Tag: AJ Burnett

New York Yankees Notes: First Place and More

The Tampa Bay Rays lost last night which puts them in a tie with the Yankees. Both teams have three games left to play, but the Yankees need  a better overall record as the Rays would come out ahead in the event of a tie because they have a better head-to-head record.

Here are some notes:

  • It’s raining a ton here in New York as I write this which may make its way up to Boston tonight and cause a rain out. In that event there is likely to be a double-header on Sunday.

A big loss for the Rays last night, but they are playing the Royals over their final three games. That gives them a pretty good chance to win the next three. That puts a lot of pressure on the Yankees, they must sweep the Red Sox in order to come out on the top of this division.

 

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2010 MLB Playoffs: Yankees Can and Should Avoid Using Burnett In Postseason

Since 1920, 391 Yankees pitchers have had a seasonal ERA of at least 5.30. Of all those pitchers, no pitcher has been allowed to pitch as many innings as A.J. Burnett.

Why? Because Burnett is on a five-year deal, and he is making $16.5 million this season. Essentially, he is here to stay. It is mentally very difficult to waste $16.5 million dollars.

In 2010, Burnett is working on the worst ERA of his career. He is also stacking up the most hits per nine innings in a season, and the most home runs per nine innings. His velocity and strike percentage are also way down.

Burnett is not having a good season by anyone’s standards. You can sit through a Joe Girardi press conference and listen to myths about Burnett’s stuff, but results are results, and Burnett is simply not performing. 

Like I said earlier, the Yankees have stuck with Burnett all the way through this mess, and that is likely due to his big, long-term contract. Say all you want about his potential, but Javier Vazquez has potential too, and you didn’t see the Yankees treat him very well.

So here is my question to you: if you could avoid using one of your worst starting pitchers in the playoffs, would you?

With the playoffs looming, the Yankees are expected to have Burnett in the postseason starting rotation. Here is my message to the Yankees: you don’t need to have Burnett start, so don’t do it.

By now you are aware of Major League Baseball’s brilliant ability to prolong the playoffs. However, in this case, it may actually help the Yankees. Due to the two days off in between games two and three, the Yankees could easily get by on a three-man rotation, just like they did last year.

CC Sabathia would pitch game one, and then pitch on short rest in game four. Andy Pettitte and Phil Hughes would fill in the other two slots in some undetermined order.

This is all assuming that Pettitte can perform. In two starts since returning from the disabled list, Pettitte has had one great start and one horrible start. Hopefully he’lll be on his game as he usually is.

Hughes, the 24 year-old right-hander, has been a bit shaky in the past month, but his lights-out start last time out against the Red Sox was enough to make us believe that he can return to his early to mid-season form.

Bottom line: the Yankees have a much better chance to win in the postseason with a three-man rotation than they do with four-man rotation that includes Burnett.

Burnett has been everything the Yankees feared this season. Money and a desire to keep him happy are not enough to allow this pitcher to sink the Yankees in the playoffs. The Yankees can get by without trouble with a three-man rotation. Avoiding Burnett is possible, and it should be done.

E-mail me at jess@jesskcoleman.com, follow me on Twitter @jesskcoleman, and check out more at jesskcoleman.com.

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Yankees Likely Stuck With A.J. Burnett in Playoff Rotation

Last season, the New York Yankees were able to ride through the playoffs with a three-man rotation. This year’s staff is not built for that. The Yankees will likely need a regular four-starter rotation when the playoffs begin.

This causes a dilemma for manager Joe Girardi. Who is going to be the fourth starter? CC Sabathia is the clear ace and will get the ball in a Game 1 and pitch as often as possible. Following Sabathia will likely be Phil Hughes and Andy Pettitte, in that order to split up the left-handed pitchers.

After those three, however, the choices are unflattering. A.J. Burnett stands in that spot at the moment, but does anyone really trust him?

Burnett is just 10-15 with a 5.33 ERA this season. His latest outing, last night against the Toronto Blue Jays, could have been a confidence boost for both Burnett and the Yankees. The righty took the mound with the chance to help his team clinch a playoff birth.

