2nd in ‘18 NL ROY voting 2x Top 5 NL MVP finishes 1x Top 2 NL MVP finish ——————————— 28.6 career WAR at 25 Leads active players in career OBP (.421)
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Post by fwclipper51 on Apr 18, 2024 11:39:45 GMT -5
From MLB Rumors: 4/17/2024
2023 Rule 5 Update: April Edition By Steve Adams | April 17, 2024 at 7:06pm CDT
We’re three weeks into the 2024 season, and this year’s crop of Rule 5 picks has had an atypical amount of staying power. That’s perhaps in part due to the fact that only ten players were selected in the 2023 Rule 5 Draft, but as of this writing, only one Rule 5 selection has been returned to his original organization.
For those unfamiliar, in order to be eligible for the Rule 5 Draft, a player must not be on his team’s 40-man roster and must have played in either parts of five professional seasons (if they signed at 18 or younger) or four professional seasons (if they signed at 19 or older). The deadline to protect players from the Rule 5 by selecting their contracts to the 40-man roster typically falls in mid-November and spurs a good deal of player movement as teams jettison borderline players and non-tender candidates from their roster in order to protect younger prospects.
A player who is selected in the Rule 5 Draft must spend the entire subsequent season on his new club’s Major League roster and cannot be optioned to the minors. The player can technically spend time on the injured list as well, but at least 90 days must be spent on the active roster. If not, the player’s Rule 5 status rolls into the following season until 90 days on the active roster have been accrued. If a team at any point decides it can no longer carry a Rule 5 selection, that player must be passed through waivers and subsequently offered back to his original organization. Any other club can claim the player via waivers, but the same Rule 5 restrictions will apply to the claiming team.
Broadly speaking, the Rule 5 Draft rarely produces impact players. There are plenty of exceptions over the years, though, with names like Johan Santana, Dan Uggla, Shane Victorino, Joakim Soria, Josh Hamilton and, more recently, Garrett Whitlock and Trevor Stephan thriving in new organizations. The Rule 5 Draft dates back more than a century and has even produced a handful of Hall of Famers: Roberto Clemente, Hack Wilson and Christy Mathewson.
It’s unlikely we’ll see any Cooperstown-bound players come from this year’s crop, but the teams who opted to select a player will be content if any of these names become a viable reliever or role player for the next several seasons. Here’s a look at this year’s group of ten Rule 5 players and where they stand. We’ll do a few of these throughout the season, keeping tabs on which players survive the season and formally have their long-term rights transferred to their new clubs.
On a Major League Roster
Mitch Spence, RHP, Athletics (selected from Yankees)
Spence, 26 next month, was the first overall pick in this year’s Rule 5 Draft, and understandably so after the 2023 season he had. His 4.47 ERA might’ve been pedestrian, but the 2019 tenth-rounder led all Triple-A pitchers with 163 innings while delivering a nice blend of strikeouts (21.8%), walks (7.5%) and ground-balls (50%). For an A’s club desperately thin on starting pitching after the slew of rebuilding-driven trades for minor league arms have failed to produce much, adding a 25-year-old arm with that type of season held obvious appeal.
Spence made Oakland’s decision easy with a monster spring showing. He pitched 17 2/3 innings and allowed only six earned runs (3.06 ERA) on 15 hits and six walks with 21 punchouts. He’s worked out of the ’pen so far in Oakland but could very well find himself making starts later in the year. Through his first 11 2/3 MLB frames, Spence has yielded four earned runs on 10 hits and four walks with a 48.4% grounder rate. He’s not in danger of losing his spot anytime soon.
Matt Sauer, RHP, Royals (selected from Yankees)
Another 25-year-old righty out of the Yankees organization, Sauer came to his new club with a much heavier draft pedigree than his now-former teammate, Spence. The Yankees selected the 6’4″ righty with the No. 54 overall pick back in 2017, but Sauer didn’t develop as quickly as hoped. He was set back by 2019 Tommy John surgery and the canceled 2020 minor league season. He’s never topped 111 innings in a season, but Sauer rebuilt some prospect pedigree with a nice 2023 season that saw him pitch 68 1/3 innings of 3.42 ERA ball in Double-A. He whiffed 29.5% of his opponents, albeit against a less palatable 10.3% walk rate.
Like his former teammate, Sauer had a nice spring that made the decision relatively easy for his new club. In 10 2/3 innings, he held opponents to three earned runs (2.53 ERA) on 13 hits and three walks with 13 strikeouts. He opened the season in the Kansas City bullpen and has thus far pitched five innings, allowing a pair of runs in that time. Sauer has walked four of his 25 opponents and fanned just two thus far. It’s a small sample, of course, but he’ll need to reverse that early trend to hang onto his roster spot — especially if the Royals continue their hot start and find themselves contending into the summer.
