Tag: AL East

Red Sox Become 1st Team Since 1999 to Score 13+ Runs in 3 Straight

The Boston Red Sox scored 13 or more runs in each contest of a three-game series against the Oakland Athletics, becoming the first team since the 1999 Cleveland Indians to plate 13-plus runs in three consecutive games, per ESPN Stats & Info.

After losing two of three games to the rival New York Yankees in a weekend series in the Bronx, the Red Sox returned home and beat the Athletics by scores of 14-7 (Monday), 13-5 (Tuesday) and 13-3 (Wednesday).

According to MLB Stat of the Day, the Red Sox had previously never scored 13-plus runs in three straight games, despite being one of the oldest franchises in baseball.

It obviously takes a team effort to sustain that kind of production throughout a series, but there were still a few notable standouts, including 26-year-old outfielder Jackie Bradley Jr., who had eight hits, three home runs and 13 RBI over the course of the three-game set.

Even more encouraging for Boston, first baseman Hanley Ramirez continued his hot-hitting ways, with his five hits in the series boosting his batting line to .297/.343/.453.

After tallying just one home run and 13 RBI in April, the 32-year-old slugger already has three long balls and eight RBI through his first nine games in May.

With stalwarts David Ortiz and Dustin Pedroia also swinging the bat well this season, the Red Sox appear to have a dangerous offense that features an ideal combination of young talent and proven veterans.

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What If the Yankees Became 2016 Trade-Deadline Sellers?

It’s looking like not even the New York Yankees can outrun losing forever, and that raises a question.

What would it look like if they decided to make the best of a bad situation?

It’s already easy to imagine the Yankees will have to cut their losses by becoming sellers on the summer trade market. They’re following a return to the postseason in 2015 with a 13-19 start to 2016, putting them in last place in the American League East. 

General manager Brian Cashman has already put his foot down. As he told David Waldstein of the New York Times, he’ll be forced to “look for alternatives” if his team doesn’t “self-correct.” 

But waiting on this Yankees team to self-correct could be a wait with no end. With poor performances on offenseon defense and on the mound to blame, their slow start can’t be chalked up to bad luck. Lo and behold, neither Baseball Prospectus nor FanGraphs projects them to make a comeback.

In other words, this is not a drill. After 23 straight years of winning, the Yankees finally appear ticketed for a losing season.

By traditional Yankees standards, this is an outrage. They’re not supposed to lose, darn it. And when losing is happening, it’s nothing that abiding by the legacy of George Steinbrenner can’t fix.

But by today’s Yankees standards, it’s not the worst thing in the world. Even in saying the team can’t ever rebuild, team president Randy Levine sort of admitted that the team is trying to rebuild.

“What has to be noticed here, unlike very few teams, what we’ve done, is we can’t rebuild here,” Levine said in December, via Kevin Kernan of the New York Post. “That’s not what we’re about. We’re trying to win every year, and we’re trying to get younger and transition.”

The Yankees have indeed made an effort to get younger, bringing in Starlin Castro, Didi Gregorius and Nathan Eovaldi (all 26), as well as Michael Pineda and Masahiro Tanaka (both 27), in recent seasons. Club boss Hal Steinbrenner has also committed to rebuilding the club’s farm system. And after spending exactly $0 in free agency over the winter, the Yankees sure seem interested in saving money for the future.

If the Yankees really wanted to further these efforts by selling ahead of (and even after) the July 31 trade deadline, they could start by dealing a few valuable trade chips.

Andrew Miller and Dellin Betances, who are among baseball’s nastiest relievers, headline that list. And in light of recent developments, Joel Sherman of the New York Post suggests Eovaldi and Pineda also have considerable value:

Cashman would need to open up extra phone lines if he were to put these guys on the block. Just about every team could use a Miller or a Betances, especially since neither would be a rental. And despite their inconsistencies, Pineda and Eovaldi are two talented young pitchers who are controlled through 2017.

