Tag: Brian Cashman

Top 5 Reasons Why Brian Cashman Should Be Fired As GM of the New York Yankees

The New York Yankees’ offseason has been marked by inactivity, as they have sat on the sidelines and watched teams like the Boston Red Sox and Philadelphia Phillies load up with big-name free agents.

Other than the signings of their two key free agents, Derek Jeter and Mariano Rivera, the Yankees’ two main signings have been lefty reliever Pedro Feliciano and catcher Russell Martin. The team has been on a downward spiral that started right after the Yankees won the 2009 World Series. The man most responsible is general manager Brian Cashman.

Without further ado, let’s look at the top five reasons why Brian Cashman should be fired.

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New York Yankees: Patience Part 1 (of 6): Hector Noesi

There is a lot of talk about how Brian Cashman failed this offseason.  When he failed to land “the big fish,” which is Cliff Lee, the entire 2011 season became a bust.  He is preaching “patience;” a very taboo word in this city, with this team.  

The question on peoples’ minds is this: what are we being patient for?  What moves does Cashman have lined up that the Yankee Universe is unaware of?  The answer is down on the farm.

Not since the days of Gene “Stick” Michael have the Yankees enjoyed riches in the minor leagues like they have today.  Cashman has been able to build a farm system that has the potential to be something special in 2011 and years to come.  

Those who follow the Yankees and baseball are aware of blue chip prospects Jesus Montero, Dellin Betances and Manny Banuelos.  What they may not be aware of are some of the less-heralded prospects that the Yankees have drafted or signed in recent years that are just now starting to show their potential.  

Last year the world was introduced to Ivan Nova.  Let’s meet another of the pitching prospects that are poised to make an impact potentially in 2011 and the reason for “patience.”

Hector Noesi, a 6’2″, 175 lb right-hander hailing from Esperanza (which translates to “hope” in English), Dominican Republic, was signed by the Yankees on December 3rd, 2004.  Born on January 26, 1987, he is only 23 years old and finished the 2010 season with the Yankees AAA affiliate in Scranton Wilkes-Barre.  The last two years, he has started to open eyes throughout the baseball community.

After undergoing successful Tommy John surgery, the 2009 season is when he started to shine.  He posted a 2.92 ERA over 26 appearances (20 starts).  In 117 innings pitched, he surrendered 96 hits, 15 walks, 118 strikeouts, and six HRs allowed with a minuscule .220 average against over two stops in A ball.  

In 2010, Noesi started the year with class A Tampa and dominated over 43 innings.  He went 5-2 in eight starts compiling a 2.72 ERA with 35 hits, six walks, three HRs allowed and a staggering 53 strikeouts.  That performance earned him a call-up to Trenton where he continued to excel.  

His next stop in the 2010 season was AA Trenton.  There Noesi had a record of 8-4 over 98.2 innings, 90 hits and 86 strikeouts. He issued 18 walks and held opposing hitters to a .243 average.  The HR was not a major issue in 2010 as he allowed a mere 11 total in 160.1 innings (.62 HR/9 innings). 

Finally, Noesi finished 2010 at Scraton Wilkes-Barre and struggled a little in three starts (18.2 innings, 23 hits, 14 Ks, .311 BAA) but that could certainly be the result of “moving to the next level jitters.”  Way too small of a sample size to determine anything for a kid that has been successful at all levels before this.

A stat that jumps off the page are the three complete games Noesi pitched during the 2010 season (two with Trenton and one with Scranton Wilkes-Barre) that show his stamina.  Frank Piliere, a scout for the Texas Rangers in 2009, said, “Maybe most impressive of all was his stamina; his stuff would sometimes improve as his pitch count mounted.”

Frank Piliere goes on to cast Noesi as “having the stuff of a No. 3 big league pitcher.”  It was in this season (2009) that he developed a curveball that Piliere says has “good 12-6 action” and at times “flashes as being plus.”  Piliere also praised Noesi for a “well spotted 90-94 MPH fastball” that “with an occasional change up mixed in, showed tremendous growth in 2009 and became a complete pitcher.”  Noesi was invited to play in the Futures Game at All-Star weekend in 2010.

