Yankees’ starting pitching rotation earns surprisingly impressive grades via Fangraphs

yankees, gerrit cole

All the New York Yankee post-season news has been centered around picking up that star shortstop to fill the gap from the failed experiment with Gleyber Torres. Still, General Manager Brian Cashman has been vocal about acquiring a one-two punch in the pitching rotation that is now missing with the departure of 2 times Cy Young Award-winning Corey Kluber.

Cashman has done next to nothing to accomplish the needs of the club before MLB instituted the CBA lock-out.

Fangraphs has issued their projected WAR for MLB’s pitching rotations, and it shows that if the Yankees fail to upgrade the rotation for the new season, they still come in with the 8th best rotation in baseball.

Unfortunately for the Yankees, their cross-town rival New York Mets come in at number one on the list. However, with the acquisition of Max Scherzer, they now have two bonafide aces leading their pitching staff. Jacob deGrom and Scherzer should give them the edge in the NL East.

The Mets’ rotation looks like this: deGrom, Scherzer, Carlos Carrasco, Taijuan Walker, and David Peterson. Marcus Stroman is presently a free agent. This Mets lineup is a game-changer in the National League.

Meanwhile, the New York Yankees have one of the best pitchers in the game leading their lineup with Gerrit Cole. But they lack that one-two punch they will need if they reach the post-season. Cashman knows that at the end of the CBA lock-out, he will be actively looking for that missing piece, as evidenced by his try for 2 time Cy Young award winner Justin Verlander. Verlander ended staying with the Astros.

 

1.) Gerrit Cole will lead the lineup and be the opening day starter. Cole last year was 16-8 in 30 starts with an ERA of 3.23. His record should have been much better, but he got poor support with the poor hitting 2021 Yankees. The Yankees only scored 3.03 runs per innings he pitched.

 

2.) Number two for the Yankees at this point will be Luis Severino. Yes, Severino will be a question mark, not pitching an entire season since 2018. Severino, if he can come back to his 2018 from can be that number two man. In 2018 he was 19-8. In a few games in 2019, he had an ERA of 1.50. He didn’t pitch at all in the shortened 2020 season. Last season after coming off rehab, he threw four games with a perfect .000 ERA.

 

3.) Jordan Montgomery: Monty had the second-best WAR after Cole. Last season, he went 6-7 with an ERA of 3.83. Montgomery was the bad luck kid for the Yankees last year, getting the least run support of any pitcher. He had over a half dozen of his starts with absolutely no run support and another six games with less than two runs of support.

 

4.) Jameson Taillon: As the 2021 season progressed, Taillon found his form that made him a star pitcher with the Pirates. Taillon was 8-6 in 29 starts with an ERA of 4.30. He pitched much better in the second half than the stats would suggest. He, like other Yankees pitchers, would have liked better run support.

 

5.) Nestor Cortes Jr.: Cortes Jr. turned out to be the pitching story of the 2021 season, replacing Kluber for three months. Cortes Jr. pitched in 22 games for the Yankees going 2-3 with a tiny 2.90 ERA in his 14 starts. Without a blazing fastball, Cortes confused hitters with his never-know-what’s-coming pitching style and delivery.

The Yankees, in addition to this starting rotation, have some other qualified pitchers in the bank, including Domingo German, who can be dominating at times, Luis Gil, and Clarke Schmidt. But make no mistake about it, Cashman will be looking to improve the starting rotation.

Interestingly, according to Fangraphs, none of the Yankees East rivals came in ahead of them as far as the pitching rotation is concerned. The Toronto Blue Jays came in two positions behind the Yankees at number ten. However, they have Jose Berrios, newly acquired Kevin Gausman, and Hyun Jin Ryu leading their rotation.   

Yankees’ ace has the chance to win first Cy Young award on Wednesday

yankees, gerrit cole

The winner of the American League Cy Young will be made public on Wednesday evening, as award season continues to take the scene at the same time as the start of free agency. A member of the New York Yankees, Gerrit Cole, is a strong candidate to take home the recognition, which would be the first one of his great career.

However, as good a candidate as Cole is, he is not the favorite to win. That distinction goes to Robbie Ray, who surged from a couple of lousy seasons to dominate in 2021. The Blue Jays’ ace had a 2.84 ERA and led the American League with 248 strikeouts. He had a solid 1.05 WHIP and covered 193.1 innings, limiting walks (a career-best 2.47 per nine frames) in the process. Lance Lynn is the other finalists, but his chances are looking slim.