But don’t count on it. There’s a line between selling and tanking, and the Yankees would surely steer clear of the latter. They’ll want to have a shot at winning in 2017 and beyond, so they’ll keep Miller, Betances, Pineda and Eovaldi alongside Tanaka, Castro, Gregorius and Luis Severino no matter what.

The Yankees would surely prefer to move some of their well-paid geezers, including Alex Rodriguez, Jacoby Ellsbury, Chase Headley, Brian McCann and Brett Gardner (all 32 with the exception of the 40-year-old Rodriguez). But in all likelihood, that’s not happening, either.

The Yankees are stuck with A-Rod for a variety of obvious reasons. A painfully slow start has killed Headley’s trade value. There could be interest in Ellsbury, but Jim Bowden of ESPN.com is right in thinking the Yankees could only move him in a bad contract swap. And though many teams could use offense at catcher, McCann’s home/road splits could scare suitors just as much as his contract.

That just leaves Gardner. His contract doesn’t have a no-trade clause, and it gets cheaper beyond 2016. He’s also showing he can still hit, posting a .773 OPS in 30 games. And though these are arguably reasons for the Yankees to keep him, he’s a 32-year-old who’s probably running out of good years. If they can save some money and bring back some talent by moving him, they should.

After Gardner, the Yankees’ list of trade chips is narrowed down to three free-agents-to-be: Aroldis Chapman, Mark Teixeira and Carlos Beltran.

Chapman would be an easy sell. The flame-throwing lefty has been baseball’s most valuable reliever since 2012, and he’s already served his punishment for an alleged domestic violence incident. If the Red Sox could turn Miller into Eduardo Rodriguez a couple of years ago, the Yankees might do even better in a Chapman trade.

Teixeira and Beltran would be harder sells. They’re off to slow starts offensively, and both are old and expensive. Teixeira is 36 and owed $23.15 million. Beltran is 39 and owed $15 million. To boot, Teixeira has a full no-trade clause, and Beltran also has some no-trade protection.

For markets for Teixeira and/or Beltran to develop, they would have to be willing to move, and the Yankees would likely have to be willing to eat some money. And even then, they would probably have to be happy with accepting merely low-level talent.

In all, any selling the Yankees do is likely to be more of a small campfire than a raging, everything-must-go fire sale. Chapman is one piece they could move for a significant haul. Otherwise, they may be content with flipping Gardner, Teixeira and/or Beltran for financial flexibility and whatever young talent they can get back.

However, don’t think that even a small sale couldn’t have a big impact in the long run.

Any money the Yankees save this summer will only help the team make it rain in future free-agent markets, including the loaded class of 2018-19. Likewise, even a small injection of talent could help a farm system that Baseball America ranked No. 17 at the beginning of the year. 

With Beltran out of the way, the Yankees could promote Aaron Judge and have him play out the string in right field. They could move McCann to first base and do the same with Gary Sanchez behind the plate. They could also move Headley to first base and see what Rob Refsnyder can do at third.

If the Yankees could have it their way, they’d shake off their early struggles and get back to doing what pinstriped teams usually do best. But if this season does indeed knock them down a few pegs, that could prove to be a good thing in the long run.

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted/linked. No-trade clause information courtesy of Cot’s Baseball Contracts.

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Red Sox’s Steven Wright Taking Reins as MLB’s New Knuckleball King

Knuckleball pitchers stick together.

They understand each other in a way that no one else can. They ask each other questions that no one else can answer.

And when one of their own is pitching on national TV, they’re going to do what they can to watch.

So last Sunday night, Steve Sparks skipped the NBA playoffs and watched baseball’s latest knuckleball king instead.

It was a good night to watch Steven Wright, a 31-year-old who flings his knuckleballs for the Boston Red Sox. Wright came within one out of a complete-game shutout against the New York Yankees. He ended up with a three-hitter, the best performance by a Red Sox starter this season.