Instead, Burnett could not get out of the third inning after giving up seven runs, all earned, in 2.1 innings of work. The Blue Jays pounded Burnett, giving the Yankees yet another disappointing start from their high-paid starter.

A 7-7 record and 4.75 ERA before the All-Star break has gotten worse. Burnett is 3-8 with a 6.19 ERA since the break.

As the regular season gets closer and closer to ending, the Yankees had hoped Burnett could turn his season around. Instead, he has pitched to a 6.14 ERA in the month of September.

Continue this article on Double G Sports.

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A.J. Burnett Has Disastrous Performance in Toronto


The Yankees magic number was down to one, but they never really had a chance to clinch last night thanks to an absolutely terrible performance from starter A.J. Burnett, who couldn’t even last three innings as he gave up seven runs over 2.1 innings in a 7-5 loss in Toronto.

Here are some highlights:

  • Burnett’s line: 2.1 IP, 7 H, 7 R, 7 ER, 1 BB, 1 K, 2 HR.
  • He is the first Yankees pitcher since 1992 to post 15 losses in a season.
  • The offense struggled against Mark Rzepczynski, who struck out nine batters in five innings. He did give up a two-run homer to Curtis Granderson.
  • Mark Teixeira made it interesting in the seventh when his three-run homer made it 7-5, but the Yankees didn’t score again.
  • After the game manager Joe Girardi refused to talk about the playoffs and Burnett’s potential involvement in them.

Coming into last night’s game, Burnett was 1-1 with a 4.50 ERA in his last four starts. Nothing spectacular by any stretch, but enough to build on. If he had a good start last night and had a big moment helping the Yankees clinch a playoff spot, you might actually have felt good about him pitching in the playoffs.

At this point it’s certainly hard to imagine him as anything but the fourth starter at best in the playoffs behind CC Sabathia, Andy Pettitte, and Phil Hughes. If the other options weren’t equally as bad, Burnett would be even lower.

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A 2010 World Series Rematch and Why the Phillies Would Be Favored Over Yankees

Monday night, the Philadelphia Phillies won the NL East for the fourth straight season in a row.

Up in Toronto, the New York Yankees evening could have been a champagne party too. Instead, AJ Burnett imploded worse than ever on the mound and the Blue Jays won the game 7-5.

Burnett could not even get out of the third inning, and he was to blame for all seven runs scored.

Rock bottom?

I thought that already happened for Burnett, as he showed glimpses of why the Yankees acquired him in the first place just a week ago.

Well, whatever it is holding AJ back seems to be an off the field issue that is eating away at him. The best Yankee fans can do is just hope Burnett figures himself out, as he is a big piece of the playoff puzzle.

Looking at the playoff picture so far, the Phillies are unanimously the NL favorites to make it to the World Series for the third year in a row.

It would be hard for anyone to disagree with that predictions, considering how hot a September the Phillies are having posting a 19-5 record.

A lot of that success has to do with the pitching rotation, which includes Cole Hamels, Roy Halladay, and Roy Oswalt. It is by far the best threesome in baseball and they keep getting better.

This month their combined record is 13-1, pitching just shy of 95 innings, have a strikeout total of 87 and the month is not over yet.

Another critical component on any team is the closer, and the Phillies have been a roller coaster ride with Brad Lidge since 2008 ended.

Now Lidge has found his swagger again. His 27 saves this season don’t do how he is pitching justice, as Lidge only earned the team’s trust back the last two months. He admitted he needed to change due to loss of velocity on his pitches.

No need to explain how good the Phillies hitters are because the proof is in the names alone: Utley, Howard, Werth, Rollins, Ibanez, Victorino, Ruiz, Valdez, and I think you get the point.

So, could it be a rematch from last year’s World Series?

Sure it could, but the Yankees need to clinch officially and for any team to match-up with Philadelphia my advice is to bring your A-Game.

It would be a treat to fans to see a Yankees-Phillies World Series, because if it is anything like 2009, it is sure to be exciting for baseball as a whole.

