Tag: New York Yankees

CC Sabathia Injury: Updates on Yankees Star’s Recovery from Knee Surgery

New York Yankees starting pitcher CC Sabathia is expected to recover in time for spring training after undergoing surgery on his right knee Tuesday.

Continue for updates.


Yankees Call Procedure ‘a Routine Cleanup’

Tuesday, Oct. 11

The Associated Press reported Yankees head team physician Dr. Christopher Ahmad handled the surgery after Sabathia pitched the entire 2016 season with a knee brace on the bothersome joint.

Sabathia is no longer the ace he was during his prime seasons with the Cleveland Indians and early in his Yankees career. He can still serve as a valuable piece of the rotation, however, especially with New York being limited in terms of pitching depth. He finished this season with a 3.91 ERA in 30 starts.

He had previously established himself as one of baseball’s most reliable workhorses for more than a decade. Injuries have become an issue over the past couple of years, though. He missed most of the 2014 campaign because of knee problems, and a groin injury sent him to the disabled list earlier this season.

Since he should be back to full strength in time for spring training, the Yankees don’t necessarily have to focus on filling a void. But starting pitching is one area the team will probably try to address in the offseason after ranking 19th in starter ERA (4.44), per ESPN.com.

Sabathia should still have a place in the rotation after his solid bounce-back year. But the Yanks will probably take it easy on the 36-year-old lefty during camp to make sure there are no setbacks before the start of the new season.

                                                   

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Gary Sanchez Ties Record for Fastest to Reach 20 Career Home Runs

New York Yankees rookie catcher Gary Sanchez hit his 20th home run of the season (and his career) in Tuesday’s 6-4 win over the Boston Red Sox, tying Wally Berger’s record for fastest player to reach 20 career long balls, needing only 50 major league appearances to accomplish the feat, per ESPN Stats & Info.

The 23-year-old Dominican phenom did the deed in the first inning, launching a two-run shot to left field off Boston Red Sox starting pitcher David Price.

While no longer a realistic part of the wild-card chase, the Yankees did bring Boston’s impressive winning streak to an end at 11 games, putting a dent in their archrival’s bid to earn the No. 1 or 2 seed in the American League playoffs.

However, the Red Sox still enter Wednesday just one-half game behind the AL West-leading Texas Rangers for the top spot, with a one-game lead over the Cleveland Indians for the No. 2 seed.

In any case, Sanchez has been the leader of the Yankees’ impressive second-half youth movement, with the team’s combination of young talent and deep pockets providing hope for a quick return to playoff glory.

Prorated to a 150-game season, Sanchez’s incredible numbers work out to 60 home runs, 96 runs and 126 RBI, though it is worth noting that catchers rarely make 150-plus appearances in a single season these days.

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Starlin Castro Injury: Updates on Yankees 2B’s Hamstring and Return

New York Yankees second baseman Starlin Castro has not appeared in a game since Sept. 17 because of a hamstring injury, and it’s unclear when he will return to the field.

Continue for updates.


Castro Out vs. Blue Jays

Friday, Sept. 23

The Yankees announced Castro was not in the starting lineup against Toronto on Friday.


Latest on Castro’s Timeline for Return

Thursday, Sept. 22

Manager Joe Girardi said he could take the field again this season, per Bryan Hoch of MLB.com.


Castro Playing Major Part in Yankees’ Offensive Surge

This is Castro’s first season with the Yankees after playing his initial six years at the MLB level with the Chicago Cubs. He is slashing .273/.304/.439 with 21 home runs and 69 RBI in 146 games and has provided a power surge for the Bronx Bombers considering his career-high home run total entering the 2016 campaign was 14 (2012 and 2014).

The Yankees will likely turn toward Ronald Torreyes until Castro is ready to return. Torreyes has appeared in 63 games this year and is slashing .271/.322/.391 with one homer. The Yankees also have Donovan Solano, who is in his first year with Yankees after four seasons with the Miami Marlins. However, he has only appeared in three games in 2016 and is there more for depth purposes.