“It was remarkable,” Sparks said a couple of days later.

This season has been remarkable so far for Wright, who only made the Boston rotation out of spring training because Eduardo Rodriguez was hurt. Now he has the third-lowest ERA in the American League (1.52).

Wright’s career has been remarkable, too, the story of a onetime Cleveland Indians second-round draft pick who saw his development stalled in Double-A until he listened to suggestions to try the knuckleball. But it usually works that way with a pitch that can be incredibly hard to hit but also hard to learn and control.

There’s a reason there aren’t that many guys who throw it, a reason why such a bond develops between those who do. Sparks, who pitched nine seasons in the major leagues and now calls Houston Astros games on the radio, leaned heavily on Charlie Hough, who rode the knuckleball to a 25-year career.

So did Wright, who also has the benefit of talking regularly to ex-Red Sox knuckleballer Tim Wakefield.

“There’s definitely a camaraderie,” Wright said. “I talk a lot with Wake and with Charlie Hough. I talk to R.A. [Dickey], because he’s in the same division. I saw Steve Sparks when we were in Houston, and Tom Candiotti.”

He’s younger than all of them, and now he’s the one who can take their pitch and carry it into the future. When Sparks watched Wright dominate the Yankees, he could see that the future of the knuckleball was in good hands.

“It reminded me of Dickey in his Cy Young season,” Sparks said.

It’s not a bad comparison. Dickey threw back-to-back one-hitters at one point in that 2012 season. Wright hasn’t done that, but he has allowed just three hits in each of his last three starts. He’s gone at least six innings in each start this season and hasn’t allowed more than two runs in any of them.

Even with Rodriguez and Joe Kelly close to coming off the disabled list, there’s no way the Red Sox can take Wright out of the rotation now.

“I think his pitching is speaking loud and clear,” Red Sox manager John Farrell said.

The bigger question is whether Wright can sustain this, and for how long. Knuckleballers can have long careers—Hough pitched until he was 46, Phil Niekro started a game at 48 and Dickey is 41 now—but their reliance on one sometimes-erratic pitch can make consistency tough to achieve.

“I want to just go out and do the best I can do,” Wright said. “Hopefully I can make it and carry the torch for 10-12 years.”

Sparks believes it’s possible.

“To be honest, watching Steven, I really think he has a chance to do this for a long time,” Sparks said.

Like so many who have eventually mastered the knuckleball, Wright took a long time to get to this spot. He was drafted as a conventional pitcher back in 2006, and he advanced as far as Double-A throwing fastballs and sliders.

He messed around with a knuckleball, just as many conventional pitchers do. By his fourth season in the minor leagues, he even threw it in games, but just occasionally, when he was ahead in the count and wanted an out pitch.

The next year, in 2011, he listened to advice from some in the Indians organization and tried throwing the knuckleball all the time.

Wright didn’t get to the major leagues until 2013, and not until he’d been traded to the Red Sox for minor league first baseman Lars Anderson. His first big league start was a one-inning disaster, with two walks, a hit batter and four Ryan Lavarnway passed balls leading to three runs.

There have been passed balls this year, too, as there always will be with a knuckleballer. But Wright’s comfort with catcher Ryan Hanigan, and Hanigan‘s comfort with catching the knuckleball, seems to be growing with each start.

Meanwhile, Sparks saw from afar why Wright’s knuckleball has been so good.

“You can see that his palm is behind the ball, and that takes the spin off it,” Sparks said. “That’s key, and it’s hard to do. As a conventional pitcher, you’re taught to throw downhill toward the catcher. But I learned from Charlie Hough that with the knuckleball, you don’t want to do that. The key is to pick out a high target, then figure out how to keep your hand on the ball as long as you can. [Wright] has his palm behind the ball. He’s not tilting forward, and that’s how you get that dancing movement.”