The Yankees’ ace, on the other hand, finished with a 3.23 ERA in 181.1 frames, accumulating 243 strikeouts. It’s safe to assume he would have led the league in whiffs if he had pitched the same number of innings as Ray.

The race is close between the Yankees’ Cole and the Blue Jays’ Ray

Cole finished with 2.03 walks per nine and a 1.06 WHIP. The race is extremely close, more than people think, because the Yankees’ pitcher has the edge in strikeouts per nine (12.06 to 11.54), walks per nine (2.03 to 2.47), fWAR (5.3 to 3.9), and the increasingly obsolete win-loss record (16-8 to 13-7).

Ray takes the edge in ERA (2.84 to 3.23), WHIP (1.05 to 1.06), bWAR (6.7 to 5.7) and total strikeouts (248 to 243). However, every other run-prevention metric favors the Yankees’ pitcher: FIP (2.92 to 3.69), xFIP (2.93 to 3.36), xERA (3.15 to 3.55), and even SIERA (2.93 to 3.22).

So, while Ray is the favorite (and he had a really good season regardless of the result) and there is no doubt about that given the people perception, Cole has a legitimate chance of winning the award.

Yankees’ Gerrit Cole is a finalist for major award

yankees, gerrit cole

The league, through its official site, announced the list of finalist for all major awards on Monday. The New York Yankees have one player among the candidates to win the American League Cy Young.

Unsurprisingly, Yankees’ ace Gerrit Cole was announced as one of the finalists for the AL Cy Young award. Robbie Ray of the Toronto Blue Jays and Lance Lynn of the Chicago White Sox are the two other candidates to take home the prestigious recognition.

Perhaps Cole is not the favorite to win his first Cy, but he has a very good case to be strongly considered. With a 2.84 ERA, Ray was better from a run prevention standpoint, but Cole’s 3.23 is not too shabby and there is a sizable difference in FIP (Fielding Independent Pitching) and other metrics in favor of Cole.

The Yankees’ righty had an impressive campaign

The Yankees’ right-hander had an excellent 2.92 FIP and struck out 12.06 hitters per nine innings, with 243 in total. He was able to overcome an important rule change, the prohibition of the foreign substances on the ball, to put an all-around great campaign.

The winners of the Cy Young award in both leagues will be announced on November 17. Philadelphia Phillies’ Zack Wheeler, Los Angeles Dodgers’ Max Scherzer, and Milwaukee Brewers’ Corbin Burnes are the finalists in the National League.

Incredibly, Cole hasn’t won a Cy Young award in his career despite some really impressive seasons, like 2019 when he was with the Houston Astros. This is his second time as a finalist since that year, when he lost to former teammate and current free agent Justin Verlander.

His 16 wins led the American League in 2021, and so did his 5.93 strikeout to walk ratio. His 243 strikeouts were third. Unfortunately, he faltered in the Wild Card game, when he couldn’t get out of the third frame, but it was a really impressive campaign for the Yankees’ best starter.

New York Yankee Analysis: Results of my 2021 predictions

New York Yankees, Aaron Judge

Every year before the season starts, I make my predictions on what the New York Yankees season might look like, who will star, and who will bomb. Last year I bombed out several times but still had a 50% winning percentage. This year’s predictions were made on March 30, 2021, when things looked risky but pretty rosy for the upcoming season. But, of course, things have changed a lot since then, so let’s examine whether I stared or bombed.

1. Gerrit Cole will not perform as expected!

This year after his average spring training performance, I predicted he would go 15-6 with at least 24 home runs given up. He will also leave several games early. I hit this one -pretty much on the nose; Cole hasn’t come close to his 2019 performance with the Astros. Hed ended the season 16-8 with an ERA of 3.23. In 2019 he was 20-5 ERA 2.50. That’s quite a drop-off, particularly in ERA. I hit the nail on the head with my home run prediction; he gave up precisely 24. Projection grade A.

2. DJ LeMahieu will be good, but not as good!

Last year LeMahieu was the New York Yankees MVP and was all of baseball’s batting champ, hitting .364. At the beginning of the season, I suggested that DJ would not come close to those lofty numbers. He will start the season slowly and only marginally improve after the All-Star break. He has definitely not performed like he did last year, with a batting average of about .100 less. Projection grade A.

3. Clint Frazier will shine in his first full season!

Clint Frazier hit .267 last year, and his defense improved so much he was nominated for a Gold Glove Award. This season I predicted the same, except that he will have a better batting average and would play his first entire season with the Yankees. Oh boy, I made an absolute mess of this one. First, Frazier was not as good in the outfield and has bombed at the plate. His batting average is .186, with only five home runs. Then midway through the season, he came down with some ailment that still hasn’t been fully explained. Dizziness and eye focus problems kept him off the field. Projection grade F.

