Tag: New York Yankees

CC Sabathia Discusses Life as an Alcoholic in New York Daily News Interview

New York Yankees starting pitcher CC Sabathia admitted this week he’s known about his alcohol problem for about three years. Yet, it wasn’t until near the end of the regular season in Baltimore that he finally understood he needed help.  

The 35-year-old former ace discussed his addiction to alcohol in an interview with Mark Feinsand of the New York Daily News. He insisted the issues never carried into his starts, stating he was “functioning as an alcoholic,” but on the final day of the regular season, he decided it was time for change.

“I woke up on that Sunday and was like, ‘I can’t do this no more,'” Sabathia said. “I came in on Sunday and felt like I needed to get some help. I know it was bad timing, but I felt like if I didn’t tell somebody then, I would have been in real trouble.”

Sabathia decided to leave the Yankees as they were getting ready for the playoffs, and enter an alcohol rehabilitation center. His wife urged him to wait until the season played out, but the left-hander told her if he didn’t make the move at that time, he probably never would.

The choice came after years of trying to control the problem by himself by setting various boundaries concerning when and what he would drink. He ultimately determined trying to make those types of decisions highlighted the problem, according to Feinsand:

I would go around my starts. If I knew I had a weekend or three or four days, where I would have two days to get back to be ready to pitch, I would do that. The planning out of it, what made me realize I was an alcoholic, I’m planning out when I can drink. If you’ve got to do that, I feel like you’ve got a problem.

He first felt the urge to get help after an incident outside a Toronto nightclub in August. He ended up staying the course, however, stating, per Feinsand: “Really at that time is when I felt like I needed it, but it was right in the middle of the season.”

Now that he’s gone through rehab and is feeling better about himself, he’s hopeful about the future with a strong support system in place, including a sponsor. He said he knows the real test will come when it’s time for the extended grind of a baseball season, though.

“It’s going to be hard, but I have different things that I can do now,” Sabathia said. “Pick up a book, play some video games, go out with my teammates, do stuff that I like to do and get back to my old self. I think the biggest thing for me is not isolating myself and feeling like I need something to do.”

All told, Sabathia seeking professional help at a time when the Yankees were getting ready to start a potential playoff run proved he was serious about getting better. Based on his comments, everything is now moving in a positive direction.

Sabathia also spoke about trying to become an asset for the Yankees again after some lackluster seasons by his standards. That said, staying healthy must be the top priority.

 

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CC Sabathia Discusses Decision to Enter Rehab on ‘Good Morning America’

CC Sabathia knows he left the New York Yankees to enter rehab for alcoholism at the worst possible time; however, in his first interview since completing treatment, the former Cy Young Award winner said it’s what needed to be done.  

“Like I said, I know it was a bad time of the season, but I woke up on that Sunday morning in Baltimore and there was no other option for me but to get help,” Sabathia told Robin Roberts in a Good Morning America interview that will air in full Friday (h/t Katie Kindelan of GMA, via Yahoo).

Sabathia, 35, checked into rehab Oct. 5, a day before the Yankees played the Houston Astros in their American League Wild Card matchup. He would have been part of the team’s expected rotation for the ALDS had the Yankees won. Many fans were critical of the timing of Sabathia’s decision, which drew a mixed reaction from the lefty.

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Rapid-Fire Predictions for the Yankees Offseason

The New York Yankees fell short of a World Series title in 2015, but they have some exciting young pieces in place.

What needs must they address this offseason? Will they spend big or keep their wallet holstered? What big-name outfielder should they pursue now that Carlos Beltran’s best days are behind him?

Watch Stephen Nelson and Bleacher Report MLB Analyst Scott Miller discuss the Yankees in the video above.

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Stephen Strasburg Blockbuster Would Be Yankees’ Road Back to the Top

Now that all the actual baseballing is over, we can finally turn our attention to the possibility of a Washington Nationals star heading to the Bronx and transforming the New York Yankees.

No, not that one. The other one. Stephen Strasburg.