He has “active and violent” movement, as Farrell described it. And he has a chance, a chance to help the Red Sox win and to carry on the tradition for knuckleballers everywhere.

Wherever they are, they’re watching.

 

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball.

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Aroldis Chapman Comments on 1st Appearance with Yankees in Win vs. Royals

New York Yankees closer Aroldis Chapman made his debut against the Kansas City Royals on Monday and was flattered by the reaction he received from the home crowd.

“It was incredible,” he said through a translator, per ESPN.com’s Andrew Marchand.

The 28-year-old Cuban wowed the fans with his vintage 100-plus mph fastballs. Coming on in the ninth inning with New York up 6-2, he struck out the first two hitters he faced but allowed a double to Paulo Orlando before Alcides Escobar delivered an RBI single.

Chapman eventually forced Lorenzo Cain to ground out two batters later to seal the Yankees’ 6-3 win.

Regardless, Chapman still appeared to be happy with his first appearance in pinstripes.

“I felt good out there for being my first outing,” he said through a translator, according to the Associated Press (via Fox Sports). “Very excited and happy to see the fans receive me the way they did, but I was looking to stay focused and get the job done.”

ESPN.com’s Jayson Stark provided a breakdown of Chapman’s heaters on the day:

MLB.com director of baseball research and development Daren Willman also noted that Chapman did not take long to set a league standard:

With Chapman back, the Yankees can finally start to deploy their loaded bullpen, which also features Dellin Betances and Andrew Miller. However, New York needs to start building leads if it wants to put that unit to good use. The team is last in the American League in runs scored, according to ESPN.com.

The return of New York’s marquee offseason addition should provide a spark with his electrifying stuff. Look for the Yankees to start stringing together some wins in the near future with the team being close to full strength.

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Aroldis Chapman’s Comeback Gives Lifeless Yankees a Must-Watch Spark

Finally, over the weekend, the New York Yankees generated a little excitement. Finally, Yankee Stadium had some life in back-to-back wins over the Boston Red Sox.

You’d have thought Aroldis Chapman was on the mound.

Not yet, but soon enough. On Monday, Chapman’s 30-game domestic violence suspension runs out. Soon, maybe even Monday night against the Kansas City Royals, New York will see what all of the fuss is about.

The Yankees saw Chapman in spring training, before he began serving the Major League Baseball-imposed suspension for an incident last October in which he allegedly fired eight shots from a gun into his garage wall and put his hands around his girlfriend’s neck. Chapman wasn’t arrested or prosecuted, but MLB found enough evidence to justify action under its new domestic violence policy.

Chapman has served his time, and the Yankees are happy to welcome him into their clubhouse and into their bullpen. But even with his 546 career strikeouts (in 319 innings) and more than 1,400 triple-digit fastballs, the man they’re welcoming remains something of a mystery to them.

Those who have already seen that mystery unfold on the field would say Yankees fans are in for a treat.

“They have no idea what they’re about to see,” said Tomas Vera. “In 120 years of Yankee history, the Yankees haven’t seen this. The New York Yankees have not seen what they’re going to see.”

Vera is more than a little biased. Beyond working with Chapman as the Cincinnati Reds‘ assistant athletic trainer, he became close enough to the left-handed relief pitcher that they still talk regularly.

But even if he says it a little more enthusiastically than most, Vera is only echoing what others have said about the show Chapman can put on when he takes the mound to close a game. Even in a Yankee bullpen that already includes Andrew Miller and Dellin Betances, Chapman should stand out.

They throw hard. He throws harder. MLB.com’s Statcast system includes data back to 2008, and it says 1,404 of the 5,485 Chapman pitches tracked came in at 100 mph or faster. No other pitcher had more than 310 triple-digit pitches (Joel Zumaya).

According to Statcast, Chapman hit triple digits on 453 pitches last season alone, doing it on 39 percent of the pitches he threw.