4. Aaron Judge will have an injury-free season

Last year I predicted that Aaron Judge would have an injury-shortened season, and I was correct; he played in only 28 games while nursing injuries. This year in what will probably prove to be my most foolish prediction, I am saying he will play in at least 135 games and stay healthy for most of the season, hitting over 35 home runs. I did considerably better on this one. He mainly stayed healthy and played in 148 games. He hit 39 home runs, four above my prediction. Projection grade A.

5. Gleyber Torres will lead the Yankees in home runs

Last season after Torres hit 38 home runs in 2019; I predicted he would be much better during 2020. I was wrong. I made nearly the same prediction this season, saying that he would return to his winning ways and lead the Yankees in home runs. Suggesting he could hit as many as 45 long balls. We all know how that turned out. His defense was poor to the point that the Yankees gave up on him as their shortstop. If anything could be worse than that, his performance behind the plate was worse. I bombed big time on my prediction. He batted only .259 after an uptick late in the season; he hung around the .210 mark most of the season. He hit only nine home runs. Projection grade F.

6. Domingo German will be the winningest pitcher

After returning to the New York Yankees from his suspension, Domingo German will be the Yankees winningest pitcher. He started the season pitching magnificently in spring training which is what I based my prediction on. I predicted that he would have a 20 game winning season, returning to his 2019 performance when he went 18-4. I completely flopped in this one. German wasn’t close to good. He started the season with a heartbreaking loss and was sent down to Scranton to figure it out. Upon his return, he would go out and have a can’t touch performance, followed by miserable outings. He finished the season just 4-5 in 18 starts. Projection grade F.

7. Jonathan Loaisiga will be the Yankees’ best reliever

Loaisiga has been growing in Yankee importance for the last few years. This spring training, he was just short of perfect. He didn’t allow a run in his first six games. He had a tiny 1.26. He will outshine all the other relievers and give up less than 30 earned runs in the 2021 season. I will add a caveat that that could be affected by the number of innings he throws. I hit this one on the nose. Loaisiga has been the Yankees’ most dependable reliever. He is 9-4 with an ERA of 2.17 in 57 games. He had five saves. With all the pitching injuries, he quickly became Aaron Boone’s go-to guy. Projection grade A.

8. Gary Sanchez will prove the Yankees wrong

Last year I predicted that Gary Sanchez would have the second-most home runs of any Yankee player. I was correct; he shared that stat with DJ LeMahieu. This year I am saying that the New York Yankees made a mistake in offering him to stay with the team. As much as I would like to see him prevail if his spring training performance is was an indication, he will not. Gary gets into long slides that make him ineffective as a hitter. Although he got ten homers last year, he batted a miserable .147. I predict he will have another poor season that may seal his fate with the Yankees. I was pretty correct for the first half of the season, but after the All-Star break, he improved somewhat. He ended the season with a .204 batting average and 24 home runs. Regardless of the somewhat improved season, he is still a topic of controversy. Projection grade C.

9. Yankees will win 108 games

Last season, a 60 games season, I said that the Yankees would win 48 games; they only won 33. I fell substantially short of my prediction. In 2018 and 2019, they won 100 and 103 games. This year with improved pitching, they will exceed that and win 108 games. Unfortunately, I blew this one big time. The Yankees fell far below my prediction, with Aaron Boone guiding the club to only 92 wins on the season, falling eight games behind the East-leading Tampa Bay Rays. Projection grade F.

10. The Yankees will win their 28th World Championship

Last year I made this exact prediction and was very wrong; they didn’t even win the East Division. However, this year I will stick with the same forecast for several reasons. One is that at least at the beginning of the season, most all the Yankees are healthy. With their new pitching staff and the return of both Domingo German and Luis Severino, the New York Yankees will prevail over the significantly reduced Tampa Bay team, with the Toronto Blue Jays coming in second in the East. The Yankees will go on to beat the San Diego Padres in the World Series in seven games. I guess I am the perennial optimist; if they have a chance of winning it all, they have to have a highly dramatic turnaround.

As the Yankees failed miserably, so did my prediction. They won only 92 games but were good enough at the end to face the Boston Red Sox that I predicted would have a failed season. Unfortunately, the Yankees lost the winner take all wild card game, and their season was over. To add insult to injury on my prediction, the San Diego Padres didn’t even make the postseason. Projection grade F.