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2010 MLB Playoffs: Yankees Need a Backup in Ivan Nova

As the New York Yankees thrust towards the playoffs, with a magic number of three as of this writing, some postseason roster decisions still loom large.

At this point, the concern for the Yankees is their pitching. Yes, CC Sabathia, Phil Hughes, and most of the bullpen will be fine. But beyond that (the other two starters) the Yankees have some issues.

A.J. Burnett’s 4.33 ERA in his past five starts is surprisingly an improvement, but that is not too telling considering his season ERA is north of five. In his past 10 starts, Burnett has pitched anywhere from three and one-third innings, to eight innings. He touched on virtually every number in between as well. 

Andy Pettitte, a notably 38-year-old left-hander, has pitched two games since coming off the disabled list with a groin injury. His first start was a brilliant six-inning affair, during which he surrendered just one run on three hits. Five days later, he coughed up 10 hits and six earned in three and one-third innings against the Red Sox.

What am I getting at? You cannot rely on either of these pitchers into the playoffs; or, to put it a little nicer, you should at least have a backup.

That is where Ivan Nova comes in. Nova has pitched eight games this season for the Yankees, including a stunning, two-run, five and two-thirds innings start against the division rival Rays. Consequently, he finds himself on the brink of a postseason stint. If you ask me, he not only deserves it, but the Yankees need it.

Looking up and down the Yankees active roster, no one is better suited to back up one of the Yankees starters than Nova is.

Now, this is not to say that Burnett and Pettitte cannot be effective. Burnett has pitched a no-hitter, and Pettitte is one of the best pitchers of his era. Sure, they both deserve to be in the starting rotation in the first round of the playoffs, but don’t tell me you are comfortable without a backup.

E-mail me at jess@jesskcoleman.com, follow me on Twitter @jesskcoleman, and check out more at jesskcoleman.com.

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New York Yankees: Rain and Rays Stop Yankees, Lead Down To 1.5 Games

The rain knocked A.J. Burnett out of the game and the Yankees B-squad bullpen let them down as they lost at home 7-2 to the Tampa Bay Rays to drop to just 1.5 games up in first place.

Here are some highlights:

  • Because of the rain, Burnett pitched just three innings and allowed only one run and got credit for the loss.
  • The Yankees were fortunate that the rain knocked Wade Davis out of the game after he held them hitless over 2.1 innings, but they couldn’t take advantage it though as they scored just 2 runs in 6.2 innings off the bullpen.
  • Derek Jeter and Lance Berkman lead the offense with 2 hits apiece. Berkman hit his 1st homer as a Yankee.
  • The Yankees came within one-run of the lead twice, when it was 2-1 in the fifth and then when it was 3-2 in the sixth.
  • David Robertson was unavailable last night because of back pains. MRI’s came back negative.
  • Joe Girardi loves Chad Gaudin and Gaudin cost the Yankees yet again as he allowed back-to-back home runs to Carl Crawford and Evan Longoria in the seventh. The Yankees were trailing 3-2 at that point.

This is a game where the Yankees probably could have won, but Girardi went to the B-squad relievers in order to avoid burning out the big guys he’s going to have to lean on in the playoffs. It’s hard to watch these games, but it’s hard to argue with that tactic since it appears the Yankees will easily make the playoffs.

Their magic number to clinch a playoff spot is down to three. They can clinch as early as tomorrow against the Red Sox.

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2010 MLB Playoffs: Justin Morneau and the 10 Prime Question Marks for Contenders

We are in the home stretch of the long, arduous MLB season. The Minnesota Twins have wrapped up the AL Central, while five others (New York Yankees, Tampa Bay Rays, Texas Rangers, Philadelphia Phillies and Cincinnati Reds) are all pretty much guaranteed spots.

That leaves the quartet of the Atlanta Braves, San Francisco Giants, San Diego Padres and Colorado Rockies jockeying for the final two postseason spots: the National League West Crown and the NL Wild Card.