Not surprisingly, his career ratio of 15.4 strikeouts per nine innings is the most in baseball history, according to Baseball-Reference.com’s Play Index.

“I’m excited to see him pitch on a daily basis,” said Betances, whose 14.03 ratio ranks third all-time (with Boston Red Sox closer Craig Kimbrel second, at 14.57).

“Hopefully he makes us better,” Miller said.

Maybe he will, maybe he won’t.

As good a show as Chapman puts on, with fastballs that can reach 105 mph on the radar gun and strikeouts at a rate never seen before, he’s just the guy who will pitch the ninth inning when the Yankees have a lead.

They’ve had a ninth-inning lead just 10 times in 29 games. They won all 10 games.

They led entering the ninth inning 81 times in 2015. They won all of those games, too.

Chapman’s arrival pushes Miller from the ninth inning to the eighth and Betances from the eighth to the seventh. It makes it more likely manager Joe Girardi will have at least one or two of his late-inning options available every night.

But holding leads hasn’t been the issue for a Yankee team that has spent the past two weeks alone in last place in the American League East. Getting leads is the issue due to their inconsistent starting pitching and often-inexistent offense, and Chapman’s presence won’t help them solve either of those problems.

Chapman ended up missing 29 games, because the Yankees had one postponement that didn’t extend the suspension. There’s not one of those 29 games you can point to and say they would have won if they’d had Chapman in the bullpen. Not one.

So why is he here, and why should you care?

He’s here because after the domestic violence issue came up, a proposed trade that would have sent him from the Reds to the Los Angeles Dodgers fell apart. When the Yankees realized they could get him for the minimal price of Caleb Cotham, Rookie Davis, Eric Jagielo and Tony Renda, they decided it was too good a deal to pass up.

They took him knowing there was a chance he’d be suspended, and during spring training they found out the suspension would cost him 30 games. At a Sunday press conference, Chapman said that he had learned from the suspension, although he didn’t really explain what he had learned.

“The good thing is that’s behind me now,” he said through an interpreter.

Chapman left Cuba for the United States six years ago, and during the suspension he completed the process of becoming a U.S. citizen. But he still uses an interpreter for all interviews, and his English isn’t even good enough to allow long conversations with his non-Spanish-speaking teammates.

Miller and Chapman had side-by-side lockers in the Yankees’ spring training clubhouse.

“He’s a quiet guy,” Miller said.

Not always, he isn’t.

Chapman’s Reds teammates talk about how fun and funny he can be, and what a good teammate he was. Vera said that once the Yankees get to know him, they’ll see that side of him as well.

“Chappy’s unbelievable,” he said. “If he gets to the point he learns the language, you’ll laugh consistently. … I would love to see him be able to communicate fluently, because his life experience, it’s so much fun.”

He has a generous side, too. Vera tells the story of Chapman going to see a Cuban musical group play and finding out that their instruments were all falling apart. He invited the group to lunch the next day and then took them to buy an entire new set.

“That’s him,” Vera said. “Nobody knows that.”

Chapman can also be serious, as he was when he told Billy Witz of the New York Times he thinks Latin players can become a “target.”

“We make a lot of money, everyone wants a piece of it, and we end up looking bad,” he said. “When I had the [domestic violence] problem, everyone thinks I did something wrong; on social media, people are saying I hit my girlfriend.”

Chapman said Sunday that he never meant to suggest that Major League Baseball had targeted him or other Latin players with the domestic violence policy that resulted in the suspension. He accepted the suspension even though he continues to maintain he did nothing wrong (and never faced criminal charges).

Despite the serious allegations, the Yankees were willing to take him, and when Chapman becomes a free agent at the end of the season, you can bet other teams will be willing, too.

For one thing, by all accounts, he’s a good teammate. For another, he’s special on the mound.

In fact, there are those who think Chapman could be even more special in New York than he was in Cincinnati.

“All the reviews say the brighter the lights, the better he gets,” Miller said.