Notes: In my years of making annual predictions, so far, this has been my worst. However, in my defense, most industry analysts would have agreed with me. This has been a very disappointing season for the New York Yankees and its fans. No one has been able to come up with a reason that one of the most potent lineups in baseball hasn’t been able to hit the ball consistently. They have made far too many basic ball-playing mistakes and pitching failures. Jameson Taillon and Domingo German have underperformed. The loss of Corey Kluber for three months could not have been foreseen. The only part of the team that has mostly shined is the bullpen.

You usually don’t see substantial changes in teams until after the World Series has been completed. The Yankees have announced that they are retaining Aaron Boone as manager for at least another three years. They also will not renew the contracts of their hitting coach, assistant hitting coach, and third base coach. In addition, their first base coach announced he was retiring from the Yankees.

EmpireSportsMedia.com’s columnist William Parlee is a member of the Society for American Baseball Research. Follow him on Twitter @parleewilliam.

Yankees’ ace Gerrit Cole fails to come through: ‘I’m sick to my stomach’

Gerrit Cole, New York Yankees

In the biggest game of the New York Yankees’ season, their ace couldn’t deliver. With five full days of rest, Gerrit Cole couldn’t get out of the third inning and ended up taking the loss as the Bombers fell 6-2 to the Boston Red Sox. Their archrivals advanced to the American League Division Series, where they will face the Tampa Bay Rays.

Cole didn’t pitch well in his last start of the regular season, allowing five runs in six innings last Wednesday against the Toronto Blue Jays. Last night, he conceded three runs, including a pair of home runs to Xander Bogaerts and Kyle Schwarber.

“A difficult decision, but one I feel I needed to make,” said Yankees manager Aaron Boone, per USA Today. Cole left with two men on base and nobody out, but Clay Holmes cleaned up his mess with a key double play.

The Yankees’ ace didn’t deliver

Cole said he was “sick to my stomach’’ for failing to come through when it mattered most. He also said that “not achieving your ultimate goal” is the “worst feeling in the world.”

“That’s the guy they gave all that money to. He’s the ace,” Bogaerts said of the Red Sox’s happiness about taking the Yankees’ ace out of the game so early. Still, “everyone coming out of that bullpen is throwing 95-plus.”

Cole has struggled since injuring his hamstring in September 7, with a 6.35 ERA since that point in four starts. He insists he is fine health-wise.

“When it’s all said and done, I didn’t perform the way I wanted to perform,” he said.

The offense once again failed to show up besides Giancarlo Stanton, who hit two balls to the Green Monster and homered late in the game to put the second and final run for the Yankees. Ownership and the front office will have a long, busy winter trying to bring the Bombers back to being really competitive.

New York Yankees: 3 Takeaways from a bad end to a disappointing season

New York Yankees, Aaron Boone

It’s all over for the New York Yankees as they lost the wild card game in Boston. A long and primarily painful season is now behind them as they bombed out in another postseason. The Yankees, with the most championships in all of the sports, haven’t won a World Series in twelve years. In that span, the phrase Bronx Bombers once meant a powerful team that slaughters its opponents now seems to mean a team the bombs out at the end of every season. The Yankees lost the wild card game 6-2 to the Boston Red Sox.

Gerrit Cole bombs big time

At the beginning of this season, having Gerrit Cole on the mound usually meant winning another game; that is no longer true, as evidenced in his last four games when he gave up 18 earned runs. That is not the signature of a pitching ace; it’s not even the sign of a mediocre pitcher. Steinbrenner and company paid huge bucks to acquire Gerrit Cole to come up big in big situations. Instead, he has failed and failed badly.

Last night in a winner-take-all ticket to an eventual World Series, Cole only lasted two innings giving up three earned runs, two of them homers, and walking two Red Sox. That’s a 13.50 ERA, hardly a stat that will win games. Cole, after the game, didn’t give any excuses like that mound wasn’t proper or my hamstring was bothering me; he simply said he didn’t make his pitches.

In his usual manner of protecting his players rather than holding them responsible, Manager Boone actually said I think he made some good pitches. If he meant that he threw a few pitches that weren’t hit out of the park, that is true, and if he wanted to suggest that Cole pitched well, he doesn’t understand baseball. At the very least, an ace should be able to keep a team in the game even if they don’t have their best stuff. Unfortunately, Cole did not do that last night.