While each team has their strong points, such as the Padres pitching, and the Rockies having MVP candidates Troy Tulowitzki and Carlos Gonzalez (nice move Billy Beane), they also have their issues.

Below are the top ten players or factors that could affect teams already in or fighting for a postseason spot.

1) Justin Morneau

How bad was that innocuous slide into second base on July 7th for Morneau and the Twins? Well, it turned out to be very harmful, as Morneau has not played since that day, missing over 60 games with a concussion.

Prior to the injury, Morneau hit .345 with 18 homers and 56 RBIs and the former 2006 MVP was on his way to another award this season.  

There is no set timetable for Morneau’s return, and while he did take batting practice last week, his symptoms persist.

The Twins have fared very well in Morneau’s absence (Michael Cuddyer has moved to first base and filled in admirably), but that was mostly against the mediocre at best AL Central foes. The absence of Justin’s big bat in the middle of the lineup could prove fatal in the post season against a team like the Rays, Yankees or Rangers.

2) Joe Mauer

Not only has Morneau missed considerable time, but now the other M of the “M & M Boys” is out with an injury. Mauer hurt his left knee swinging during a game this past Sunday, but an MRI has revealed no structural damage.

This is great news for the Twins who were hoping Mauer did not aggravate a prior left knee injury he suffered in 2004 which ended his rookie season. That injury to his meniscus required surgery.

Winning the division on Tuesday night gives the Twins time to get Mauer needed rest and hopefully back into the lineup for the Division Series.

3) Josh Hamilton

Will Hamilton be able to overcome the pain and play in the post season? Finally diagnosed with two slightly cracked ribs, Hamilton hasn’t played since September 4th. The Rangers lost that game and have been 8-8 with Hamilton out of the lineup.

That is not good enough in the postseason. The Rangers heavy right handed hitting lineup needs Hamilton’s left handed production to win.

My bet is Hamilton plays through the pain.

4) AJ Burnett

The Yankees were ecstatic when Andy Pettitte pitched six high quality innings in his first major league outing after missing two months with a groin strain. Why he was not allowed a seventh inning is still puzzling, but his success gives the Yankees another consistent, top starter for the postseason.

With Phil Hughes back on track after last night’s performance, the Yankees have their third starter ready to go.

But unlike last season, when the Yankees rode three starters to a World Series title, they need four this year.

That is where AJ Burnett comes into play.

Will he be good AJ or bad AJ? He had a horrible June (0-4, 11.35 ERA) and August (0-4, 7.80 ERA), but a great April (3-0, 2.43 ERA) and July (3-1, 2.00 ERA).

His four starts in September have been OK, but unless the Yankees crush the ball in a game, none have been good enough to win a tight postseason game.

He will get a start, but whether it is in Game 2 or Game 4 will depend on how AJ pitches in his last couple starts.

5) Matt Garza and All Rays Pitchers Not Named David Price

This is basically all about the Rays starting pitching, and many of their relievers too. Widely recognized as the premier organization in developing starting pitching, this facet of their team has been terrible in September.

And their relievers have not been great either.

After the recent debacles by Garza and James Shields in the Bronx, Rays starters are 4-6, with a 5.47 ERA and 1.510 WHIP. Remove the four starts by Price, and Rays starters are 2-6, 7.11 ERA in September.

As mentioned previously, the relievers have not fared much better, posting a 4-4 record, 5.07 ERA and 1.459 WHIP.

But with his prior postseason success, Garza again needs to be the No. 2 man behind Price. Other than that, it is up in the air, and if I were Joe Maddon, I would not hesitate to start rookie Jeremy Hellickson in a postseason game.

6) Francisco Cordero

The Reds closer has recently been nothing short of a nightmare. In eight September appearances, Cordero has a 1-1 record with two blown saves and a couple more really scary moments.

His walk rate of 4.8 per nine innings pitched is an insanely high rate for a reliever, let alone a closer. And now he is giving up well more than a hit per inning this past month.