Anthony Molina, RHP, Rockies (selected from Rays)
The 22-year-old Molina worked as a starter in the Rays’ system last year, taking the ball 28 times (27 starts) and pitching 122 innings with a 4.50 ERA. The undersized righty has garnered praise for a solid-average heater and above-average changeup, and he showed good command in 2023 after struggling with walks earlier in his minor league career. Molina continued to show good command in spring training (in addition to a massive 60.5% grounder rate), but the regular season has been brutal for him thus far. In three appearances, he’s been tattooed for a dozen runs on 13 hits and four walks with just two strikeouts. The Rockies can afford to be as patient as they want. They’re 4-13 on the season and were never expected to contend. Still, Molina will need to improve on his early performance in order to stick on the roster.
Nasim Nunez, INF, Nationals (selected from Marlins)
The Nationals have effectively played the season thus far with a 25-man roster. Nunez made the Opening Day squad but has been M.I.A. since. He’s appeared in just five of Washington’s 16 games and received only two plate appearances, going hitless in that meaningless sample. Nunez is an all-glove and speed prospect who hit just .224/.341/.286 in Double-A last season. He did go 52-for-59 in stolen base attempts, and scouting reports have long touted his defensive excellence at shortstop. He hit just .152/.200/.182 in 35 spring plate appearances.
It’s fair to wonder how long the Nats can essentially punt a roster spot by keeping Nunez on the bench, but like the Rockies, they’re not expecting to contend this season anyhow. One would imagine that from a pure developmental standpoint, they need to find a way to get Nunez into some games and start getting him some playing time, but for now, the team appears content to just hide the 23-year-old on the bench.
Ryan Fernandez, RHP, Cardinals (selected from Red Sox)
Fernandez, 25, has just four appearances out of the St. Louis bullpen so far and has been understandably deployed in low-leverage spots while he acclimates to the majors. He’s pitched fairly well in sparse duty, holding opponents to three runs (two earned) in 5 2/3 innings. Fernandez has averaged just under 96 mph on his heater, fanned seven opponents and issued three walks. His swinging-strike rate isn’t close to where it’s been in his minor league work, but his wipeout slider has been strong thus far. Fernandez has finished off eight plate appearances with that pitch, picking up four strikeouts and yielding only one hit. Nothing he’s done so far makes it seem like he’ll be cut loose anytime soon.
Justin Slaten, RHP, Red Sox (selected by Mets from Rangers; traded to Red Sox for LHP Ryan Ammons)
While most Rule 5 relievers are eased into low-pressure spots, that hasn’t been the case with the Sox and Slaten. He held a four-run lead to pick up a seven-out save in the team’s fourth game of the season, and the 6’4″ righty has since tallied three holds out of Alex Cora’s bullpen. In 10 1/3 innings, Slaten has allowed only one run on three hits and a walk with eight strikeouts. Add in 6 1/3 shutout innings in spring training, and he’s looked more like a seasoned veteran than a 26-year-old who entered the season with all of 8 1/3 innings above the Double-A level. Slaten has immediately made himself an important part of Boston’s roster, and while a prolonged slump could always change things, he looks like a keeper right now.
Stephen Kolek, RHP, Padres (selected from Mariners)
Kolek, who’ll turn 27 tomorrow, began his big league tenure with four runs in 1 2/3 innings over his first two appearances. He’s since bounced back with 8 2/3 innings of one-run ball, fanning 11 hitters against three walks along the way. He punched out nearly a quarter of his opponents in Triple-A last year and did so with a huge 57.5% ground-ball rate. He hasn’t picked up grounders at such a strong level just yet (43.5%), but San Diego probably isn’t second-guessing their decision to select him. He’s already picked up a pair of holds, and his recent run of success has dropped his ERA to 4.35. Command has been a problem for Kolek in the past, but he’s only walked 8.9% of his opponents against a 26.7% strikeout rate so far.
On the Major League Injured List
Shane Drohan, LHP, White Sox (selected from Red Sox): Drohan underwent shoulder surgery in late February and is on the 60-day IL. There’s no telling yet when he’ll be medically cleared to return. As noted in the intro, Drohan needs 90 days on the active roster to shed his Rule 5 designation; even if he spends the entire 2024 campaign on the injured list, his Rule 5 status will carry over into 2025 until he picks up those 90 active days.
Carson Coleman, RHP, Rangers (selected from Yankees): Coleman is also on the 60-day injured list. Unlike Drohan, it was well known at the time of his selection that he’d be IL-bound to begin the year. Coleman had Tommy John surgery last year and is expected to be out until midsummer at the least.