Yankee bullpen gives up three runs

This season, the mostly good bullpen has suffered somewhat because the starting pitching hasn’t been stellar, causing them to be overused for most of the season. But, for whatever reason, the bullpen did not respond and lift the Yankees out of the hole that Gerrit Cole created. Instead, they gave up three more runs making it extremely difficult for a poor-hitting team to crawl out from.

Some of this is Cole’s responsibility; to expect any bullpen to get 21 outs scoreless is a tall order. After Cole was removed, manager Boone called in Clay Holmes to pitch two innings of one-hit ball. It will be questioned why he didn’t Boone leave him in longer when he only used  26 pitches. Luis Severino, returning from Tommy John surgery, replaced Holmes and gave one run in 1.1 innings of work. Jonathan Loaisiga, also coming back from a stint on the IL, gave up two more runs. Chad Green pitched 1.2 innings of scoreless ball, but it was too little, too late.

Hitting was a microcosm of the whole season

The New York Yankees have been plagued all season long by long stretches of no-hitting. Droughts that put them in a wild card showdown instead of a division win. Unfortunately, after crawling back to postseason contention, they went on another one of those droughts. Hitters four through nine last night went one for twenty putting all the weight on the lead-off hitters. Giancarlo Stanton and Anthony Rizzo hit home runs, but it wasn’t impactful with no baserunners ahead of them. The Red Sox had only one hit more than the Yankees, but there were runners on base when their sluggers hit.

The New York Yankees have only scored eight runs in their last five games. It was undoubtedly a very inopportune time to go on a hitting drought. Nevertheless, this is the season the Yankees have had, was so inconsistent that it caused them to miss another try at the elusive 28th World Championship. For the Yankees, it’s time to lick their wounds and when they get tired of the taste, try to figure out what went wrong and how to fix it before the start of the 2022 baseball season.

 

New York Yankees Recap: Yankees don’t hit and Cole bombs in the wild card, Yankees go home

New York Yankees, Kyle Higashioka, gerrit cole

Tonight, with the whole season on the line, the New York Yankees faced the Boston Red Sox in the 2021 AL wild-card game. Although the Red Sox won more games in the regular season, causing the game to be played at Fenway Park in Boston, the last time the two teams met, the Yankees swept the Red Sox. They wanted just one more win tonight to get to the divisional series against the Tampa Bay Rays. Unfortunately, it was not to be the hitters didn’t hit, and the pitchers didn’t pitch well. The final score was the Boston Red Sox 7 and the New York Yankees 2. Tonight starts the long offseason of discontent.

The Yankees tried to put their best foot forward by sending their ace Gerrit Cole to the mound to face the Red Sox Nathan Eovaldi, a  former Yankee pitcher. Cole was 16-8 with an ERA of 3.23 and an incredible 243 strikeouts.  Cole has pitched to the Red Sox four times this season, with the Yankees losing two games.

The Red Sox sent Nathan Eovaldi to the mound to hold down the Yankees. Eovaldi is a former Yankee pitcher (2015-16, 23-11). With the Red, Sox Eovaldi has been 20-15 with an ERA of 4.11. This season he is 11-9 with an ERA of 3.75. The Yankees and Eovaldi have met in the postseason once before. In 2018 in game three of the divisional series, he pitched seven innings in the 16-1 Yankee loss, the Yankees’ most lopsided loss in their postseason history.

Eovaldi is coming off a September 29th win over the Baltimore Orioles when he gave up only four hits in a scoreless effort, striking out 7. Still, on the 24th, he lasted only 2.2 innings against the Yankees giving up seven earned runs in the Yankee win. Over the 2021 season, Eovaldi has a 2-4 record against the Yankees.

In the game, Anthony Rizzo led off the first inning against Eovaldi and ground out to first. Aaron Judge flew out to right for the second out. Then, Giancarlo Stanton singled to the monster. Joey Gallo struck out when he couldn’t hold up. At the bottom, Kyle Schwarber led off and flew out to Gardner in centerfield. Kiki Hernandez popped out to Torres at second. Rafael Devers walked. Xander Bogaerts homered to left-center, driving in Devers for the Red Sox two-run lead in the first. Alex Verdugo flew out, but the damage was done. Red Sox 2 Yankees 0.

Gleyber Torres led off the second inning by flying out to right field. Brett Gardner struck out. Gio Urshela singled to the right side. Kyle Higashioka struck out to leave Gio stranded. At the bottom, Hunter Renfroe struck out. Kevin Plawecki doubled to the centerfield wall. Bobby Dalbec struck out. Christian Arroyo struck out stranding one. Red Sox 2 Yankees 0.