It looks as if Noesi will start the year in Scranton Wilkes-Barre this season.  If Andy Pettitte decides to retire he may compete for a spot in the 2011 rotation in spring training. All indications are that this is a prospect that could have a major impact in 2011 and beyond.  

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New York Yankees: GM Cashman Picks Up Schlitter, but Needs To Go Get Pettitte

New York Yankees GM Brian Cashman claimed 25-year-old Brian Schlitter, a relief pitcher, off waivers this week from the Chicago Cubs.
 
Schlitter made seven appearances out of the bullpen in 2010 for the Cubs. Over his eight innings of work, Schlitter posted a terrible 12.37 ERA, giving up 18 hits, 11 earned runs, allowed two home runs and walked five of the 48 batters he faced.
 
Schlitter also hit one batter, the Brewers’ Carlos Gomez, in the head in the eighth inning of the 18-1 Cubs loss. Gomez went on the DL and Schlitter was sent back down to Triple-A.
 
The Cubs lost all seven games that the 6’5″, 240-pound Schlitter appeared in, which is not a comforting stat to read.
 
Schlitter throws right and survives on a mid-90s fastball that he adds a slight sink too. His mediocre slider and changeup are not effective on the major league level, but some minor altering regarding Schlitter’s execution could fix both.

Schlitter has done well in the minors, where he has a 3.32 ERA in 154 relief appearances; but it is still the big show that counts.

Look, the Yankee bullpen does need more arms, but adding another chancy player when Rafael Soriano is still a free agent just seems desperate.
 
Cashman has made both horrid and genius signings in his career, but as long as it doesn’t cost the Yankees players or a money-ball contract then who really cares?
 
Whether Cashman will be hailed as a genius for making a mountain out of an anthill is yet to be seen.
 
Cashman is definitely sticking to the quantity over quality motto since losing out on ace Cliff Lee, who is bringing his talents to Philadelphia instead of New York. That theme is becoming all too common lately too.
 
The question that is lingering is whether southpaw Andy Pettitte will come back for another season. Pettitte’s family is supposedly on board with another season, but a source said personally, Pettitte’s return was contingent on the Yankees landing Lee.
 
Why doesn’t Cashman jump on the plane with the Baby Steins, skipper Joe Girardi and maybe throw Mo, Posada or Jeter on board for a quick trip down to Texas?
 
It boggles my mind that Jeter and Lee got paid a visit, but Cashman and crew are fine with one or two phone calls from Pettitte, who is the guy they need the most before the start of 2011 season.
 
My advice is to stop all the picking and praying, haul your butts down to Texas and bring us back our most successful postseason starter, please.
 
If anything, Pettitte keeps the Phillies from stealing the nickname, “the Core Four,” which just can’t happen!

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Brian Cashman’s Wasted Winter Leaves New York Yankees Buried

COURTESY OF YANKEES ‘N MORE

The holidays, and 2010 along with them, are over.
 
We head into the second day of the first work week of 2011, and Brian Cashman, well, he continues to do what he’s done all winter…NOTHING.
 
Well, that’s not exactly true. Cashman did manage to wake up long enough to sign a lefty specialist, who has never pitched a day in the American League before.

Oh, and don’t forget about those broken-down scrubs like Mark Prior and Russell Martin. Now, if Cashman could just track down Doc Brown and his DeLorean, those guys might actually do what they’re being counted on to do this season.
 
But while the Boston Red Sox have made the moves that vaulted them to heavy favorites in the American League, our sorry sack-of-dog-$#!t general manager has gone from playing dress-up to alternating between long naps and burying our beloved Yankees in a massive hole of his own digging.
 
With just six weeks to go until the start of Spring Training, here’s what Brian Cashman has to show for the largest payroll in the game:

  1. ONE reliable starting pitcher.
  2. NO reliable setup man.
  3. $56 million worth of charity wasted on a 36-year-old SS with NO range, NO bat speed, NO power and a mediocre arm.

That’s about it. Oh, and Cashman also has Eduardo Nunez and Ivan Nova. Those are the guys who Cashman declared were deal-breakers when he had a chance to add Cliff Lee before the trade deadline last season.
 