“It’s like the last show of the circus, the highlight,” Vera said. “He’d be a highlight anywhere. But the bigger the crowd, the more they cheer, the better the show.”

Starting Monday, the show comes to Yankee Stadium.

 

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball.

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David Price Comments on Recent Struggles, Dustin Pedroia’s Advice

Boston Red Sox pitcher David Price said Sunday he is confident he will turn his season around.

This comes after teammate Dustin Pedroia went up to Price before Boston’s Sunday night game against the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium and showed him pictures of his delivery the past few seasons compared to 2016, according to Dan Shaughnessy of the Boston Globe.   

Price said the problem is an “easy fix.”

“I put myself in this situation,’’ Price said, per Shaughnessy. “I can’t be upset about it. I’ve got to block all that stuff out. This has been, hands down, the worst I’ve thrown a baseball over a seven-game stretch. To me, it can only get better.”

Price later commented that his performance this season is hurting his team, according to WEEI.com’s John Tomase: 

The 30-year-old lefty is certainly not pitching like himself. Although he is 4-1, Price is sporting an ERA of 6.75, which is well below his career average of 3.19. If not for Boston’s high-powered offense, which leads the American League in runs, Price could be floating around one to two wins on the year.

Given his history of being one of baseball’s top arms, Price should be able to find a rhythm. Most pitchers go through slumps during the course of the season. Price is just lucky his is coming when Boston’s bats are hitting well enough to bail him out. 

Look for him to figure himself out in his next few outings and start earning that $217 million deal he signed this offseason. Good on Pedroia as well for being a team leader by trying to help Boston’s ace.

 

All statistics courtesy of ESPN.com. 

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David Price’s Latest Dud Turns Slow Start with Red Sox into Real Concern

The Boston Red Sox made a $217 million bet that David Price would be the ace they badly needed. And at first, it seemed like he would be.

Things have gone so far downhill since then, however, that it’s hard not to bite your nails and wonder if there will come a time when things start going uphill again.

Seven starts into his first season with the Red Sox, Price is running a 6.75 ERA. The New York Yankees did their part to push that figure skyward when they got to the veteran left-hander for six runs last Sunday, and they tagged him for six more in an 8-2 thumping at Yankee Stadium on Saturday.

It was Didi Gregorius who got the big hit, sending a three-run double down the right field line that gave the Yankees a 4-1 lead in the fourth inning.

Now, it’s not impossible to put a positive spin on Price’s inflated ERA. For example, you can look at expected fielding independent pitching (xFIP) and see that it puts Price’s “true” ERA at 2.95. That ranks him among the top 10 starters in baseball.

The suggestion there is that a rogue wave of bad luck in the early going has blindsided Price. That’s apparent on a micro level, as Mike Axisa of CBS Sports pointed out the pitch Gregorius hit was actually a well-located changeup.

It’s also apparent on a macro level, as Price is dealing with a .373 batting average on balls in play (BABIP) and has stranded only 54.2 percent of the runners he’s put on base. In time, both numbers should change for the better.

But to chalk Price’s 6.75 ERA entirely up to bad luck is to ignore that he has some real problems he may not be able to fix.

One of these problems is an open secret: Price hasn’t had his usual velocity. According to Brooks Baseball, he worked around 95 mph with his four-seamer and sinker and over 90 mph with his cutter in 2015. He hasn’t been able to find zip like that on his heat so far in 2016:

It would be one thing if Price’s velocity was at least trending upward, but it’s heading in the opposite direction. Not exactly encouraging, that.

The popular retort in a discussion like this is that velocity isn’t everything. But while that’s true, even Price himself can admit it’s something that counts for a lot.

“I feel like the more velocity that you have, the more mistakes you get away with,” Price said after Saturday’s game, per Ian Browne of MLB.com. “Right now, I’m not getting away with mistakes—or good pitches, for that matter. That’s part of it. They hit some good pitches today.”