The third inning was led off by Andrew Velazquez, who flew out to left field. Rizzo struck out swinging. Judge flew out to the right-center wall to end the half. Schwarber led off the bottom and homered to right field.  Hernandez singled. Devers walked, and that knocked the Yankee ace out of the game. Xander Bogaerts faced Clay Holmes and struck out. Verdugo hit into a double play to end the inning, but the Red Sox picked up another run. Red Sox 3 Yankees 0.

Giancarlo Stanton led off the top of the fourth and struck out swinging. Gallo flew out to center field. Torres flew out to center as Eovaldi had his way with Yankee hitters. At the bottom, Renfroe faced Holmes still on the mound for the Yankees and singled up the center. Plawecki hit into a double play for two outs in the inning. Dalbec flew out to far-right to end the inning. Red Sox 3 Yankees 0.

Brett Gardner led off the fifth inning by striking out. Urshela flew out. Higashioka struck out to end another Yankees scoreless inning. At the bottom, Christian Arroyo against new Yankee pitcher Luis Severino ground out to second. Schwarber ground out to first. Hernandez flew out to Judge in right as Severino put down the side in order. Boston 3 New York 0.

The sixth inning was led off by Rougie Odor pinch-hitting for Anthony Velazquez, and Odor went down on three pitches.  Rizzo homered into the right-field stands. Judge beat out a roller to short for a single, knocking Eovaldi out of the game. Stanton facing new pitcher Ryan Brasier and doubled with Judge in a baserunning mistake trying to reach home, was out at the plate. Gallo popped out to third, but the Yankees got on the board with the Rizzo homer. At the bottom, Devers struck out. Bogaerts walked. Verdugo doubled with Bogaerts scoring from first. Renfroe, against new pitcher Jonathan Loaisiga walked. Travis Shaw pinch-hitting for Plawecki struck out. Dalbec struck out to end the inning. Boston 4 New York Yankees 1.

Glyber Torres led off the seventh inning against Tanner Houck and flew out to center. Gardner stuck out swinging. Urshela struck out for another 1-2-3 inning for Red Sox pitching. Arroyo led off the bottom and ground out to third. Schwarber, who homered in the game, walked.  Hernandez walked, and that was it for Loaisiga. Chad Green came in and faced Devers, who flew out to Gardner with the runners staying put. Bogaerts walked for the third walk of the inning. With the bases loaded and two outs, Verdugo doubled with a run scoring and Verdugo out at second. Red Sox 6 Yankees 1.

In the eighth inning, with the New York Yankees down by five runs, Gary Sanchez pinch-hitting for Higashioka lined out to center. Odor flew out to center. Rizzo, who scored the only Yankee run, struck out to end the half. At the bottom, Renfroe struck out. Christain Vazquez, in his first at bat, went down on strikes. Dalbec ground out to third. Red Sox 6 Yankees 1.

The New York Yankees, with lack licks on the line in the top of the ninth, Aaron Judge ground out to short. Then, Giancarlo Stanton homered around the Pesky Pole in right. Next, Gallo flew out to the warning track in right field. Finally, Gleyber Torres flew out to right to end the season for the New York Yankees.

The wild card final score was the Boston Red Sox 6 and the New York Yankees 2. The winning pitcher was Nathan Eovaldi, and the loser was Gerrit Cole.

 

 

 

 

Yankees’ ace Gerrit Cole is ready to go for tonight’s win-or-go-home affair

yankees, gerrit cole

The New York Yankees refrained from using their ace Gerrit Cole on short rest over the weekend, and ended up winning 1-0 against the Tampa Bay Rays to avoid playing a tiebreaker game with the Toronto Blue Jays.

Thankfully for the Yankees, Cole will be well-rested and ready to take the ball tonight against the Boston Red Sox in the American League Wild Card game, to be played at Fenway Park.

“It’s like, ‘Can we get it going already?’” Cole said, to MLB.com. “It’s like a bit of a waiting game, which is good for the body and good for the mind, to a certain extent, to recover. But you’re champing at the bit to get back out there. I’m excited for the challenge that’s ahead of us.”

The Yankees’ ace is looking to right the ship

Cole’s last start of the season didn’t go particularly well, as he allowed five earned runs in six innings against the Jays last Wednesday, jeopardizing his chances of winning the AL Cy Young. He still can win the award, though, as his main competition, Robbie Ray, had a similar stat line on Thursday.

Cole’s fastball was a problem that day, as he allowed five extra-base hits with the pitch, whiffing only three bats. He said he didn’t locate it very well.