With Aroldis Chapman slinging 103 MPH fastballs and hard-breaking sliders, if Cordero continues to falter in the next two weeks, the Cuban defector is a viable option to close for Reds manager Dusty Baker.

But closing in postseason games is another matter and Chapman has only a month of major league baseball under his belt. My guess is Baker sticks with Cordero, good or bad.

Red fans hope it is the former.

7) San Francisco’s Lineup

If the Giants lose a postseason spot in 2010, they will look back at the time from the season’s commencement through May 27th.

Why? Those days contained the 47 games in which Buster Posey did not play for the Giants. The Giants management told their fans that Posey was “not ready” for the majors behind the plate, but they still needed his bat.

Well, he seemed pretty good to me, and his bat was definitely ready. So, instead of trying to save money by eliminating his Super 2 status, the struggles of Bengie Molina warranted Posey’s call up before the Giants really intended.

But waiting so long might have cost the Giants a few wins early in the season. The Braves are happy they brought up Jason Heyward early. Imagine where the Braves would be now if they did not have Heyward’s .292 AVG/.400 OBP/.578 SLG/.978 OPS in April and May?

Since Barry Bonds last played in 2007, the Giants have always struggled with their offense. They added Aubrey Huff and desperate for offense, the Giants signed two of the biggest negative clubhouse influences in Pat Burrell and Jose Guillen.

Those moves were made because last year’s hitting star, Pablo Sandoval, has struggled all season. The Giants are 12-6 in September, but have scored two or fewer runs in 11 of those contests.

That will not get it done the last dozen games.

Burrell and Guillen have helped in spurts and surprisingly have not caused any issues, but the Sabermetrics guys would say their short time in San Francisco would be a “very short sample.”

The pitching is there in San Francisco, but guys like Sandoval need to hit better, and Burrell and Guillen need to be more productive.

You would hate to have to look back on the first two months and think what might have been? Especially if the Giant miss out on the postseason while Heyward and the Braves sneak in as the Wild Card.

8) San Diego’s Confidence and Strength

The Friars suffered through a stretch where they lost 10 straight games, but still held on to the NL West lead. But after sweeping three games from the Los Angeles Dodgers, the Pads went on to lose five of their next 12. 

Now they are a half game behind the division leading Giants and a full game behind the Wild Card leading Braves. Interestingly, none of these games are in the loss column, as all three teams have 66 losses.

But this season for the Padres will not come down to their offense (anemic, but still better than the Giants) or their pitching (good, but nearly as good as the Giants), but their constitution and strength.

While they are a small market team with a low payroll, this is NOT a exceedingly young team. Veteran presence is strong with Adrian Gonzalez, David Eckstein, Yorvit Torrealba and recent additions Miguel Tejada and Ryan Ludwick.

Three of the starting pitchers are young, including ace Mat Latos (who has been bombed in his last two starts), but veterans Jon Garland and an experienced bullpen headed by Heath Bell and Mike Adams are sound.

My feeling is that the Padres’ veterans and staid manager Buddy Black overcome this lowpoint and come away with a postseason spot. This will be helped by a favorable schedule which sees two more games versus the lowly Dodgers and a seven game homestand against long-distance travel teams in Cincinnati and Chicago.

But the final three game trip to San Francisco is going to be must watch TV late at night here on the East Coast.

9) Joulys Chacin

They have Tulo and CarGo, and Jason Giambi probably is wearing his golden thong again. The lineup has produced a .298/.370/.476/.846 OPS helping lead the annual September surge for the Rocks.

But their pitching staff is just OK, and even with Ubaldo Jiminez seeming to round back into form, their starters are only 8-8 with a 4.05 ERA in September.

A key for them is of course, Jiminez, but Joulys Chacin needs to throw the ball well in his last two starts to keep the bullpen rested and to add another ace to the staff. The Rockies bullpen is throwing more than three innings per game in September with a 4.47 ERA over this span.

The 23-year-old Venezualan rookie is 4-1, 1.88 ERA in his last seven appearances, but has only averaged six innings in those starts. He must be allowed to go longer in his starts like his last outing of eight innings.  