Returned to Original Organization
Deyvison De Los Santos, INF, Guardians (returned to D-backs): De Los Santos has big raw power but a well below-average hit tool. The Guardians selected him on the heels of a 20-homer campaign in Double-A with the D-backs, but he hit just .227/.227/.318 in 44 spring appearances before being designated for assignment, clearing waivers and getting returned to the Snakes. He’s had a big performance in a return-trip to Double-A.
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Post by jiminy on Apr 18, 2024 12:43:02 GMT -5
What can Trent Grisham do for the New York Yankees this season? yanksgoyard.com/posts/what-can-trent-grisham-do-for-the-new-york-yankees-this-season-01hvmnxnh65w“He hasn’t had a lot of run yet, but there’s no reason to think he can’t be really valuable in a smaller role,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone told the New York Post. “But you know that could inevitably change at any moment.” According to Baseball Savant, the former first-round pick ranked in the 93rd percentile in terms of Outs Above Average and the 86th percentile in Fielding Run Value. At the very least, Grisham could provide a steady glove when the game calls for stout defense (although it’s worth wondering who, if anyone, the Yankees would sub out for him). At the plate, Grisham is far from an “old-school” contact bat. He recorded a .198 batting average across 555 plate appearances in 2023 while ranking in the 20th percentile in K%. Is it all bad? Not exactly. Grisham has bashed 30 home runs over the past two seasons and ranked in the 92nd percentile in terms of BB% last year. It’s doubtful that he will ever be a consistent catalyst towards the top of an order, but he does have valuable pop, and a decent feel for the strike zone. A quick look at Grisham’s 2023 hits spray chart reveals that his 13 home runs were fairly spread out. At the very least, the former Padre can elevate the ball to all fields. Even if he does not match or top his 2023 home run count, this ability could result in sac flies for a Yankees team that has already shown a willingness to play smart baseball in 2024. And don't forget Grisham's power surge that led the Padres past the New York Mets in the 2022 Wild Card round. In a perfect world, Grisham won’t have to assume a large role at any point this season, and can contribute as needed. But injuries could make his presence necessary. Regardless of how Grisham finds playing time, his defense and streaky power could be useful if he’s able to lean into these strengths.
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Post by inger on Apr 18, 2024 13:06:03 GMT -5
James Smyth: MLB Youngest Players to Reach 500 RBIs Since 1977 (Years.Days) (h/t @yankeespr) 24.139 Miguel Cabrera 24.198 Ken Griffey Jr 24.254 Albert Pujols 24.291 Alex Rodriguez 25.038 Andruw Jones 25.165 Adrian Beltre 25.175 Juan Soto I’d like to add this: Free swingers often get more RBI than stormy hitters. I’ll assure you without looking that Soto has the highest walk rate among this group of players making this accomplishment even greater…
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Post by inger on Apr 18, 2024 13:17:01 GMT -5
What can Trent Grisham do for the New York Yankees this season? yanksgoyard.com/posts/what-can-trent-grisham-do-for-the-new-york-yankees-this-season-01hvmnxnh65w“He hasn’t had a lot of run yet, but there’s no reason to think he can’t be really valuable in a smaller role,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone told the New York Post. “But you know that could inevitably change at any moment.” According to Baseball Savant, the former first-round pick ranked in the 93rd percentile in terms of Outs Above Average and the 86th percentile in Fielding Run Value. At the very least, Grisham could provide a steady glove when the game calls for stout defense (although it’s worth wondering who, if anyone, the Yankees would sub out for him). At the plate, Grisham is far from an “old-school” contact bat. He recorded a .198 batting average across 555 plate appearances in 2023 while ranking in the 20th percentile in K%. Is it all bad? Not exactly. Grisham has bashed 30 home runs over the past two seasons and ranked in the 92nd percentile in terms of BB% last year. It’s doubtful that he will ever be a consistent catalyst towards the top of an order, but he does have valuable pop, and a decent feel for the strike zone. A quick look at Grisham’s 2023 hits spray chart reveals that his 13 home runs were fairly spread out. At the very least, the former Padre can elevate the ball to all fields. Even if he does not match or top his 2023 home run count, this ability could result in sac flies for a Yankees team that has already shown a willingness to play smart baseball in 2024. And don't forget Grisham's power surge that led the Padres past the New York Mets in the 2022 Wild Card round. In a perfect world, Grisham won’t have to assume a large role at any point this season, and can contribute as needed. But injuries could make his presence necessary. Regardless of how Grisham finds playing time, his defense and streaky power could be useful if he’s able to lean into these strengths. It’s got to be tough on Grisham to be sitting so much after having been a starter for several seasons and still being such a young man. If/when someone goes down with an injury this season perhaps we can still reap some value from his presence on the field, his speed, and his occasional power. He’d surely be playing more often, if not regularly for at least 15-20 teams in MLB. We’re privileged to have such a talented player buried in our bench, to proverbial embarrassment of riches…
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Post by fwclipper51 on Apr 18, 2024 16:54:03 GMT -5
Yankees Claim Taylor Trammell, Designate Kevin Smith By Darragh McDonald | April 18, 2024 at 3:05pm CDT MLB Rumors
The Yankees announced that they have claimed outfielder Taylor Trammell off waivers from the Dodgers, the latter club having designated him for assignment earlier this week. To open a roster spot for Trammell, the Yankees have designated infielder Kevin Smith for assignment.