“I don’t think he’s far off at all,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. “I think the stuff is there. In Toronto the other day, they banged him for a couple of home runs on a couple of just-missed heaters. So I think everything is there for him to put it together [Tuesday]. It’s just about executing in the right quadrants against a good team.”

Cole finished the year with a 4.91 ERA against the Red Sox this season, but will be looking for vengeance. He remains the Yankees’ best pitcher and will try to give his team the best chance to win.

New York Yankees: The whole season lies with Gerrit Cole tonight

New York Yankees, Gerrit Cole

New York Yankees general partner and owner Hal Steinbrenner spent $324 million to see Gerrit Cole in a Yankee uniform and pitching for the Yankees, at Yankee Stadium. Cole, 30, was born on September 8, 1990, in Newport Beach, California, to Mark and Karen Cole. Cole’s father was from New York and a Yankee fan. His father would tell him stories of Lou Gehrig and other famous Yankees, and the young boy would quickly become a baseball fan and Yankee fanatic.

Now, tonight Cole will try to show Steinbrenner and company that they made a good investment. Games like this are the exact reason the Yankees wanted Cole.  Cole is 16-8 record, an ERA of 3.23, and an incredible 243 strikeouts. So far, with the Yankees, he is 23-11 with a 3.11 ERA in two seasons. Cole has pitched to the Red Sox four times this season, with the Yankees losing two games. Cole is coming off a loss to the Toronto Blue Jays when he gave up five runs in six innings of work. He hopes to turn it around tonight, dominate the Red Sox, and propel the Yankees into the divisional series.

More on how Cole got to tonight’s game. On weekends one could see the young Cole playing baseball at local ball fields, playing any position so that he could play. His father certainly nurtured Cole’s interest in the Yankees by flying him across the country seven times to Yankee Stadium to see his idols, Mariano Rivera, Derek Jeter, and Andy Pettitte. Cole was a member of the Tustin Western Little League team of Newport Beach.

In 2001 his dad would take the young Cole to the World Series in Arizona to see his favorite Yankees play. The eleven-year-old could be seen in the stands with a Yankee uniform and cap on while holding a sign saying “Yankee Fan Today, Tomorrow, Forever.” Being a lifelong Yankee fan had to, in some way, sway him to being the pitching Ace for a club he loved all his life? The signing of Cole is not the first time Cole and the Yankees have interacted. The Yankees drafted Cole in 2008, but Cole decided to attend college at UCLA. They were also outbid by the Pirates for Cole when he got out of college.

Cole attended Orange Lutheran High School and played on the team as a pitcher. In this sophomore year, he once pitched 45 innings without allowing a run. In his junior year, his fastball reached 94mph. At the start of his senior season, fifty baseball scouts would attend his opening start. He would go 8-2 that season with a .047 ERA while striking out 121. The Yankees would select Cole in the first-round draft in 2008, but Cole would attend college instead.

Cole’s introduction to college pitching at UCLA would be a bit rude, as he faced more talented players. He would go 4-8 with an ERA of 3.49. His next year would be more successful as he went 11-4, with an ERA of 3.37 with 153 strikeouts. In 2011 Cole would sign with the Pittsburgh Pirates. Cole attended spring training in 2012 but was optioned to the Bradenton Marauders of the Florida State League. Cole pitched to a 2.90 ERA before being promoted to the Indianapolis Indians, a triple-A Pirates minor league team. There he would go 5-3 with a 2.91 ERA in twelve starts.

Injuries on the Pirates would cause Cole to be brought up to the majors; he made his MLB debut on June 11, 2013. In his first appearance, he struck out his first batter in just three pitches. In the game, he would also get his first hit. He gave up two earned runs in the game but got his first win as a major league pitcher. He would hit his first home run on Sept. 7, 2014, his second on August 26th, and his third for the Pirates, on May 26, 2016, a three-run blast into the visitor’s bullpen.

For the Pirates, he would go 10-7 in his first year, 11-5 in his second, and an impressive 19-8 in his third year while being an All-Star, MVP nominee, and coming in fourth in the Cy Young voting. He would have an offseason in 2016 going only 7-10. 2017 would be only slightly better when he went 12-12. At the end of the season, he would be traded to the Houston Astros. With a new pitching coach and new technologies, Cole would again find his form. He would go 15-5 in 2018 while posting a 2.88 ERA. Cole’s 2019 was even better, going 20-5 with an ERA of 2.50.