Price has a point. Even before the Yankees knocked him around (again), Baseball Savant had the slugging percentage against his fastballs at .455. That’s the highest it’s ever been.

Less velocity may not be the only dark cloud hanging over Price’s arsenal of pitches. His stuff has often looked flat to the naked eye, and that may not be a mirage. He’s seeing some slight variation in the horizontal and vertical movement of his pitches. In a related story, the average spin rate on his pitches going into Saturday’s start was down from last season:

  • 2015: 2,147 rpm
  • 2016: 2,029 rpm

This is where it becomes hard to blame Price’s struggles on bad luck. There has been some of that, but he’s also been hit harder. His average exit velocity was more than 2 mph higher than his 2015 mark going into Saturday, and the Yankees probably made that worse. Such is life when a pitcher is dealing with lesser velocity and flatter stuff.

The question that arises is whether there’s something physically wrong with Price, but there doesn’t seem to be any evidence of that. His release point is fine, and the Red Sox don’t see any red flags.

“That’s not health-related,” Red Sox manager John Farrell said in reference to Price’s velocity, per Browne. “Right now we’re examining everything. Physically, he checks out, as we check all of our pitchers after a start. So it’s not a health-related issue.”

If Price is indeed healthy, the hope that arises is that maybe the struggle that seems so real is actually, you know, just one of those things.

But that may be a fool’s hope. The likely explanation is that Price is finally succumbing to age now that he’s past his 30th birthday. Per the aging curves that Bill Petti presented at FanGraphs, Price is already well beyond the age when starting pitchers tend to start losing velocity. We don’t yet know how spin rate is affected by age, but it’s easy to imagine there’s a similar correlation.

So rather than wait for Price to get his old stuff back, the best hope is that he’ll find ways to make do with what he has. That’s a matter of sequencing and location, and the bright side is that the latter is still one of Price’s strengths. He may be struggling to get hitters out, but he’s not having issues with walks (2.6 per nine innings) or throwing strikes (66.2 strike percentage).

Whether a new version of Price can be better than vintage Price is anyone’s guess. That’s a high bar to clear, as vintage Price used his power arsenal to win two ERA titles and a Cy Young in the last four seasons.

If that’s the guy the Red Sox were hoping to get, it may be time for them to lower their expectations.

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted/linked.

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Ortiz Passes Sheffield to Join Top 25 of All-Time Home Runs List

Boston Red Sox designated hitter David Ortiz hit the 510th home run of his career during Friday’s 3-2 loss to the New York Yankees, passing former Yankee Gary Sheffield to take sole possession of 25th place on the all-time homers list, per MLB Stat of the Day.

Unfortunately for the Red Sox, Ortiz’s line-shot, two-run homer off Yankees pitcher Michael Pineda in the first inning represented the only runs the team would score all game.

Down 3-2 in the top of the ninth inning, Boston managed to load the bases for Ortiz with one out, but the slugger struck out looking and was subsequently ejected for arguing the call.

Yankees closer Andrew Miller then fanned Red Sox first baseman Hanley Ramirez for the final out, improving New York’s record to 10-17 while dropping Boston’s to 17-12.

In addition to moving him into the top 25 of the all-time list, Friday’s home run was Ortiz’s 452nd in a Red Sox uniform, pulling him even with Hall of Famer Carl Yastrzemski for second place on the franchise list, per ESPN Stats & Info.

The leader, of course, is legendary outfielder Ted Williams, who hit each of his 521 home runs in a Boston uniform.

Interestingly enough, Friday’s long ball was Ortiz’s 50th against the Yankees, making him just the sixth player ever to slug at least 50 career homers against baseball’s pre-eminent villains, per MLB Stat of the Day.

The list is unsurprisingly full of former Red Sox, with Ortiz joined by Jimmie Foxx (70), Williams (62), Manny Ramirez (55), Hank Greenberg (53) and Yastrzemski (52). Of the six players, Greenberg is the only one who never played for the Red Sox.