Just remember that when you’re watching Nunez sit on the bench this season and Nova hit the showers after five innings. The Mariners, after balking at the medical records on infielder David Adams, asked the Yankees for ONE of Nunez or Nova to complete the Lee deal, and Cashman said no.
 
Just another in a long line of hideous decisions made by “Elf” Cashman in the last year plus. And that decision, combined with others like re-acquiring Javier Vazquez, cost the Yankees their best chance at the 2010 World Series, and their best chance at signing Cliff Lee.

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New York Yankees: It’s Déjà Vu All Over Again

Let’s take a walk down memory lane. Not many people are aware of the deep history of the Atlanta Braves. This is a team whose roots go all the way back to 1869, in Cincinnati, where they were the first established baseball team in the history of the game, the Cincinnati Red Stockings. After trips to Boston—complete with a name change to the Braves in 1912—and Milwaukee in 1953, they moved to Atlanta in 1966 and settled into their new home where they would stay.

They have seen many of the greatest baseball players mankind has ever seen: Warren Spahn, Henry Aaron and even the greatest that ever played, George Herman “Babe” Ruth.

Fast forward to 1992. The Toronto Blue Jays were the dominant force in the American League that year and handily rolled through the Oakland Athletics four games to two and then the Atlanta Braves by the same tally. Those same Atlanta Braves were at the beginning of building one of the greatest playoff runs in the modern era, in the second year of a historic 14 straight division titles that finally ended after the 2005 season.

Under the tutelage of Bobby Cox, serving in his second stint as Braves manager, they had built what was one of the most formidable pitching staffs in baseball, with young hurlers Tom Glavine (22 wins and a Cy Young award in 1991), Steve Avery (18 wins) and a young fireballer by the name of John Smoltz (15 wins). These three pitchers had pitched the Braves to the World Series each of the past two years, but both were losses, and more work was needed to be done.

Greg Maddux had just completed a season in which he won the National League Cy Young award for the first time and would not relinquish that award for the next three seasons—winning it four years in a row from 1992 to 1995. He was one of the best pitchers in the game—if not the best—and was hitting the free-agent market with a fever pitch. Teams lined up for his services, including the most storied franchise in sports: the New York Yankees.

The Yankees had a run of bad luck; and for this particular franchise, it was a run of very bad luck. They had not been to the World Series since 1981 where they lost to the Los Angeles Dodgers and had not won a World Series since 1978, the year of the fabled Bronx Zoo. They had a young prospect by the name of Bernie Williams who was at the cusp of becoming a household name.

Donald Arthur Mattingly, a veteran player who was already a household name, was respected by many inside and outside the city of New York. The pieces were being laid out for a turnaround; all they needed was a man to lead a dismal rotation. The man that they targeted was Maddux.

As the Yankees had done before (with varying degrees of success), they threw money at Maddux. They presented an offer worth $34 million to include a $9 million signing bonus. Since he was a Scott Boras client, one would think that deal could get the job done. Instead, Maddux took $28 million from the Atlanta Braves to join a rotation that was dominant before his arrival and became superhuman afterwards. $6 million is still a lot of money, especially when one considers his salary.

It was not until three years later, in 1995, that the Braves finally won their World Series beating the Cleveland Indians. That would be the only World Series win during that remarkable 15-year playoff run. Three Cy Young awards for Greg Maddux in an Atlanta Braves uniform; one World Series win!

What happened next is etched in baseball history forever. A series of well thought out signings, crafty trades and budding young stars put the Yankees back on the map. So, much so that in the strike-shortened season of 1994 they had the best record in the American League before the strike destroyed the season (70‐43, second to Montreal at 74‐40). The seeds of a turnaround were in place and they did not include Greg Maddux.

In 1996 the Yankees won their first World Series in 18 years against those very same Atlanta Braves. Against all odds, facing what was perceived as perhaps the greatest pitching staff of the modern era, the Bronx Bombers overcame a 0‐2 deficit in the series. Who was on the mound for Atlanta for the clincher in Game 6? Greg Maddux himself. Sweet redemption.

Then there was the magical season of 1998 when the Yankees posted 125 wins total in the regular season and postseason—a record that will be quite difficult to break. Then in 1999 they faced those very same Braves, featuring Greg Maddux, and demolished them four straight games. The Yankees two, Greg Maddux nothing.