The Yankees can at least take solace knowing they have replacements available, but neither of them provide the presence in the order that Castro does on a daily basis.

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Masahiro Tanaka Injury: Updates on Yankees Star’s Elbow and Return

New York Yankees pitcher Masahiro Tanaka has suffered a flexor mass injury, Mark Feinsand of the New York Daily News reported Thursday.

Continue for updates.


Tanaka to Miss Monday’s Start

Thursday, Sept. 22

Feinsand reported Tanaka, who will miss his scheduled start Monday, won’t throw for five days as he recovers from the injury.

This is another setback for the injury-prone pitcher, which is particularly worrisome for a Yankees team that’s relying on him to be the ace of the staff as it fights for a postseason berth.

He underwent elbow surgery in October 2015 to remove a bone spur and was on the disabled list from April 23 to June 3 last season with right wrist tendinitis and a forearm strain. He missed another start down the stretch in September 2015 because of a strained right hamstring.

Tanaka could have had surgery after suffering a partially torn elbow ligament in 2014, but he decided against it.

The right-hander tallied 24 starts in 2015, posting a 12-7 record, a 3.51 ERA, and 139 strikeouts in 154 innings. He also finished with an impressive 0.99 WHIP and 3.1 WAR, according to ESPN.com. In 2016, he’s 14-4 with a 3.07 ERA, a 1.08 WHIP and 165 strikeouts in 199.2 innings pitched.

While injuries have prevented him from living up to the astronomical hype that surrounded him when New York signed him before the 2014 campaign, he is the anchor of the Yankees pitching staff when healthy. He has struggled to keep the ball in the park, allowing 62 home runs in his first three seasons, but his 1.08 WHIP makes the ace valuable at the front end of the rotation.

New York will have to rely on pitchers such as Michael Pineda and CC Sabathia in the meantime. It also has a formidable bullpen with pieces such as Adam Warren and Dellin Betances to help shorten games until Tanaka is ready to return.

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Gary Sanchez’s MLB Superstar Breakout Just the Start of an All-Star Future

There’s a New York Yankees coach named Tony Pena. He was an All-Star catcher when he played in the major leagues, the only All-Star catcher ever born in the Dominican Republic.

When you ask him why there’s only been one, he first says, “Don’t ask me that question.” Then he points across the Yankees clubhouse, at the corner where 23-year-old Gary Sanchez is sitting in front of his locker.

“There’s one coming up,” he says.

There’s a major league scout who grew up as a Yankees fan and has long followed the Yankees farm system while working for a rival team. You ask him about Sanchez, and he points to Monument Park.

“That’s where he could end up,” the scout says.

You see, it’s not only fans and writers who are caught up in the Sanchez craze. It’s real, because while no one could rightly expect 19 home runs in the first 45 games of his major league career (no one had ever done that), plenty of people who know Sanchez best have long believed he would succeed, and succeed big. 

His path to the big leagues hasn’t always been smooth, but the benchings and suspensions and “time outs” can easily give the wrong impression about a kid who signed at 16 for $3 million and simply needed to grow up.

“He’s always been a good guy in the clubhouse,” said pitcher Bryan Mitchell, who signed with the Yankees a month before Sanchez and saw him at every level, starting in the rookie Gulf Coast League in 2010. “You always want that guy on your team.”

As Andrew Marchand wrote in a fantastic ESPN.com story on Sanchez’s development, becoming a father two years ago helped Sanchez move from sometimes-immature kid to fast-developing man.

“When he got the baby, that changed his life,” Sanchez’s friend Francisco Arcia told Marchand. “He thought about what he has to do.”

He had to do a lot, because modern data-driven baseball puts more pressure on young catchers than on any other players. They need to understand scouting reports but also adjust from them. They also need to understand pitchers, a difficult enough task even when they speak the same language and share a culture.

Sanchez had to learn all that, including English, because he barely spoke the language when he first showed up in the minor leagues. He still uses an interpreter for interviews now, although teammates say his command of the language is more than adequate.

