Saturday, May 31, 2008

More Anti-Yankee Bias in the Press

Jim Souhan of the Minnesota Star Tribune wrote what I'm sure he thought was a scathing article about the state of the Yankees. Instead, Souhan comes across as an ignorant homer, bitter about the Yankees' continued success and the Twins' lack of it since the days of Puckett and Hrbek.

If you want to get fired up read the article here.

The best way for us to stick his words up his keester would be a 4 game sweep in the baggy-dome, coupled with a series 0-fer by "one of the most electrifying players in Twins history" Carlos Gomez (are you kidding me? 203 at bats and a .319 OBP and he's already among the best players in Twins' history?? Get a grip!).

It's time to flick the insignificant gnat off of our forearm and kick their butts!

Today's Reading

Eight Minutes With Mark Melancon
Update on Posada
Details of MLB's 2008 Special Negro Leagues Draft
Could Giambi Be a Yank in '09?
Shoulder Strain Sidelines Matsuzaka

Friday, May 30, 2008

Who will the Yankees Draft?

The MLB draft is just around the corner and there is not shortage(finally!) of information, some of the best;
Keith Law Projects the First Round
MLB.Com's Draft Central
Baseball America's Draft Page
River Ave Blues Does a Great Job as well

So, the question is really who are the Yankees going to target at #28 of the first round? The organization could use some high end bats but it doesn't seem likely for those to drop. The Yankees seem to have a few requirements when it comes to the drafting players;
  1. Throw right-handed
  2. Have plus velocity
  3. Want a ton of money
  4. Be a project

The best match I can find is Gerrit Cole who throws hard, is a RHP, a Boras client(wants a ton of money to skip college), and has some makeup questions around him. He has been tied to the Yankees on MLBtraderumors.com and by Keith Law. Here is a breakdown of him on milb.com.

The good;

His projectability and his stuff, with the ability to throw three average to plus pitches, and to throw them for strikes.

Cole was throwing 95-98 mph early and settled in at 92-94 throughout his start.

The bad;

He has some mechanical issues with his delivery, with an arc in the back and a tendency to throw across his body; he gets too emotional on the mound.

Cole is a projectable high school right-hander who compares a bit to Kyle Farnsworth.

Ok the last part might be a plus, Krazy Kyle is a decent ML player with great stuff so finding him in the late first would be a good thing....I guess.

Today's Reading

Full-Time Joba Ready To Start
Baby Boss Has 'High Hopes' For Hughes, Kennedy
Pitcher Used to the Shadows Is a Bright Spot for the Yanks
Don't start that Joba
Joba seeing double?
Jorge Posada progresses, almost ready
Expect Joba to have his ups and downs
With Yanks roster, what you see is pretty much what you get
More Trouble For Tabata

Yankee Stadium Legacy Card Set


Marty Appel, former PR man for the Yanks, is involved in a special promotion from Upper Deck - It's called Yankee Stadium Legacy. In Marty's words -
I wanted to make your readers aware of an Upper Deck card product called Yankee Stadium Legacy – a 6,661 card set, with one card representing every Yankee home game ever played in Yankee Stadium (plus a few extras for Papal visits, boxing, etc.).

It is the largest card set ever produced (Guinness Book worthy), and an amazing research project.

The cards are inserted into various Upper Deck baseball products, and will continue into next year so that the 2008 MLB season is included.

More information is at
www.OwnTheLegacy.com. Is it impossible to collect the full set? It’s certainly a challenge. Also, fans can register the codes on the back of the cards at the website to be included in a Yankee Dream sweepstakes for a chance to win tickets to the All-Star Game, the last regular-season game and the first 2009 home game.
Sounds like a very cool project. Click the link above and check it out!