Yeah, that one. Though the Nationals could lose Jordan Zimmermann and Doug Fister to free agency this winter, word is they might shop Strasburg anyway. As Nick Cafardo of the Boston Globe reported in mid-October, there’s a “lot of buzz” that the Nationals could make the 27-year-old right-hander available.

As for which teams could pursue Strasburg—who only has one year to go until free agencyif the Nationals put him out there, Cafardo had nothing to say. However, one need not jump through hoops or do any rocket surgery to be able to draw a straight line from Strasburg to the Yankees.

The Yankees had a mostly successful 2015 season, winning 87 games and making their first postseason since 2012. But among the reasons why they fell short of the AL East crown and failed to move beyond the AL Wild Card Game was their mediocre starting rotation. It finished with just a 4.25 ERA.

Hence why Mark Polishuk of MLB Trade Rumors highlighted starting pitching as an “an area of focus” for Yankees general manager Brian Cashman this winter. And if you ask Mike Axisa of River Avenue Blues, he’ll say the Yankees should make a pursuit of Strasburg a part of that focus.

He’s right, you know. And here’s why: While the Yankees do have the makings of a solid starting rotation, they lack a guy who stands out as a true ace.

Take a wild guess who could be that guy.

Yeah, yeah. I know. Using the word “ace” in conjunction with the name “Strasburg” is not as easy as we expected it to be.

Strasburg was heralded as baseball’s next great starting pitcher when he was drafted No. 1 overall in 2009. But a promising breakthrough in 2010 was cut short by Tommy John surgery, and Strasburg hasn’t been untouchable since becoming a regular in Washington’s rotation in 2012. 

But now comes the part where we stop kidding ourselves and get into the truth of Strasburg‘s career. He’s been really good, has arguably been even better than really good and might now be on the verge of the elite ace-like season we’ve been waiting for.

Though there’s no ignoring Strasburg‘s durability issues—he’s pitched over 200 innings only oncehe has indeed been one of the league’s most effective pitchers when he’s been healthy in the last four years. His 3.17 ERA may not sound especially impressive, but that darn near qualifies him as a top-10 starter.

Strasburg comes off looking even better in the eyes of Fielding Independent Pitching (FIP) and Expected Fielding Independent Pitching (xFIP). According to FIP, he’s MLB’s eighth-most effective pitcher since 2012. According to xFIP, the top of the 2012-2015 leaderboard looks like this:

  1. Clayton Kershaw: 2.59
  2. Stephen Strasburg: 2.80

Why do FIP and xFIP like Strasburg so much? Primarily because they love pitchers who rack up strikeouts and limit walks. Nobody has ever questioned Strasburg‘s ability in those two arenas. His mid-90s fastball and wicked curveball and changeup have allowed him to compile a 10.3 K/9 over the last four seasons. His excellent control, meanwhile, has allowed him to compile a 2.3 BB/9.

Though the 3.46 ERA Strasburg posted in 2015 would seem to suggest otherwise, these skills are still very much intact. His fastball velocity is doing just fine, and Brooks Baseball can vouch that his curveball (see below) and changeup remain extremely difficult to hit. And in throwing 67.1 percent strikes, he found the strike zone exactly 50.0 percent of the time in 2015.

Of course, strikeouts and walks alone don’t tell the whole story of a pitcher’s talent. By extension, neither do FIP and xFIP. There’s something they miss, and this particular something has been Strasburg‘s true weakness.

Two words: contact management. 

This is something Strasburg hasn’t been particularly good at. He’s excelled neither at getting ground balls (46.2 GB%) nor at getting pop-ups (9.1 IFFB%) throughout his career, and he has also failed to be a merchant of soft (18.1 Soft%) or hard (28.9 Hard%) contact.

As Shane Ryan of Grantland (RIP) pointed out, this is partially owed to Strasburg‘s inability to develop a reliable fourth pitch. As ESPN.com’s Tony Blengino pointed out, it’s also due to how Strasburg‘s plus control hasn’t translated into plus command within the strike zone.

But while this has been the big knock on Strasburg to this point, it’s possible that it may soon be history.