In fact, when Masahiro Tanaka was asked what language he and Sanchez communicate in (since both use interpreters), he said they speak English. When he was then asked who speaks the language better, Tanaka quickly pointed across the room.

“Sanchez!” he said.

The language was a challenge, but so was the position. The best young players in the Dominican Republic simply don’t go behind the plate, and neither did Sanchez, at first.

He was a third baseman as a kid and only became a catcher when a coach suggested his strong arm might fit better behind the plate.

“At first, I didn’t like it,” he said. “Eventually, I came to like it.”

With few Dominican-born catchers to use as role models, Sanchez said he watched Ivan Rodriguez and Jorge Posada (both Puerto Rican) and Jason Varitek.

“The money [in the Dominican Republic] goes to infielders and outfielders,” he said. “When you grow up there and have a coach, they want to teach you third base, shortstop, second base. There aren’t too many catchers.”

He was still raw when he signed. His manager at Single-A Staten Island, former major league catcher Josh Paul, told Marchand that Sanchez “couldn’t catch a fastball down the middle” when he played for him in 2010. Paul, now a minor league catching instructor with the Yankees, also told Marchand, “I’ve never seen anyone work harder on a baseball field [than Sanchez did last year].”

That work ethic stands in contrast to some of the stories told about Sanchez. Even now, he has to fight the tag that he’s sometimes lazy.

“If somebody doesn’t know you, and they see you one time, it’s hard to have that judgment,” Sanchez said. “When you go through a season with them, they know.”

The ones who knew told the Yankees front office that Sanchez was a keeper, a potential star worth sticking with. But Yankees general manager Brian Cashman admitted to Billy Witz of the New York Times he listened to trade offers for Sanchez as recently as last summer.

“I’m glad for my sake that I didn’t do it,” Cashman told Witz. “All the people guiding me through the process were saying: ‘This guy’s going to get there. He’s going to be the difference-maker. He’s going to be special.'”

A year later, everybody can see that. But others saw it before Sanchez began hitting home runs in the big leagues.

There was the umpire in the Double-A Eastern League who made time at the end of the 2014 season to go find the Trenton Thunder coaching staff. He knocked on the office door, just to deliver a message.

“That kid made more progress this year than anyone in this league,” the umpire told them.

There was Carlos Subero, the Milwaukee Brewers first base coach who managed Sanchez in the Arizona Fall League last October.

“I’m as high on this guy as anybody could be,” Subero said.

The fall league is filled with prospects from every organization, but it can also be grueling. Almost every player in it has already been through a full season, and by the time the championship game is played the Saturday before Thanksgiving, everyone just wants to get out of there and go home.

Well, not everyone.

“Eleven o’clock, the night before the championship game, I get a text from Gary,” Subero said. “He’s sent me what he thinks my whole lineup should be for the next day, and not only where they should hit but why. Everyone wanted to go home, but Gary wanted to win.

“That’s who Gary Sanchez is. I told my wife, that’s why this kid is going to be an All-Star.”

That’s one reason, for sure, to go along with the power that enabled him to hit 19 home runs in just 166 major league at-bats this season and the arm that has already erased nine baserunners. (Did you see the one he threw out from his knees?)

Subero noticed how smart a hitter Sanchez already is, something Yankees manager Joe Girardi has also referred to. He noticed how diligent Sanchez is at controlling a game and working with pitchers, something Yankees pitching coach Larry Rothschild has mentioned.

“He’s not afraid to take charge, and that’s sometimes hard when you have a young catcher working with veteran pitchers,” Rothschild said. “It’s been good to see.”

Rothschild also praised Sanchez’s game-calling ability, another rare quality in a young catcher in the big leagues.

A few scouts still pick at things Sanchez needs to work on, though, especially with his receiving skills. But one scout marveled at a pitch Sanchez blocked, a split-finger fastball from Mitchell that bounced on the edge of the batter’s box.

“Only Pudge [Rodriguez] and [Yadier] Molina block that ball,” the scout said.