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Top Ten Reason (This week) I want to Have Mariano's Love Child

In reverse order;
10. Convinced Edwar to throw his fastball more
9. Makes Converting Joba to a starter a no-brainer
8. Holds 'relievers only' meetings when they suck
7. Makes a mean steak
6. Has given 1 walk this year
5. Has given up 1 run all year
4. Enter Sandman is still one of the most exciting things that happens at the Stadium
3. ERA+ of 1035 - No that is not a typo.
2. 0.52 Whip
1. Did I mention the 1035 ERA+!

Sometimes we take Mo for granted but he is the undisputed best player at his position in baseball history. Undisputed. Take it all in while you can.

Past Yankee All-Stars

In looking at the All-Star voting I came across the list of past Yankee All-Stars, a couple caught my eye;
  • Robbie Cano 2007 - I forgot Robbie made the team and with his post/pre splits I am a little shocked (.274 6hrs pre AS, .343 13hrs after)
  • Javier Vasquez 2004 -10 Wins 3.56 era at the break, 4 Wins 6.92 era after. Also made me angrier then I have ever been watching a baseball game in game 7 when he gave up the GS to Damon, well except maybe game 6 when the Stoic Joe didnt make the Yankees bunt on Curt - that still makes me so mad! Why Joe Why?!?!? I yelled that 2000 times that day, still makes me angry....damnit Joe.
  • Robin Ventura 2002 - .263 19 Hrs at the break, ended up at .247 27.
  • Mike Stanton 2001- The pick that took the reserve selections away from the managers. Was there ever a more homer of a pick?

Also, since 1933 the Yankees have had more then one representative every year but four;

  1. Bobby Murcer 1972 - Finished top ten in MVP voting, a deserved selection
  2. Steve Sax 1990 - Finished at .260/.316/.325 but had 43 steals! Maybe made it on reputation.
  3. Scott Sanderson 1991 - Ended up with 16 Wins and a 1.1 whip on a real bad team, deserved it
  4. Roberto Kelly 1992 - .272 10 Hrs and 28 sbs. This team had nobody start more then 10 games and have a winning record.

An All-Star Nightmare?

The final season in Yankee Stadium is being celebreated by holding the annual All_Star game and festivites in the Bronx. The House that Ruth built will be given its proper send off or will it? Imagine this;
  • The All-Star Festivities will begin with the Home Run Derby. The event is being highlighted by Red Sox David Ortiz attempting to call his shot ala the Babe.
  • Right now the best starting pitcher in the AL has arguably been Red Sox Daisuke Matsuzaka who sports a 8-0 record and a 2.53 era.
  • Based on the current voting totals the Al lineup would consist of 5 other Red Sox players - Ortiz, Manny, Youkilis, Pedoria and Varitek
  • The AL club is being Managed by Red Sox Manager Terry Francona
  • At least one other Sox will make the team - Papelbon, Okajima is a long shot too.

So to celebrate The House That Ruth Built we will be overrun by Red Sox. Also, with Jorge out we loose one possible All-Star and are left with Arod, Jeter, Mo and Possibly Wang on the team.

So what do we do? Vote, Vote, and Vote again. Cano is second to Pedoria so he could slip in bad season and all, at first base go heavy on Justin Mourneau, catcher Joe Mauer is our man, and at DH Hideki is 2nd behind Ortiz. I don't typically care about the All-Star game but I couldn't stomach seeing an all red display in the Bronx. So get the word out and rock the vote!

Expectations

On this date last year the Yanks were 21-29, 14.5 games behind the Red Sox in the AL East. Comparatively, 26-27, 4.5 games behind the Sox doesn't look too bad. The problem is, the Yanks went on to finish 73-39 en route to a 94-68 record.

Assuming 95 wins will be needed to get in the playoffs, the Yanks will need to go 69-40 (.633) over the duration of the season. For some reason, we all expect that to happen, no?

I am fairly confident that the Yanks have an extended good streak in them, and that they are a better team than their .500 record indicates. Are they capable of playing .633 ball over 109 games? Not unless the bottom of the rotation is straightened out and the offense becomes more consistent.