When looking at Strasburg‘s 2015 season, it stands out that he rescued himself from mediocrity with a brilliant 10-start stretch at the end. In 66.1 innings, he posted a 1.90 ERA with 92 strikeouts, eight walks and an opponents’ OPS of just .512. He was as good as he’s ever been.

How did this happen? According to the man himself, it came from an adjustment between his ears.

“I learned to be more aware of my thoughts out there,” Strasburg told James Wagner of the Washington Post. “There are times in the game when you can kind of let your focus slip just for a split second. And I made it a point to not let that happen, to just focus on each pitch and just let everything I’ve got go on that individual pitch and turn the page.”

This, certainly, is a worthwhile adjustment. There have been times through the years when Strasburg has fallen to pieces when confronted with adversity. If he’s getting over that, great.

But something else was at play in Strasburg‘s hot finish. When diving into the finer points of how he got things done, one notices that he got better at managing contact. He got plenty of pop-ups (16.4 IFFB%) and outperformed his career rates in the Soft% (21.9) and Hard% (27.4) departments. 

As for what happened, there was a noticeable change in Strasburg‘s fastball location. Whereas he spent the early portion of 2015 working mainly across the middle of the zone, he spent the latter portion of 2015 working more up in the zone.

This wasn’t the first time that a Nationals starter reaped the benefits of more high fastballs. Zimmermann took to living up in the zone with his own heat in 2014, and the result was a breakout year built on the strength of a career-best K/9 and career-best IFFB% rate.

Strasburg‘s move up in the zone might have been him taking after Zimmermann. The way in which that correlated with a marked improvement in his contact management without infringing on his mastery of strikeouts and walks makes him quite the intriguing pitcher for 2016. 

And if he so happens to become a member of the Yankees, their rotation in turn would also become quite intriguing.

Exactly how the Yankees would acquire Strasburg is as good a question as any, but there should be no doubt it’s something they can do.

Even beyond the presumably untouchable Aaron Judge, the Yankees have an improving farm system they could dip into to pull off a deal for Strasburg. If the Nationals prefer more established players, the Yankees have a trio of starters they can deal from: Michael Pineda, Nathan Eovaldi and Adam Warren.

Whatever the case, let’s assume there’s a deal to be made that sends Strasburg to the Bronx. If that happens, a rotation that was shaky in 2015 would suddenly look awfully solid for 2016.

Behind Strasburg, there would be Masahiro Tanaka and his mix of excellent command, a plus slider and a plus-plus splitter. Behind him, there would be 21-year-old phenom Luis Severino and his mix of plus-plus stuff and budding command. If all three were to live up to their potential in 2016, the Yankees’ 2016 rotation would feature one of the league’s best pitching trios.

Behind the front three could be Pineda and/or Eovaldi, who have nasty stuff of their own. If one of them were to go in the deal for Strasburg, bringing up the rear would be CC Sabathia. There aren’t many reasons to believe in him anymore, but by far the most appealing is the notion that he might be a changed man after going through alcohol rehab.

Regardless, things would look very encouraging for the Yankees’ starting rotation if Strasburg were to be placed at the head of it. The Yankees would be looking at going from having mediocre starting pitching to potentially elite starting pitching.

And that could indeed be enough for them to take the next step in 2016.

The awesome duo of Dellin Betances and Andrew Miller would still be at the back end of the bullpen after all. And though the Yankees can’t expect more of the same from Alex Rodriguez and Mark Teixeira on offense in 2016, bounce-back years from Jacoby Ellsbury and Brett Gardner, and Judge’s impending arrival, could ensure that the offense as a whole remains an elite unit.

The way things are set up in those two departments, starting pitching is really the only missing link in the Yankees’ plans for 2016. If pursuing Strasburg is how they choose to deal with that problem, they’ll be making a bold play that could get them to the very spot they desire to return to: On top of everyone else.

 

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

If you want to talk baseball, hit me up on Twitter.

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A-Rod Slips Up, Says Yankees Instead of Mets on Live TV

Your true colors are showing, A-Rod.

New York Yankees star Alex Rodriguez slipped up during the live broadcast from Kauffman Stadium following Game 2 of the World Series, saying Yankees instead of Mets.