Trammell, 26, was only with the Dodgers for a couple of weeks. They claimed him off waivers from the Mariners in early April and he only got 6 hitless plate appearances, striking out 3 times, before getting bumped off the roster and put right back on waivers.
The Yankees are likely interested based on Trammell’s past status as one of the top prospects in the game. Selected 35th overall by the Reds in 2016, he was on Baseball America’s top 100 lists in 3 straight years starting in 2018.
But his results started to dip as he began to be passed around the league a bit. He was flipped to the Padres in the 2019 deal that sent Trevor Bauer to the Reds and Yasiel Puig to Cleveland, then he was traded again, going to the Mariners in the 2020 deal that also sent Ty France and Andrés Muñoz to Seattle.
The Mariners gave him sporadic playing time in the majors over the past few years but he didn’t live up to his previous prospect hype. He currently has a line of .165/.266/.361 in 357 plate appearances, having struck out in 37.3% of those. His 10.9% walk rate is strong but the overall output has obviously not been good. He is now out of options, which is why the Mariners and Dodgers have each had to designate him for assignment in recent weeks.
Reasons for optimism can be found on Trammell’s Triple-A performance. Dating back to the start of 2021, he has 812 plate appearances at the top minor league level. He struck out in 24% of those but also drew walks at a 14% rate and hit 38 HRs. That’s to be taken with a grain of salt since those HRs were all in the hitter-friendly Pacific Coast League, but his .274/.381/.506 batting line nonetheless translated to a 116 wRC+, indicating he was 16% above league average. He also stole 33 bases in 40 tries in that time.
The Yanks will give Trammell a roster spot to see if he can finally have his long-awaited breakout in pinstripes. While that’s a sensible decision in a vacuum, it seems less than ideal in terms of roster construction.
The Yankees already have a pretty loaded group in terms of outfielders, with Aaron Judge, Juan Soto and Alex Verdugo getting the regular playing time. Giancarlo Stanton is in the DH slot most days while Trent Grisham is on hand as a glove-1st backup.
Smith was added to the roster on the weekend with the club’s infield injuries mounting. Oswald Peraza and DJ LeMahieu both started the season on the injured list, which prompted the Yanks to trade for INF Jon Berti. But then Berti himself landed on the IL a few days ago, which is what led the club to select Smith’s contract.
Swapping in Trammell for Smith will seemingly give the club a surplus of outfielders but leave them a bit shorthanded on the dirt. Oswaldo Cabrera has taken over as the regular 3rd baseman amid all those injuries, taking a spot next to Anthony Volpe, Gleyber Torres and Anthony Rizzo. The Yankees have Jahmai Jones on hand as a depth infielder, but he’s been given just 1 plate appearance so far this year and only has major league experience at 2nd base and in left field.
LeMahieu is starting a rehab assignment this week but a bench of catcher Jose Trevino, Jones, Grisham and Trammell will leave the club a bit thin on the infield until LeMahieu is ready to rejoin the big league club. Someone will have to lose their roster spot when LeMahieu gets back and time will tell who that is. If Trammell hangs onto his spot, he can be retained well into the future. He has less than two years of service time, meaning he has four years of club control beyond the current campaign.
As for Smith, the Yankees will now have a week to trade him or pass him through waivers. He got into one game as a pinch runner during his time on the roster but didn’t get sent to the plate. He has hit .173/.215/.301 in his 333 career plate appearances at the major league level.
He seemed to have a Triple-A breakout in 2021 when he hit .285/.370/.561 for the top minor league affiliate of the Blue Jays. But since then, his Triple-A performance has been an average-ish .280/.340/.497, which translates to a 101 wRC+. He also struck out in 29.9% of his plate appearances in that time. Like Trammell, he’s out of options but comes with years of potential club control. If he were to pass through waivers unclaimed, he would stick with the Yankees as depth but without occupying a roster spot.
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Post by qimqam on Apr 18, 2024 21:34:43 GMT -5
Yankees havent figured out that AAA stats mean less than AA and A in recent years
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Post by chiyankee on Apr 18, 2024 21:38:40 GMT -5
Yankees havent figured out that AAA stats mean less than AA and A in recent years They also seem to like trying failed prospects from other organizations more than giving their a chance.
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Post by chiyankee on Apr 18, 2024 21:49:16 GMT -5
We can only hope Stanton's resurgence continues.
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