It is very possible that unless the turn-around happens immediately we Yankee fans will need to temper our expectations for the year - not yet, but soon.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Hughes the Next Joba?

Phil is expected to be out about another month with the cracked rib that sent him to the DL. With the Raz our best pitcher of late, and Joba headed for the rotation, when he comes back there may very well be no room for Phil in the rotation.

I'm starting to think that it might be smart to put Phil in the 'pen when he comes back and allow him to fight for the vacated Joba roll of 8th inning wonder.

I am absolutely convinced that Phil is destined for stardom as an Ace starting pitcher. He obviously struggled mightily however in the beginning of this year. A combination of mechanics, approach and confidence had Phil on a downward spiral before the Yanks realized he had a cracked rib.

When he returns, a shot to pitch out of the 'pen may be able to restore him to the right path.

Phil has an excellent fastball and a plus curve; a perfect recipe for bullpen success. Bringing him in for an inning at a time might allow him to stop thinking and worrying about his approach and allow him to simply rear back and fire away.

A stint in the 'pen might also allow him to regain his confidence and reacquire the swagger a successful pitcher needs.

Phil is not going to reach his innings limit this year either way. At 21 there is still a ton of time for him to develop and realize his stud potential. Putting him in the 'pen for the rest of this year might just be the best way to go about it.

Edwar The Great - Part II

In Edwar The Great Part I we talked about how having a truly dominant strikeout pitch was the main ingredient to being a successful relief pitcher. We supposed that if Edwar simply added a degree of effectiveness to his mediocre fastball that he could be a dominant reliever out of the 'pen for the Yanks.

Thanks to the tutelage of the best starter and the best reliever of this generation, we are starting to see that dominance emerge from Edwar.

The strikeouts have always been there. In his minor league career Edwar has 237 Ks in 190 ip, and even during a pretty bad 2007 big league season Edwar K'ed 31 in 21ip. In those 21ip last year, though, Edwar allowed a staggering 38 baserunners, 14 via the walk.

The lack of success he had with the Yanks last year can be directly linked to the lack of a major league caliber pitch to go along with the devastating changeup. Batters would simply lay off the change and mash his 88 MPH fastball.

After spending time with Mariano, and after seeking advice from Pedro Martinez, Edwar is looking more and more like the dominant reliever we thought he could become. Relying more on a fastball that now consistently sits at 92 mph.

In yesterday's appearance, Edwar threw 22 pitches; 11 of which were fastballs, 2 sliders and 8 changeups. 7 of these fastballs were clocked by MLB at 92 mph, 2 at 91, and 2 at 90. Couple that with a change that is consistently 79-80 mhp and he now has a 10-12 mph difference between change and heat. The additional 3-5 mph might not sound like a lot but the fact that it gives that much more separation from his changeup makes a huge difference.

It's only the start of June, and he's only thrown 14 innings so far this year. But Edwar is becoming the bullpen force we thought he could become.

Murphy's Law

Murphy's law is an adage in Western culture that broadly states that if anything can go wrong, it will. "If there's more than one possible outcome of a job or task, and one of those outcomes will result in disaster or an undesirable consequence, then somebody will do it that way."

0-7 with a 7.99 ERA is pretty much a worst-case scenario.

3-12 in games started by Hughes and Ikky is absolutely the most undesirable consequence.

Both pitchers on the DL is pretty much Murphy's Law in action.

The best part of all of this is that we may not even miss them for now. A starting 5 of Wang, Pettitte, Moose, Rasner and Joba looks better than a rotation that includes Kennedy or Hughes right now.

As we have warned since November, 2007 has been set up as a growth year for the 2 of them; a learning experience with an eye toward the bigger picture. Once Hughes' rib and Kennedy's lat is healed they can now go to the minors under the guise of 'rehab starts' and work on the things they need to get straight.

Keep in mind - these are steps in the process. Learning to pitch in the bigs is a process. refining their superior talent is a process. At 21 Hughes is still ticketed for Ace-dom, and at 23, Kennedy will still be very good. What we're seeing now is just Murphy's Law in action.