10) Derek Lowe, Tommy Hanson and Tim Hudson

In September, the Braves starting pitchers are 7-10 with a 4.88 ERA but the relievers are much better with a 2-1 record and 2.27 ERA.

Much of that starting pitcher nastiness is centered on two guys, youngsters Mike Minor and Jair Jurrjens. They are a combined 1-4, 7.87 ERA and 1.781 WHIP in 32 IP over seven starts!

And Jurrjens was removed from his last start with what is diagnosed as a small horizontal tear in his meniscus. This injury is to his right knee, his posting leg when on the hill. I would not let him pitch again this season.

With all these injuries and subpar performances, the Braves big three starting pitchers need to produce like they have most of the season. If Derek Lowe (3-0, 1.35 ERA in September), Tommy Hanson (2-1, 2.77 ERA) and Tim Hudson (1-3, 5.33 ERA, but a good last start) can perform well, they can balance out the pitching and a recently shaky offense.

 

Much of these issues revolve around pitching, mostly starting pitching. Great pitching is paramount in September and in the postseason.

In regards to injuries, with the minor league seasons over, this eliminates game situations for injured starts for Justin Morneau, Joe Mauer and Josh Hamilton before they get into a meaningful game. Even if they play, and Mauer and Hamilton are locks to play in the postseason, how will their layoffs affect their performances?  

That is what pressure players do. They perform when the odds are against them. The stars who do play well, and the rotations which perform the best, will get those last two coveted spots in the National League and will decide who advances to the World Series.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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New York Yankees: Could Not Trading for Starting Pitcher Cost Them a Repeat?

On the night that the New York Yankees unveiled a seven-foot tall monument of their late owner George Steinbrenner, the American League leaders won their 91st game of the season by beating the Tampa Bay Rays.

With 12 games to play, New York leads Tampa Bay by 1.5 games in the A.L. East and leads the Minnesota Twins by one game for the best record in the league. 

New York leads the league in runs scored, is third in homers, second in walks, first in OBP, and second in OPS.

On the mound, the Yankees rank in the upper-half of the A.L. in ERA, walks, and strikeouts.

So, what’s the problem?

Well, there is no problem exactly.

New York is a juggernaut, much like the team that beat the Philadelphia Phillies last year to win the World Series.

Prior to the season, the club made two moves that got The Bronx talking. One worked out OK, the other not so much.

New York traded for Curtis Granderson in hopes that he would help it upgrade defensively in centerfield as well as bring some additional pop to the top of the order.

Granderson has done that.

His 21 homers have been nice even if his OBP is lacking for a player with his skill set.

The other deal—bringing in Javier Vazquez—hasn’t paid off for New York. After having a tremendous 2009 with the Atlanta Braves, the Yankees thought they were getting an All-Star caliber pitcher, a guy they could lock into the middle of their rotation.

Vazquez hasn’t been that, but rather a weak link in a solid rotation.

Vazquez’s walks are way up and his strikeouts are way down compared to a season ago. Sure, some of that has to be credited to moving from the National League to the A.L. East, but the point is that Vazquez isn’t who New York thought it would get.

And that’s the issue we are getting at with these Yankees. No, Vazquez isn’t the problem, he’s just part of the problem.

How Deep Is the Starting Rotation?

If there’s one thing that may stifle New York’s chances of repeating as World Series champions, it’s lack of depth in the starting rotation.

The rotation is the one where area that general manager Brian Cashman didn’t address at the trade deadline this summer.

Cashman wanted to upgrade his bench, and he wanted to get some bullpen help.

Adding Lance Berkman and Austin Kearns to the bench worked fine, although both of them have been relatively non-factors. Kearns has struck out in more than a third of his at-bats while Berkman has yet to hit a homer since coming to New York via Houston.

When the Yankees made their title run last year, a large part of it was due to Phil Hughes and his transformation of the bullpen.

Hughes became the set-up guy to Mariano Rivera, and he excelled in that role. Hughes pitched so well that he even hinted he would be open to becoming the closer when Rivera decided to walk away from the game.