The panel’s reaction may have been the best part—most notably Pete Rose’s facial expression.

[Twitter]

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Brian Cashman Turned Down Ben Zobrist Trade at Deadline

The New York Yankees were eliminated from postseason play Tuesday after falling to the Houston Astros, 3-0, in front of their home crowd, and general manager Brian Cashman took some time afterward to reflect on a deal that nearly materialized at this summer’s trade deadline. 

According to LoHud.com, Cashman told reporters the Yankees turned down a proposed deal that would have sent pitcher Adam Warren and second baseman Rob Refsnyder to the Oakland A’s for utility man extraordinaire Ben Zobrist. 

Zobrist was ultimately traded to the AL Central-champion Kansas City Royals in exchange for minor league pitchers Sean Manaea and Aaron Brooks. 

Since joining the Royals at the trade deadline, Zobrist has batted .284 with a .364 on-base percentage and .453 slugging percentage. Although he’s appeared in just 59 games for the Royals, Zobrist’s mark of 1.6 offensive wins above replacement ranks seventh among all Kansas City players. 

Despite Zobrist’s second-half prosperity, Cashman made a wise move by standing pat and not mortgaging valuable future pieces in exchange for a half-season rental. According to Spotrac, Zobrist is set to become a free agent at the end of the season, at which point he won’t be tethered to the Royals and he’ll be free to find long-term security elsewhere. 

Refsnyder made his MLB debut on July 11 as the Yankees scrambled for solutions at second base, but he was optioned back to Triple-A on July 19. However, the Yankees promoted the 24-year-old back to the big leagues prior to September, and he impressed in 16 total regular-season appearances. 

In a small, 47 plate-appearance sample size, Refsnyder batted .302 with two home runs and five RBI while recording an on-base percentage of .348. He even started Tuesday night’s Wild Card Game but failed to record a hit. 

Prior to the postseason, manager Joe Girardi told reporters, “We like the way he’s swung the bat and defensively, he’s done a good job,” according to the New York Post‘s Dan Martin

Warren was also solid for the Yankees in spots. The 28-year-old posted a 3.29 ERA as he went 7-7 and notched a career-high 104 strikeouts in 131.1 innings. 

Zobrist would have given the Yankees some more peace of mind at second base as Stephen Drew flirted with the Mendoza Line, but holding on to two inexpensive, cost-effective youngsters instead of taking a shot on a two-month flier will help New York in the long run. 

 

All statistics courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com

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Yankees’ Lifeless Offense Finally Killed Their Season in AL Wild Card Game

On Tuesday night, the New York Yankees embarked on their first postseason run since 2012. Surely they were hoping it would last long enough to see them through to championship No. 28.

Instead, it lasted about three hours, as the Yankees finally succumbed to an offensive slump that had been trying to kill them for the last two months.

Hosting the American League‘s win-or-go-home Wild Card Game for the first time, the Yankees succumbed to the Houston Astros, 3-0. Yankee Stadium was loud at the outset, but it fell quiet when Colby Rasmus got the Astros on the board with a leadoff solo home run in the second inning.

The Astros brought home two more runs after that—one on Carlos Gomez’s fourth-inning solo homer and another on Jose Altuve’s seventh-inning RBI single.

But they didn’t need those. As soon as Rasmus’ ball cleared the fence, the pressure was on the Yankees to shake the cobwebs off their bats. It’s no wonder there was a palpable sense of dread at Yankee Stadium, and it only got stronger as the Yankees tried and failed to do something, anything, on offense.

Lest we get too carried away, though, let’s give some credit where credit is due: A fellow named Dallas Keuchel had quite a bit to do with this.

Though he was starting on just three days’ rest, Keuchel showed why he may be the man to beat for the AL Cy Young. He allowed only three hits and a walk while striking out seven on his way to six scoreless innings. As Jeff Passan of Yahoo Sports noted, it was one of the best starts on three days’ rest in recent memory:

Just as noteworthy is that those six scoreless innings made it a total of 22 scoreless innings for Keuchel in three starts against the Yankees in 2015.

As Yankees skipper Joe Girardi said after the game, per USA Today“We haven’t been able to solve Keuchel this year. We haven’t been able to do it.”