Rodriguez played in 14 All-Star Games and has a good chance at being voted into the Hall of Fame this winter, the first time he’s eligible. Molina is a seven-time All-Star likely headed for Cooperstown, as well.

Sanchez played in the All-Star Futures Game each of the last two years. He was an All-Star in the Eastern League in 2014, in the Florida State League in 2013 and in the South Atlantic League in 2012.

If you had to pick an American League All-Star team right now, he might make it.

You wonder if things will change, if kids in the Dominican Republic will see Sanchez and say they want to catch, they want to be him.

For now, though, Sanchez is the best bet. Only five Dominican-born catchers played even one game in the major leagues this season, and only Welington Castillo of the Arizona Diamondbacks—hardly a star—played regularly all season.

The other World Team catcher in the Futures Game, Cleveland Indians prospect Francisco Mejia, was born in the Dominican Republic but has yet to advance past the Single-A level.

Sanchez is already a star, if not yet an All-Star.

“He’s gotten better every year,” said Mitchell, who has seen all the progress close-up.

He’s 23, two years younger than Pena was when he made the first of his five All-Star teams in 1982. Pena was the first Dominican catcher in the All-Star Game.

Thirty-four years later, he’s still the only one.

There’s one coming up.

    

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

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball.

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Gary Sanchez Becomes Fastest Player to Hit 19 HR in MLB’s Modern Era

New York Yankees catcher Gary Sanchez is having a better start to his career than anyone in baseball history.

The rookie hit his 18th home run of the season Wednesday night against the Tampa Bay Rays, making him the fastest to reach that mark in the modern era, according to Andrew Marchand of ESPN.com. It took the 23-year-old phenom just 45 games.

Sanchez amazingly followed the second-inning home run with another long ball later in the game, making him the fastest to 19 home runs as well.

According to MLB, the next-fastest player to reach that milestone was Wally Berger, who needed 51 games to do so in 1930.

The catcher went 0-for-2 in two games at the major league level last season and then 0-for-4 in one appearance in May this year. However, he has been unstoppable since rejoining the roster, producing at an extremely high level over his last 42 games.

In addition to the home runs, Sanchez finished Wednesday’s contest with a .337 batting average and .410 on-base percentage.

Teammate Brian McCann had high praise for the rookie, per Bryan Hoch of MLB.com:

Seth Rothman of the YES Network considers him a top contender for Rookie of the Year despite his short time in the majors:

Manager Joe Girardi believes he deserves the award, per Erik Boland of Newsday:

Prior to joining the big league club on a full-time basis, Sanchez hit only 10 home runs in 71 games in Triple-A this year and didn’t reach 19 home runs in any minor league season.

However, he has found magic in the Bronx.

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Yankees’ Playoff Hopes Fading Fast After Crushing Walk-Off Loss to Red Sox

Much like convenience-store lackey Dante Hicks in Kevin Smith’s seminal 1994 film Clerks, the New York Yankees weren’t even supposed to be here.

They sold their veteran assets at the August 1 trade deadline and fixed their gaze on the future. They surrendered.

Then, a funny thing happened. They started winningand kept winning. On Sept. 8, yours truly wrote a rosy, they’re-in-this-thing column. 

It’s not over, not mathematically anyway. But after a crushing 7-5 defeat against the Boston Red Sox on Thursday, the Yankees’ playoff hopes are fading fast.

For most of Thursday’s tussle at Fenway Park, New York was in control. The Yanks held a 5-1 lead heading into the bottom of the eighth. Ace Masahiro Tanaka continued his run of dominance with seven frames of four-hit, one-run ball.

Then, Boston mounted a rally. David Ortiz went deep in the eighth for his 537th home run, passing Mickey Mantle and taking sole possession of 17th on the all-time list (salt, meet wound). And the Sox plated five more runs in the ninth, capped by Hanley Ramirez’s walk-off three-run homer.