There is a similar formula in the mix in these modern times. Already, fans are seeing the fruit of Brian Cashman’s labors coming up through the system to become impact players. Robinson Cano looks like a perennial MVP candidate and Gold Glove winner at second base. Brett Gardner emerged as a very capable left fielder in his first full season. Ivan Nova showed enough to make us believe he will be a serviceable back end starter, and Phil Hughes made his face known to the world and showed everyone why he was ranked as the best pitching prospect in baseball just a few short years ago.

Reminiscent of some players from those great Yankee teams post‐Maddux that featured up‐and‐coming‐players such as Bernie Williams, Jorge Posada, Andy Pettitte, and Derek Jeter. Perhaps you’ve heard of them?

It does not end there either. There are potential stars in the making waiting to get their shot. Catcher Jesus Montero, regarded by some as the best catching prospect in baseball, will get a chance to taste the majors this year. Austin Romine, another hot catching prospect known for his defense, is not far behind. Manuel Banuelos is perceived to have top‐of‐the‐rotation stuff. Dellin Betances is in the same category.

Andrew Brackman started showing us the reason the Yankees drafted him and waited through his Tommy John rehab. Slade Heathcott, the 2009 No. 1 draft pick, may be a few short years away. These are just naming a few of the many rising potential players in the years to come.

Gamers like Nick Swisher take me back to the days of Paul O’Neill. Curtis Granderson showed at the end of the season, and all through the playoffs, that he is willing to learn and adjust and it paid dividends. Mark Teixeira does more for the Yankees than just slug homers. Just ask Derek Jeter and his polished Gold Glove.

Maybe this is merely a one‐year blip until the talent is here. These prospects could have an impact this year. The score is already Yankees 1, Cliff Lee 0. If the 10 years have taught us anything, it is there is more parity in baseball than people think. It’s still anybody’s game.

The Braves won one World Series, just one, for all that star pitching. The Phillies have won one World Series, although without Cliff Lee and Roy Halladay. Maybe they win in 2011, and Lee, Halladay and Oswalt finally get that elusive ring. So far Halladay has one Cy Young award in a Philly uniform, and no World Series wins.

All the pieces are there for the next great Yankee Dynasty. A rotation of homegrown talent, started with Hughes and now Nova, reminds me of the talent influx from the 1990s. True that the Yankees pitching isn’t any better off than it was at the end of last season, but it is not worse after. Is a rotation that features CC Sabathia, Phil Hughes, AJ Burnett and perhaps Andy Pettitte any worse than the 1995 team that made the playoffs featuring Jimmy Key, David Cone, Jack McDowell and Andy Pettitte?

Look what happened to that team in 1996 against Greg Maddux. They have weathered much worse staffs than this to playoff contention, and that was when help was not in sight. The horses are in the stable, now let’s see when Cashman and Joe Girardi decide the time is right to trot them out.

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Going from Good To Great: Why the Yankees Need To Sign Rafael Soriano

I have mentioned this a few times already, but he is worth the attention again.
 
Rafael Soriano is still a free agent, available and on the market. Whatever it is shocking considering he was the AL’s dominate closer in 2010 with the Tampa Bay Rays.
 
Even before Cliff Lee’s decision, Soriano as a player would have been more than enough for the New York Yankees to walk away with heads high.
 
Soriano was the best closer in the AL in 2010, leading the league with 45 saves, posting a 1.73 ERA, striking out 57 in just shy of 63 innings. Soriano was named to the 2010 All-Star team, won the 2010 AL Rolaids Relief Man Award, finished eighth in CY Young and 12th in MVP voting respectively.
 
Soriano will cost his new team two-draft picks as he falls into the Type A free agent category.
 
Yes, he will not come cheap especially considering his agent is Scott Boras, but it would be money well spent.
 
Boras makes any team pay no matter what, but the greediest agent has some tainted history with the Yankees, which might drive the price up some.
 
Look it is no secret the Bombers are a tad desperate, whether GM Brian Cashman and the little Steinbrenner’s care to admit it, fans know it, the players know it and Boras knows it.
 