In the Yankees’ defense, few have been able to solve Keuchel. Using a Tom Glavine-esque mix of perfect sequencing and location, he racked up a 2.48 ERA in 232 innings in the regular season. If it wasn’t already clear before, it should be very clear now that he’s one of the best pitchers in baseball.

And now for the obligatory “But…” 

In this case, it’s easily summarized: That Yankees offense, though.

For a time, the Yankees offense was quite good. Yankees hitters posted an OPS of at least .740 in three of the season’s first four months, peaking at over .800 in June and July. It’s largely because of this that the Yankees finished in the top five in MLB in runs, home runs and OPS. Bronx Bombers, indeed.

However, all of this might as well be ancient history.

Things started getting messy in August. The Yankees offense posted a season-low .708 OPS—a fall from grace that contributed to a 14-14 record. 

“We’re just not hitting,” Girardi told the New York Times at the end of the month. “That’s been the root of our problems.”

Unfortunately, the Yankees couldn’t stop the root from growing even deeper. In September and October, the club’s OPS plummeted further still to .702 OPS. This time, the cost was a 15-17 showing that made it all too easy for the rip-roaring Toronto Blue Jays to secure the AL East title.

What went wrong, you ask?

Heck, a better question is what didn’t go wrong?

After looking nothing like a rickety, old has-been through July, veteran slugger Alex Rodriguez looked everything like a rickety, old has-been in hitting .191 with a .678 OPS after August 1. After missing all of 2014 serving a suspension, it looked like he had just plain run out of gas.

But A-Rod’s slump wasn’t the only hit the middle of the Yankees’ order endured. Mark Teixeira was lost for the season with an injury in late August, robbing the Yankees of a .906 OPS and 31 homers. Slugging rookie Greg Bird did well in his stead, but not that well.

Meanwhile, there were also problems at the top of the order. Brett Gardner had an .835 OPS through the end of July, but he finished the year with just a .742 OPS. Jacoby Ellsbury never looked right after returning from a lengthy injury absence in early July, hitting just .224 with a .601 OPS in his final 74 games.

These issues alone probably would have been enough to sink the Yankees’ once-mighty offense. But the problems reached critical mass in the final month of the season. Brian McCann and Chase Headley joined Gardner and Ellsbury on the Yankees’ list of non-factors. And though they didn’t exactly go cold, previously hot hitters Carlos Beltran and Didi Gregorius definitely cooled off.

And so, there the Yankees were at the arrival of the Wild Card Game. The overall numbers looked good and could indeed be used to talk the Yankees up as a dangerous offensive team reminiscent of the Bronx Bombers of old. But in reality, the Astros were going up against a team that had gone from being rich with dangerous bats to perilously short on dangerous bats.

In times like these, you go looking for a common denominator. The only one in sight is the same fatal flaw that’s been a smudge on the Yankees’ pinstripes for several years now:

Age.

Rodriguez is 40 years old. Beltran is 38. Teixeira is 35. Gardner, Ellsbury, McCann and Headley aren’t quite as old, but they, too, are on the wrong side of 30. They were all part of an offense in which the average age was over 31 for a fourth year in a row.

All of that old age eventually caught up to the Yankees in 2012, which ended with them getting swept in the American League Championship Series (ALCS). It played a part in them missing out in the postseason in 2013 and 2014. Nobody should be surprised, therefore, that the club’s hot offensive start this season eventually crumbled. Though it often looked good early, at no point was the Yankees offense built to last.

As a result, the Yankees will now head into the offseason looking to answer the same question they’ve been trying to answer for several years now: How can they get younger, better and, hopefully, cheaper? 

It won’t be easy. The Yankees once again spent over $200 million on payroll in 2015. And according to Baseball-Reference.com, they’re projected to spend over $200 million on payroll again in 2016. Almost the entire band is set to return, and that will make it difficult to make major changes.

But try the Yankees must. Their fans are not known for their patience, and they are not about to be after the Yankees’ return to the postseason was over in a matter of hours. They wanted a bang. What they got was a whimper.