No need for that.

Rivera has pitched as well as ever, and the Yankees put Hughes in the starting rotation full-time this season, a role that he has grown accustomed to and has had some early success in.

That left a void in the bullpen.

With Joba Chamberlain struggling and the Yankees not entirely comfortable with handing all of the responsibility to David Robertson, Cashman went and got Kerry Wood.

The epitome of a high-risk, high-reward move, Wood brought his power stuff to New York and has been phenomenal because he has been able to stay healthy. Wood has a 0.39 ERA with 26 strikeouts in 23 innings, his fastball and slider as toxic as ever.

But, boy, the bullpen may need to be that good if New York’s rotation can’t roll out four consistent guys come October.

Look, it’s not as if the Yankees rotation can’t dominate any team on any night. It can. The upside there is tremendous. But the questions, you may say, are plentiful.

CC Sabathia… Then What?

You have CC Sabathia. He’s a horse that manager Joe Girardi can count on for two or three times per series in the playoffs and a guy that you could stack up against any other pitcher in baseball and feel good about. So, the Bombers at least have that much.

But that’s where the certainty ends.

Andy Pettitte had a phenomenal first half but then missed extended time after the All-Star break due to a leg injury and is just working his way back now. How will his leg(s) and arm hold up when the furnace gets cranked up in the postseason? Is his body and arm in the proper condition to handle that stress?

We don’t know.

A.J. Burnett will get the ball, but that’s because of his upside, which is magnificent, and the fact that the Yankees need to justify the mega-dollars they handed him two winters ago along with Sabathia.

But which Burnett New York gets is anybody’s guess.

And then there’s Hughes.

Hughes has good stuff and looks like he has settled into being a starter, but there’s something entirely different about starting in the playoffs when your team is facing elimination, a level of nerves Hughes has never encountered.

That’s where Cashman may have whiffed at the deadline by not securing a Cliff Lee or a Dan Haren.

The Yankees went after Lee hard, but they reportedly didn’t want to empty the farm system for a guy they could go after five months later in free agency.

Yankees catching prospect Jesus Montero was the deal breaker, and then the Texas Rangers stepped up and offered the Seattle Mariners a package built around Justin Smoak.

With that, Lee went to Texas.

And what about Haren?

He would have been great, too, but it again came down to prospects versus dollars for New York.

Cashman didn’t want to split with many premier prospects if he had to pay Haren’s contract entirely, which would have been in excess of $30 million.

Cashman reportedly was willing to part with Joba Chamberlain, but only if the dollars made sense.

It didn’t happen, and now Chamberlain is back to throwing bullets out of the bullpen.

Some shine came off Lee when he got hammered around during August, and some people questioned his health and whether or not he was “breaking down.”

I don’t buy it. I’d still love to lead my rotation with Cliff Lee in the postseason.

The Yankees have the talent to win a title again this year.

Who knows, maybe their starting rotation will be the cog that gets it done?

Or maybe New York will just hit its way to victory?

But unless Pettitte pitches like he did in the first half and Burnett pitches up to his ability, Cashman may have plenty of time to wonder this winter why he didn’t pull the trigger on another starting pitcher.

Follow Teddy Mitrosilis on Twitter. You can reach him at tm4000@yahoo.com.

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Andy Pettitte: Yankee Veteran Returns To Stabilize Rotation As October Looms

Yankee fans and management had been growing uneasy recently, as the state of the starting rotation heading into the final weeks of the season has helped to create as many question as it has answered.

The prospect of heading into the post-season with a starting rotation led by CC Sabathia, followed by Phil Hughes, A.J. Burnett, and Javier Vazquez or Ivan Nova was enough to shake the confidence of even the most ardent supporter of the team.

Of course, CC is the indisputable ace of the staff, providing stability at the head of the rotation, and the obvious choice to start any Game One the Yankees have. Immediately thereafter however, the uncertainty begins.