There’s stinging symbolic pain mixed in there—losing to the Red Sox and watching a legendary Yankee get eclipsed by a Beantown hero in the midst of his swan song.

The more immediate problem for the Yankees, however, is that the loss dropped them to 77-69. They now sit five games behind Boston for the American League East lead and three games off the pace for the second wild card.

That wild-card gap isn’t insurmountable with 16 games left to play. New York, though, would have to leapfrog not only the wild-card-leading Baltimore Orioles (80-66) and Blue Jays (79-66), but also the Detroit Tigers (78-68) and Seattle Mariners (78-68). 

Stranger things have happened. But if the Yankees miss the postseason, Thursday’s meltdown may be the watershed moment. ESPN.com’s Adam Rubin described it with the “C”-word (no, not that one):

The Yankees have three more games at Fenway, followed by three in Florida against the Tampa Bay Rays and four north of the border against the Jays. After the conclusion of this 11-game trip, they return to the Bronx for three-game sets against the Red Sox and Orioles to close things out.

The good news is, that’s a lot of games against their division rivals. “The teams that we’re trying to catch, we’re playing,” third baseman Chase Headley said, per Newsday‘s Anthony Rieber.

The bad news is, those teams have potent offenses capable of laying waste to a pitching staff.

Outside of Tanaka, the Yankees rotation is one crooked question mark. And the bullpen, after the deadline trades of Aroldis Chapman and Andrew Miller, is no longer an unmitigated strength. Newly anointed closer Dellin Betances is having a strong season, but he coughed up the homer to Ramirez and looked gassed. 

“Everyone’s tired this time of year,” skipper Joe Girardi said of Betances, per Newsday‘s Erik Boland. “We’re fighting for our lives.”

This isn’t a eulogy for the 2016 Yankees. That would be premature. And we’re not suggesting New York’s future is less bright than it was a few weeks ago.

The Yankees have MLB‘s best farm system, per Bleacher Report’s Joel Reuter. They have enviable young talent on the big league roster, including bust-out rookie catcher Gary Sanchez, who collected two more hits Thursday.

And they have arduous contracts coming off the books, meaning they’ll have Benjamins to burn in the ludicrously loaded 2018 free-agent class. 

But this surprising, house-money playoff run appears to be fizzling like a fumbled soda can on a cement floor. FanGraphs gives the Yankees a 7.1 percent chance of playing past Game 162. That could be generous.

It’s not over. But even if it were, you’d have to tip your cap. For a club that wasn’t even supposed to be here, these Yanks have done all right.

    

All statistics and standings current as of Thursday and courtesy of MLB.com unless otherwise noted. 

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Billy Butler to Yankees: Latest Contract Details, Comments and Reaction

The New York Yankees reportedly added another bat to their roster for the stretch run Wednesday.

Citing sources, Jon Heyman of Today’s Knuckleball reported the Bronx Bombers signed Billy Butler to a deal. Ken Rosenthal of Fox Sports confirmed the news.

This comes after the Oakland Athletics released the designated hitter Sunday, per Susan Slusser of the San Francisco Chronicle.

Butler struggled with Oakland this season, slashing .276/.331/.403 with four home runs and 31 RBI in 85 games. The production was a far cry from the numbers he put up for the Kansas City Royals in his prime, when he hit .313 and drilled 29 home runs with 107 RBI in 2012.

He was part of the Royals team that reached the World Series in 2014 before losing to the San Francisco Giants.

In all, the 30-year-old is slashing .289/.354/.441 with 146 homers in his career.

It wasn’t just a drop-off in his power numbers that preceded Oakland’s decision to release Butler. Slusser chronicled a fight he had with then-teammate Danny Valencia in August.

Slusser cited multiple sources who said Butler told an equipment representative that Valencia lied about using off-brand cleats only during pregame warm-ups and “allegedly told the representative that the company should drop Valencia’s endorsement deal.”

The players then pushed each other before Valencia reportedly hit Butler in the head.