Soriano’s role would change, as he would set-up to the great Rivera. Soriano was in the bullpen for the majority of his early pro-years.
 
He just turned 31 years old, and giving a pitcher of Soriano’s stature three years with a fourth year option is not a bad idea.
 
Soriano is in his prime and would make Mo’s departure at least less stressful, as it will already be beyond sad and something I can’t even think about (tears).
 
Look, Soriano will make the New York Yankees better and isn’t that the point?
 
Cashman and co. better make sure our rival Red Sox’s or player favorite Phillies don’t acquire Soriano or get ready for some big trouble in the Bronx.

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Cashman Passes On Webb As Patience Plan Rolls On For Yankees

The Texas Rangers signed Brandon Webb last week, a move classified by some in the baseball world as a “smart gamble” given the veteran pitcher’s Cy Young Award pedigree and outstanding goatee.

Still, others regarded the signing as a “stretch” or “risk”, or to tie it in with the counterpoint, a “stupid gamble” given Webb (a) hasn’t pitched in two years and (b) has a right shoulder that could trade war stories with Hideki Matsui’s knees and Don Mattingly’s back.

It’s likely Brian Cashman has had his fill of war stories after rolling the dice on Nick Johnson a year ago. Spurned by Cliff Lee, the Rangers decided to test their luck by choosing a Plan B that really deserved to be a Plan M.

It gives you some perspective on how paper-thin the market is this winter. After Lee went to the Phillies, Cashman preached that the Yankees‘ Plan B was patience. As Zack Greinke and now Webb found new homes, they and everyone else were learning that the GM was a man of his word.

Consider yourself warned Yankees fans: barring an unforeseen blockbuster trade, the team you see now may very well be the team that shows up at spring training—give or take a Pettitte. As frustrating as this may seem, it should be understood that this is ultimately a good thing.

This probably wouldn’t be the case if Cashman weren’t so confident in his job security. Had he been entering the final year of his contract, or had the Yankees still been riding a championship drought, he may have been inclined to guarantee Lee a seventh year at higher value, hand $150M over to Carl Crawford or roll the dice on Greinke or Webb.

But this is the Teflon Cash we’re talking about. He cannot be killed by conventional weapons. Even as a host of poor moves led to 10/20 and various other playoff meltdowns, his job has remained secure. The ’09 title reaffirmed the club’s confidence in him, even when detractors argued that handing over massive checks to CC Sabathia, A.J. Burnett, and Mark Teixeira didn’t require much in the way of tactical brilliance.

Cashman knows he can sit tight, wait out this crap market and hope for better situation to present itself by the trade deadline.

The Rangers are rolling the dice that a former star pitcher with an 82 MPH-fastball can fill the void in their rotation. It was a risk Cashman had no interest taking, just as he passed on finding out if Greinke could stand tall in the New York spotlight.

The Yankees and their general manager are banking that the horses already in place can keep the club in contention before acceptable reinforcements arrive. Is it a sexy gamble? Most definitely not. But it’s not a stupid one, either.

Dan Hanzus writes three columns a week on his New York Yankees site, River & Sunset. He can be reached at dhanzus@gmail.com. Follow Dan on Twitter @danhanzus.

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Brian Cashman Fails New York Yankees with Pathetic Offseason

Courtesy of Yankees ‘n More

Ten days since we last posted to our Yankees ‘n More blog. Truth be told, there has not been anything to post, so we thought we’d chime in this morning just to let people know we’re still here…waiting…and waiting…and waiting.

Sadly, there seems to be no end to the waiting. New York Yankees general manager Brian Cashman might as well have spent the entire winter, at least to this point, sliding down buildings on a rope while dressed in some ridiculous kid’s Halloween costume. For all we know, he has.

The New York Yankees, for all their financial might, have more holes in their pitching staff than a 20-pound brick of Swiss cheese, yet Cashman does nothing.

Well, to say Cashman has done nothing might be a little harsh. He has signed a few broken down pieces of $#!t, none of whom have been relevant for at least three years. And he did, for the second time in six months, butcher a chance to add Cliff Lee to a rotation that currently has only one reliable pitcher in it.