And if the Yankees don’t at least fix their offense, they may be in for more of the same in 2016.

 

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

If you want to talk baseball, hit me up on Twitter.

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CC Sabathia to Enter Alcohol Rehabilitation Center, Will Not Pitch in Playoffs

New York Yankees pitcher CC Sabathia won’t pitch during the 2015 MLB playoffs after deciding to enter treatment at an alcohol rehabilitation center.

Sabathia released an official statement Monday to explain his decision, courtesy of the Yankees’ official website:

Today I am checking myself into an alcohol rehabilitation center to receive the professional care and assistance needed to treat my disease.

I love baseball and I love my teammates like brothers, and I am also fully aware that I am leaving at a time when we should all be coming together for one last push toward the World Series. It hurts me deeply to do this now, but I owe it to myself and to my family to get myself right. I want to take control of my disease, and I want to be a better man, father and player.

I want to thank the New York Yankees organization for their encouragement and understanding. Their support gives me great strength and has allowed me to move forward with this decision with a clear mind.

As difficult as this decision is to share publicly, I don’t want to run and hide. But for now please respect my family’s need for privacy as we work through this challenge together.

Being an adult means being accountable. Being a baseball player means that others look up to you. I want my kids — and others who may have become fans of mine over the years — to know that I am not too big of a man to ask for help. I want to hold my head up high, have a full heart and be the type of person again that I can be proud of. And that’s exactly what I am going to do.

I am looking forward to being out on the field with my team next season playing the game that brings me so much happiness.

After the announcement, Yankees general manager Brian Cashman spoke about Sabathia, saying: “It wasn’t a phone call I was expecting,” but added the team will “do everything in our power” to support the pitcher, via Mark Feinsand of the New York Daily News.

“CC has demonstrated a great deal of courage…Time and place have no bearing,” Cashman said, per Feinsand. “There’s something here that needs to be taken care of.”

Sabathia has struggled to find his form over the past three seasons and is coming off of a 2015 campaign in which he posted a 6-10 record with a 4.73 ERA. Those numbers suggest he’s a shell of the southpaw stud who won 59 games in his first three seasons with the Bronx Bombers.

A nagging knee injury also limited Sabathia to eight starts in 2014 and landed him on the disabled list late this year.

NBC Sports’ Drew Silva highlighted how Sabathia still managed to close out 2015 strong despite the personal issues he’s now made public knowledge:

The former Cy Young Award winner and six-time All-Star has a World Series title to his name as well, so Sabathia has accomplished about all he could have hoped to in a stellar career. At age 35, it appears he is keen on returning to the mound in 2016, though he may be hard-pressed to rediscover the form that made him one of baseball’s best pitchers in his prime.

Above all else, the concern is for Sabathia’s well-being. If he can take care of himself away from the field, there’s at least a chance his transcendent talent will allow him to stage a successful comeback once he’s fully recovered.

As for the Yankees’ immediate outlook, they’ll start Masahiro Tanaka in Tuesday’s American League Wild Card Game against the Houston Astros, per MLB.com’s Brian McTaggart. It’s a win-or-go-home scenario, but home-field advantage should help New York as it goes up against Astros ace Dallas Keuchel.

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AL Wild Card Game 2015: Yankees vs. Astros Breakdown and Predictions

It took exactly 162 games to get here, but the matchup for the 2015 American League Wild Card Game is set. The Houston Astros will visit the New York Yankees for a do-or-die showdown on Tuesday (8:05 p.m. ET on ESPN) with a trip to the division series on the line.

The Yankees (87-75) haven’t been to the playoffs since 2012, while the Astros (86-76) last went to the dance in 2005. 

Houston won the season series against New York 4-3, splitting a four-game set at Minute Maid Park in its first meeting (June 25-28) and taking two of three at Yankee Stadium (Aug. 24-26).

The most obvious disparity between the two clubs is the depth of their pockets. The Yankees’ payroll tops out at $218.9 million, per Spotrac.com, dwarfing the Astros’ $81.2 million budget. To put an even finer point on it: New York spends almost as much on pitching ($71.3 million) as the ‘Stros do on their entire roster.