Sunday, May 18, 2008

Random Thoughts

Anyone feel like the year's Rays will end up being 2008's version of the 05 Orioles? The O's were actually 13 games over at this point in '05.

The team just seems to find a way to loose lately. The start has been rough but the season is nowhere close to being lost.

The Yankees are rich. According to Juan Gonzalez the Yankees pulled in 188 million in gate receipts alone last year (up from 122 in 04) and are projected to bring in upwards of 252 million next year. Add in the lack of a rent payment (14 mil) and increases revenues from owning concession and the Yankees will have plenty of dough to improve the team with.

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Its Official - the Rays are no longer a Joke

But we will always have the Orioles;

There's No Such Thing as Bad Publicity


Baby Stein's a chip off the old Block

Like Father Like Son

Hank - 'We're Not Gonna Take It"

Hank Tells Yanks to Earn Their Money

Hank Says Yanks Must Play Harder

Does anyone else find it strange that Hank picked up right where papa George left off? How can Hank be just like his dad and cause all of this turmoil by yelling and making threats in the papers?
No one should be surprised. It's a 30+ year Yankee tradition to goad the papers into giving the Yanks free publicity. What I don't understand is - How come no one seems to understand that this is the Steinbrenner goal?
The message boards, blogs and papers are full of people telling Hank he's gotta shut his mouth, or agreeing with him, or calling him a blustering idiot like his dad...I beg to differ. The fact that we are talking about him at all is brilliant!

Rather than everyone talking about the Mets yesterday, Hank's comments made sure that he and the Yanks were the center of attention for the tabloid media. Rather than a back page of Ryan Church and his 4 RBI, or John Maine and his 2.81 ERA, the second citizen Mets were again relegated to second class status due to the rantings of Baby Stein. Hank is a business owner - he is getting a ton of free publicity for his business and does what is necessary to keep that coming.

Also, the whole Brain Cashman debate - Is he going to leave because of Hank? Is he upset by Hank's comments? Are the Yanks gonna sign him after this year? I don't buy any of that either. Cashman knows what baby Stein is up to and is 100% on board with it. The Yanks have had a policy of not signing players to deals until the end of their contract year is up. They are simply doing the same with Cash. I believe wholeheartedly that the Yanks and Cash probably have a deal in place for Cash to stay, but are waiting until the season is over to announce it.

I love it. The Yanks are, and should be, the center of the baseball universe. The papers love it because it helps them sell. The Yanks love it because it keeps people talking about them and gives them free publicity. Just make sure, as a fan, that you see it for what it is - a planned strategy; NOT the rantings of an idiot.

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

A Note From YankeeGM

This morning, like just about every other, I booted my computer and scrolled through the approximately 50 different sources of Yankee news and commentary in my Google Reader. If you read more than 1 Yankee blog you encounter the same thing I do every morning - in an effort to post something, most bloggers pick up on the story of the day and report it as if their readers count on their site alone for Yankee news, and you end up seeing a lot of the same stories on multiple blogs every day.

The writers of YankeeGM think that blog readers are among the more sophisticated fans in the sports universe and probably read many blogs, not just ours. We therefore make a conscious effort not to post on items that you likely have seen 12 times already. We started this blog to give our opinion when we feel it needed to be heard - not to try and be another source of Yankee news. PeteAbe (LoHud) is with the Yanks everyday; if there's news to report he will likely have it first if not at least in a timely manner.

The obvious exception to this rule is when we feel we have a different take on things; an opinion not already expressed a gazillion times.

I don't have any issues with other bloggers writing on each and every topic - quite to the contrary, I think it's a smart way to keep readership high; I just don't have the patience to write about all the same things as everyone else. This is why we sometimes go a couple of days without posting.

Hopefully you'll keep YankeeGM a part of your everyday blog rounds. Just because we haven't posted for a couple of days doesn't mean we're no longer around. We appreciate our readers and thank you for reading YankeeGM blog.