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Jacoby Ellsbury Injury: Updates on Yankees Star’s Hip and Return

Jacoby Ellsbury‘s injury woes have cropped up again as the New York Yankees star outfielder left Friday’s game against the Boston Red Sox with a hip injury. It’s unclear when he’ll return to the field. 

Continue for updates. 


Girardi Comments on Ellsbury’s Injury, Recovery Timeline

Saturday, May 7 

Yankees manager Joe Girardi told reporters Ellsbury is “sore” and noted there is no plan to put him on the disabled list at this point.  


Ellsbury Out vs. Red Sox

Saturday, May 7

Ellsbury did not play Saturday against Boston.


Injury-Prone Ellsbury Still Productive for Yankees  

Ellsbury was plagued by injuries in 2015. He suffered a sprained right knee May 19, 2015 in a game against the Washington Nationals that landed him on the disabled list before he was able to return on July 8. He was able to stay healthy for the rest of the season, but he only played 111 total games. 

The 32-year-old outfielder has had injury problems in the past, playing fewer than 100 games in 2010 and 2012 as a member of the Boston Red Sox. He struggled in his first two seasons with the Yankees, posting a .265/.324/.387 slash line, and he was off to a slow start in 2016 entering Friday (.216/.315/.380). 

Ellsbury’s defense has also suffered because of injuries and playing center field into his 30s. FanGraphs‘ metrics indicate he’s cost the Yankees four runs with the glove since 2014, after posting positive runs saved totals each season from 2010-13. 

The Yankees came into 2016 with high expectations following a playoff appearance last season, but the core of this roster is old with players like Ellsbury, Mark Teixeira, Alex Rodriguez and Brian McCann all over 30 years old. Rodriguez and CC Sabathia were placed on the disabled list this week. 

Ellsbury’s health will be a key component for them keeping up with Boston and the Toronto Blue Jays in the American League East because of his ability to change a game with his legs on the bases and in center field.

Right now though, the Yankees would settle for him being able to stay on the field. 

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CC Sabathia Injury: Updates on Yankees Star’s Groin and Return

The start of the New York Yankees‘ 2016 season has been a nightmare, and things got worse Friday when the team announced starting pitcher CC Sabathia was placed on the 15-day disabled list with a groin strain. It’s unclear when he’ll return to the field. 

Continue for updates. 


Sabathia Comments on Recovery Timeline

Saturday, May 7

Sabathia told reporters he should only need 15 days on the disabled list, adding he’s unsure whether a rehab start will be necessary.


Sabathia’s DL Stint Retroactive to May 5

Friday, May 6

The Star-Ledger‘s Ryan Hatch relayed the news. In a corresponding move, the Yankees reportedly called up relief pitcher Phil Coke, per Ken Rosenthal of Fox Sports.


Sabathia Crucial to Yankees’ Rotation 

Although the Yankees have sputtered to the tune of an American League East-worst record of 10-17 to start the season, Sabathia has been one of the team’s few bright spots. 

After spending time in an alcohol rehabilitation center during the offseason, per USA Today, following a lackluster 2015 campaign, Sabathia kicked off 2016 on the right foot with a win on his first start of the season, against the Detroit Tigers

While two losses and a no-decision followed that outing, Sabathia rebounded with a great game Wednesday against the Baltimore Orioles. The 35-year-old struck out six batters and allowed just six hits over seven innings, as the Yankees shut out their divisional foe. The start seemed to provide the team with an emotional boost.

“It felt great, and it all starts with CC,” Yankees outfielder Brett Gardner said after the team snapped its six-game losing streak, according to the New York Post‘s George A. King III. “After the game it felt like we clinched a playoff spot.”

But now Sabathia’s on the shelf, the Yankees will need to lean on Masahiro Tanaka, Michael Pineda and Nathan Eovaldi to shoulder the load. 

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