For his part, Cashman continues to insist the Yankees are in “a great spot.” He’s either a liar, delusional or stupid. Or, perhaps, some combination of the three. We’re less than two months from spring training, the free agent shelves are void of game-changers and the Yankees have nothing but question marks behind CC Sabathia.

From the end of July on last season, the Yankees played .500 baseball. That’s two-and-a-half consecutive months of mediocrity, and the incompetent Cashman has done NOTHING to improve the major league roster…NOTHING.

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He Who Hesitates Is Lost: Where Do the Yanks Sit After Missing Out on Cliff Lee?

He who hesitates is lost. Or, in my experience, he who sleeps in misses the bus.

The Yankees were looking good. The assumed front-runners to nab Cliff Lee, the Yankees somehow lost him to a late arrival to the party, the Philadelphia Phillies. Apparently, Lee decided on Philly because of the “fans and a great atmosphere” and also hinted that it may have been what his wife wanted.

Whatever the case, Philadelphia is sure to have a “Merry Cliff-mas” and “Happy Hol-Lee-Days” this year, while Cashman and the Yankee front office friends are and will most likely continue to scratch their heads wondering what the hell happened.

When they recover from that, they are faced with some daunting problems.

The first of which is how they will compete with the Red Sox. The day has finally come when the world looks at what has happened so far in this offseason and sees the Red Sox somehow having a more productive bidding season than the Yankees.

(Gasp)

It seems to be true. The Red Sox have made astounding offensive upgrades, adding two of the game’s best—Adrian Gonzalez and Carl Crawford—to an already dangerous lineup. If the season began today, it sure looks like the Red Sox would be the team to beat in the AL East.

Think about it.

The Rays seem to be a third place team at best this year, losing Crawford and others to free agency. The Orioles will go on their usual April run and shut down for the year. The Blue Jays could turn out to be a good team and could possibly compete with the Rays for third place, but with their pitching staff at the moment, they won’t be able to keep up with the Red Sox or Yankees.

That leaves—you guessed it—the Red Sox and Yankees. The lineup already swings in favor of the Sox, and, assuming Josh Beckett stays healthy and Andy Pettitte retires (which the Yankees and Pettitte have hinted at), the starting pitching goes to Boston as well.

That’s not to say all hope is lost for the Yankees. Things happen, and there was no better example of that than the Red Sox in 2010. Plagued by injuries, their third-place finish was excellent considering what that many injuries can do to a team.

My point is, if everything were to go as planned in life, the Yankees would appear to have no shot right now. But, baseball is a crazy game. Keep your fingers crossed New York, and Mr. Cashman, please bring us some holiday cheer (in other words, get us some arms to help our rotation compete)!

Merry Christmas, and Go Yankees!

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MLB Hot Stove: Same City, Different Uniform as Yankees Sign Mets Reliever

Reliever Pedro Feliciano is staying put in New York, but he will be sporting a different uniform.

The life-long Met is leaving Queens to bring his talents to the Yankees

Feliciano is a 34-year-old lefty who inked an $8 million, two-year contract with an option for a third, to come over to the Bronx. Fans get the reassurance that GM Brian Cashman is doing his job, as this is a huge boost to counterpart Boone Logan in the bullpen.

Other than having a rubber arm (meaning it never tires), Feliciano satisfies a big hole in the Yankee bullpen against lefty hitters, an area the Red Sox loaded up on this offseason.

Over his eight years in the majors, Feliciano has a career ERA of 3.31. He set the Mets franchise record and led the NL for most relief appearances in a season, with 86 games in 2008, 88 games in 2009 and 92 games in 2010.

Last season, Feliciano pitched for 62.2 innings, allowing just one home run and striking out 56 of the 280 batters he faced. He kept lefties hitting just .211, which will make him a difference-maker in the seventh and eighth innings.

Nicknamed “Everyday Pedro,” as in 2010 he pitched back-to-back days 43 times without rest.

Feliciano was described by Mets Today writer Joe Janish as, “a valuable asset to a championship club in need of one final bullpen piece.”

I’ll take that; the Yankees will happily take that; and hopefully 2011 will be that year for Feliciano.

As to how Feliciano will handle playing in the Bronx?

Same lights, different borough…my bet is he will be just fine.

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