Monday, May 12, 2008

The End Of Igawa? Finally.

George King is reporting that the Yankees have decided to have Ian Kennedy start Friday against the Mets and not Kei Igawa. This is great news in the short term but the long term result might be the end of Kei Igawa in pinstripes.

If he is not going to start now when will he? This is a serious vote of no confidence from the Yankees and a clear sign that Igawa is now thought of as a flop even within the organization. So bid farewall to Igawa and add him to the Yankee pitching scrapheap(I think there is space right next to Jeff Weaver).

Sunday, May 11, 2008

A Little Razz-mataz

A second excellent outing by Darrell Rasner yesterday begs the question - How's he doing it?

If we are to believe Al "The Arrogant Professor" Leiter, a fastball without 92 MPH velocity or better mandates plus secondary pitches for a hurler to be successful. As Rasner topped out at 89 yesterday he must have had success due to some great curves/sliders/changeups, right? Wrong.

In the first inning, Rasner threw 12 pitches; 10 fastballs.
In the second inning Rasner threw 14 pitches; 8 fastballs.
In the third inning Rasner threw 10 pitches; 5 fastballs.
In the 4th inning Rasner threw 13 pitches; 7 fastballs.
In the 5th inning Rasner threw 10 pitches; 7 fastballs.

Rick Peterson, the Met pitching coach, likes to say that the 4 biggest elements to a pitcher's success are, in order, location, movement, velocity and change of speed. Darrell Rasner proved that point yesterday.

Against a great hitting team, and armed primarily with 87-89 MPH heat, Rasner located his fastball extremely well yesterday, and threw 61 of his 87 pitches for strikes.

Having Joba's 99 MPH fastball is nice, but even then (as Krazy Kyle has shown us in years past) location is still the key to being successful. If Rasner keeps locating well and throwing strikes he could be around for a very long time.

Friday, May 9, 2008

Children Everywhere Brace for Tonight's Shelling


Between Kenny Rogers and (gulp!) Kei Igawa, the bombs coming outta Comerica tonight will be enough to make WWII vets have flashbacks.
Hat tip to It Is High...

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Update on The Dirty Sanchez


Our favorite source of SWB info, Chad Jennings, spoke with Yankee minor league pitching guru Nardi Contreras and reports the following on our bet to replace the immortal Mo in 3 years:

Humberto Sanchez

Throwing bullpen sessions, but Contreras said he's not at 45 pitches yet. Forty five is an important number because if the Yankees are going to use Sanchez as a starter, they want him throwing at least 45 pitches before they let him pitch to hitters. If he's a reliever, he can start at 35 pitches. It has been my understanding that Sanchez will work as a reliever, at least that's what I was told this spring, but Contreras made it sound as though that's not set in stone. He obviously didn't go into specifics -- to be expected because the Yankees rarely go into specifics with this kind of thing -- but it sounds like Sanchez could be -- could be -- fairly close to pitching in games.

It's easy to forget that TDS was a top pitching prospect before TJ surgery forced him to take a year off.

In 2006 TDS posted a 5-3 record and 1.76 ERA in 11 starts for AA Erie. He had 86 strikeouts in just 71 innings allowing only 2 HR. After a promotion to AAA Toledo, Sanchez had 9 starts and a 3.86 ERA.

Scout.com had the following to say about Sanchez:

Possessing a plus fastball and a knockout strikeout pitch with his curveball gives him more than enough to be a big weapon in the back-end of a big league bullpen, and some scouts believe his ultimate role with the Yankees may depend on the further development of his changeup. With stuff comparable to Joba Chamberlain, he affords the Yankees a lot of flexibility upon his return.

High praise, indeed.

While his rehab is a bit behind schedule, if Sanchez can begin throwing to live batters in the next couple of weeks it's not unlikely that he could be in a position for a September call-up.

Search This Blog