Phil Hughes, the 24-year-old right-hander, whom the Yankees view as a potential future ace, has stumbled occasionally down the stretch as he nears the proposed innings limit the Yankees have in place to protect his arm. He has won 16 games, and was named an All-Star in July, but as he has ventured deeper into uncharted territory in regard to his innings total, fatigue has appeared to take its toll upon him.

That’s not to say he has pitched poorly because that’s not the case. But his results over the last three months have been uneven, and in three of his last five starts, he’s given up four earned runs or more. Of course, in his last start against the Rays in Tampa, he pitched masterfully but was undone by two swings of Dan Johnson’s bat, ending up on the wrong end of a 4-3 result.

As he has now doubled his innings total from last season, it is difficult to know what to expect of the young hurler going forward into October. Add to that the fact that he has not yet started a playoff game in his young career, and one can understand the reluctance to lean on him too heavily.

A.J. Burnett on the other hand boasts 12 seasons of major league experience, as well as five starts for the Yankees in their run to the World Series title during the 2009 post-season.

Despite his resume, the 33-year-old Burnett represents possibly the biggest question mark on the Yankee staff. To say he has been inconsistent in 2010 would be an understatement. The variance between his good days and his bad days could possibly be the greatest chasm in baseball today. Blessed with such phenomenal stuff, he’s just as likely to hurl a thoroughly dominant gem as he is to completely lose control and toss what resembles batting practice to the opposing team.

In Burnett’s 30 starts in 2010, he’s gone at least six innings and allowed two earned runs or less 10 times. Conversely, he has given up at least five earned runs in nine other starts. The utter inconsistency becomes more frustrating when you know what he’s capable of. His four September starts have been an improvement from his embarrassingly awful August, where he went 0-4 with a 7.80 ERA. A continual trend of improved performances must be demonstrated if Joe Girardi is to show faith in Burnett and reward him with post-season starting pitching assignments.

Javier Vazquez has been similarly inconsistent, but he has at least developed enough of a pattern to gain some level of expectation regarding his performance. After dealing with “dead arm” issues, and apparently working through them to see his velocity increase once again, Vazquez has returned to the bullpen for the time being. This could only be temporary however, so he remains a consideration for the October rotation.

His candidacy is harmed by his poor playoff experience, especially that of his showing against Boston in 2004, too recent to have been expunged from the collective memory of Yankees fans.

The other issue is that against stronger offensive clubs in the AL, Javy has almost invariably struggled. His efforts against Tampa, Texas, and Minnesota (his likely playoff adversaries) are among his very worst of 2010. Against those three potential foes, in five starts over 27 innings he has allowed 52 base-runners and 27 earned runs. Those are numbers that don’t exactly instill the kind of confidence necessary to send him to the mound in the ALCS. He would likely serve out of the bullpen in the first series, as a fourth starter may not be necessary in a best-of five set.

23 year-old Ivan Nova, he of five career major league starts, will be around for an emergency, but is unlikely to see a spot in the playoff rotation with all those veteran arms around. If it became necessary for the Yankees to use him, his demeanor and poise could serve to calm the panic over starting such an inexperienced pitcher on such a dramatic stage. However unlikely the scenario may be, Nova doesn’t seem the type of young player to wilt under pressure.

These various uncertainties combine to make the return of Andy Pettitte all the more critical for the Yankees. After a few hiccups on his path back to the big league rotation, Pettitte finally found himself back on a mound at Camden Yards yesterday. Out of action since injuring his groin against Tampa on July 18, the veteran left-hander’s presence had been sorely missed. At the time of his injury, Pettitte had been 11-2 with a 2.88 ERA and was in the midst of one of the finer seasons of his career.

Please continue HERE to read the full article, and for more quality New York Yankees content by Scott Gyurina, please check out PinstripeWest.com.

Here are a few other recent Yankee articles you may enjoy as well.

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/466282-new-york-yankees-alex-rodriguez-and-his-quest-for-the-elusive-clutch-reputation

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/464117-ny-yankees-kerry-wood-joba-chamberlain-and-the-state-of-the-bronx-bullpen

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