Speaking of pitching, the Astros will send left-handed ace and AL Cy Young Award contender Dallas Keuchel to the hill, while the Yankees will counter with their No. 1, right-hander Masahiro Tanaka, meaning an old-fashioned pitchers’ duel is a distinct possibility.

Which squad will emerge victorious from this winner-take-all battle and advance to the ALDS?

While we await the gameand a definitive answerlet’s break down the variables and matchups and arrive at an educated guess.

You may proceed when ready.

Begin Slideshow


Yankees Face October as $200M Underdogs in 1st Postseason Since ‘Core Four’ Era

Alex Rodriguez said they were underdogs, and for once we didn’t laugh at the thought.

The New York Yankees as underdogs?

It’s a crazy concept, given their $200 million-plus payroll and their history. It’s fair to say the Yankees never should be underdogs to make the playoffs, but it’s just as fair to say that this year they were.

And it’s even fairer to say they’re bigger underdogs now that they’re in.

Seriously, is anyone picking this club to win the World Series? Has any Yankee team in recent memory entered a postseason with lower expectations?

Oh, they could be favorites in Tuesday’s American League Wild Card Game, especially if the Minnesota Twins can somehow emerge with the AL’s other wild-card spot.

But after that?

Maybe we’re all wrong, the same way we were all wrong in March and April. I went through every preseason prediction I could find, from Bleacher Report’s Scott Miller (he picked them last in the AL East) to 15 writers and broadcasters at ESPN to five guys at CBSSports.com to 12 at FoxSports.com to five at Yahoo Sports to seven at USA Today.

All those people making picks, and just two of them (Gabe Lacques of USA Today and Buster Olney of ESPN) had the Yankees in the playoffs.

I didn’t make picks this spring, but I won’t lie. I wouldn’t have picked them, either. And I’m not picking them now.

The Yankees don’t get the benefit of the doubt they once did, because they aren’t the same team they once were. It’s been three years since New York even made the playoffs, and the roster has turned over so much that only three guys who were active for the club’s last postseason series in 2012 will be active this October (Rodriguez, CC Sabathia and Brett Gardner).

This is the first Yankee playoff team in 20 years with no Derek Jeter, and the first time the Yankees have gone to the playoffs since Mariano Rivera and Andy Pettitte retired (although Rivera was hurt in 2012 and didn’t pitch). This is a team whose playoff experience almost entirely was earned elsewhere, in Boston (Jacoby Ellsbury, Andrew Miller) or in Atlanta (Brian McCann) or even in Japan (Masahiro Tanaka).

They do have Carlos Beltran, who has had plenty of October success in multiple places, and if they’re going to surprise us this month, perhaps it will be because of what he does. They wouldn’t have gotten this far without what he has already done.

Rodriguez and Mark Teixeira got far more credit as comeback veterans, but Jack Curry said on YES that after an awful April, Beltran has been the Yankees’ best player. There’s little doubt he’s been their most important hitter in the second half, and it seemed totally appropriate when Beltran’s home run gave the Yankees their first lead in Thursday night’s playoff-clinching 4-1 win over the Boston Red Sox at Yankee Stadium.

“He has a knack for big hits,” Chase Headley told YES’ Meredith Marakovits. “Obviously he turns it up in the big games, and he did again [in September]. We’re hoping he keeps it up for the next month or so.”

They’re hoping Beltran keeps hitting. They’re hoping Tanaka can look like an ace, Sabathia’s September revival is real and the bullpen can put them over the top. Manager Joe Girardi still won’t commit to having Adam Warren in the pen full time in October, but how can he not? Girardi has no one he trusts after the big three of Miller, Dellin Betances and Justin Wilson, and Warren’s three shutout innings of relief Thursday night showed what an addition he would be to that group.

Yes, you can make a case for this team (though few will). You can point out how wild-card teams have won before (two of them met in the World Series last year).

But whatever case you make for the Yankees, it’s the same one you’d make for any underdog. Could they win? Of course, because in October, any team that gets there could win.

Will anyone pick them to win?

Probably no more than picked them in April.

 

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

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball. 

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