Rosenthal suggested the Yankees will use their newly acquired hitter against left-handers, whom they will face seven times in the next 11 contests. However, Butler has hit three of his four home runs this year and 26 of his 39 long balls from 2013 to 2015 against righties, per ESPN.com.

As of Wednesday, the Yankees were four games behind the Boston Red Sox in the American League East and two games behind the Toronto Blue Jays for the AL’s final wild-card spot.

Butler hasn’t been the force he once was during the 2016 campaign, but he is a proven bat who can help an offense that has struggled for much of the year. As of Wednesday, New York’s 610 runs scored ranked 22nd in the big leagues.    

Butler may not be a season-saving presence in the lineup, but the Yankees offense needs a boost as the club chases a playoff spot.    

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Aaron Judge Injury: Updates on Yankees OF’s Oblique and Return

New York Yankees outfielder Aaron Judge suffered an oblique strain in his team’s 3-0 win Tuesday night over the Los Angeles Dodgers. He’s been placed on the 15-day disabled list, per Jesse Spector of Sporting News.

Continue for updates.


Judge Likely Out for Season

Wednesday, Sept. 14

Speaking to reporters, Yankees general manager Brian Cashman said he doesn’t think Judge will return this year, per Brendan Kuty of NJ Advance Media.

The injury came in the bottom of the fourth inning. During an at-bat against Dodgers starter Julio Urias, Judge called for the trainer after swinging and missing on a changeup and fouling off a fastball:

Judge stayed in the game to finish the at-bat but made way for Jacoby Ellsbury to start the fifth.

The 24-year-old figures to be a big piece of the Yankees going forward. At the start of the season, Baseball Prospectus ranked him as the top player in the organization’s minor league system. He sits fourth on MLB.com following New York’s midseason acquisitions of Clint Frazier and Gleyber Torres.

Gary Sanchez’s breakout has largely resulted in Judge getting overshadowed, though. Judge is also batting .179 with four home runs and 10 RBI in 95 plate appearances.

While it would be nice for Judge to continue getting at-bats in the majors, there’s little sense in putting him at further risk for injury with so little time left in the season. The Yankees are still in the playoff hunt, but given his struggles at the plate, it’s doubtful Judge would help New York’s postseason chances all that much.

The Yankees announced Rob Refsnyder will start in right field for Wednesday’s 4:05 p.m. ET game against the Dodgers. An outfield of Ellsbury, Refsnyder and Brett Gardner is likely manager Joe Girardi’s preference going forward with Judge unavailable.

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Yankees and Rays Play Rare Game with 3 Multi-Homer Performances

The New York Yankees and Tampa Bay Rays combined for an unusual feat in Thursday’s game at Yankee Stadium, playing the first MLB contest all season that included multi-homer efforts from three different players, per Elias Sports Bureau (via ESPN Stats & Info).

Completing the feat were Yankees catcher Brian McCann, Rays outfielder Kevin Kiermaier and Rays outfielder Steven Souza, with each player contributing two apiece.

Yankees first baseman Tyler Austin also went deep for a walk-off win at the bottom of the ninth inning, but despite the total of seven home runs, Thursday’s game ended with a reasonable 5-4 score in favor of the Bronx Bombers.

Each of the seven homers was a solo job, with the game’s other two runs—both scored by New York—coming on an RBI single and an error at the bottom of the first inning.

Prior to Thursday, it had been more than two years since any MLB game featured three multi-homer performances, dating back to May 23, 2014, when Giancarlo Stanton, Mark Reynolds and Garrett Jones did the honors in a 9-5 victory for the Milwaukee Brewers over the Miami Marlins, per ESPN Stats & Info.

Thursday’s victory was the fifth in a row for a surging Yankees team that finds itself right in the thick of the American League playoff hunt, despite selling off a number of veteran players before the trade deadline.

New York is now just four games behind the Boston Red Sox for first place in the American League East, and only two games behind the Baltimore Orioles for the final wild-card spot.

Tampa Bay, on the other hand, owns the AL’s second-worst record, sitting at 59-80 after Thursday’s tough loss.

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