During the 2019 postseason, Cole would get his second taste of postseason play, dominating. In 2018 he would go 1-1 with a 3.46 ERA. He would go seven or more innings in all five of his 2019 starts, sometimes going over 100 pitches. On October 5, against the Rays in the ALDS, he would not allow a run in the 3-1 win. On 10/10, he would again face the Rays and pitch to a .057 ERA in the win. On 10/15, he would lose to the Yankees but post an ERA of just .040. In the ALCS against the Nationals on 10/22, he would get a 5-4 win. To finish his postseason, he would get another win against the Nationals on 10/27 while allowing only one run in the 7-1 Houston win. He would end the postseason 4-1 with an ERA of 1.72.

Once interviewed by David Laurila, he would ask Cole what his hitting approach is; Cole would answer, “I try to get early contact and keep it on the ground. I like to keep the ball down as much as I can. Strikeouts are something that just happens. You don’t go for strikeouts because your pitch count gets too high. When you get that opportunity, you have to put them away with whatever is working that day. That’s the approach I’ve always had to have. I’ve got to keep my pitch count down. If you want to go deep into ballgames, you have to stay under that 100 mark.”

Cole is a fearless monster on the mound and attacks hitters. He is durable and goes deep into games, something that will rest the Yankee bullpen. In his short career, he has been an All-Star three times, been an MVP nominee twice, and voted for the Cy Young Award three times, coming in second in the voting this past year.

Although he has turned out to be the New York Yankees winningest pitcher, he doesn’t seem to be the dominant pitcher he was for the Houston Astros last year. He appears to have struggled at times, even in the games that he has won. Also, Cole has given up home runs; lot’s of them. He has given up a home run in every one of his starts. The Yankees have lost the last four games that Cole started. In those games, Cole gave up eight home runs while walking nine hitters. In 2019 he was 21-5 with an ERA of 2.51; last year, his earned run average was considerably higher at 3.64.

One would have to assume that this crazy baseball season and its broken-up spring training may have something to do with Cole’s performance. There is another possibility, could he be another great pitcher to come to the Yankees and flop? A.J. Burnett is the most recent overpaid pitching bust for the New York Yankees. He was not the first, the Yankees have had over a dozen premier pitchers to come to them in the last 30 years that couldn’t cut it in New York.

Since manager Aaron Boone has matched him up with his battery mate, catcher Kyle Higashioka, the Yankees have won five in a row at one point and pitched to an ERA of just 1.32. If the New York Yankees get all the way to the World Series, Cole could start six or seven games for the Yankees, although some would be on short rest.  In his one postseason start so far last year, he was totally dominating, beating the Cleveland Indians, pitching seven strong innings with 105 pitches, allowing just two runs while walking no one, and racking up 13 strikeouts.  Striking out 13 hitters while issuing no walks has only been done by one other baseball player, and he was Tom Seaver in 1973.

In one of the most important games he will play, he faces the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park in Boston. It’s the 2021 Wild Card game. Cole will face the Red Sox’s Nathan Eovaldi in the 8:08 pm EDT contest. On September 24, he gave up seven earned runs over 2.2 innings of work in the Yankees sweep of the Red Sox at Yankee Stadium. Buckle up fans it will be a hard-fought match by both teams.

When he became a Yankee, Cole and his family moved to Greenwich, CT, a suburb of New York. The 6’4″ Cole is married to his wife Amy, who he met as a softball player at UCLA. His brother-in-law is Brandon Crawford of the San Francisco Giants. He and his wife love to cook and entertain family and friends. Cole is a healthy cook and a nutritional nut. Amy has a blog called “the Culinary Experience”. The two gave birth to a son earlier last summer. Cole has a younger sister Erin.

New York Yankees: Tonight is the night, win or go home, the Wild Card

The New York Yankees have won many games this season, but they also have lost a lot, winning 92 and losing 70. It’s been the worst season since Aaron Boone has taken over as manager. Discarding the shortened season, they haven’t lost this many games since 2017. Regardless of the up and down season, they had this year, in the end, they managed to scratch and claw their way to the postseason. Tonight a few hours after 8:08 pm EDT, the Yankees will know if they will go to the divisional series and continue in the postseason.

The Yankees are in this winner take all game tonight because they have not gotten season wins over any of their division rivals except the lowly Baltimore Orioles and only by a few games. However, they dominated the National League teams they played and had a winning record over all the remaining teams in the AL, except the Angels with a record of 3-4.

The New York Yankees have a lot of work to do. To advance in the postseason and win a 28th World Championship, they will have to win over teams that haven’t been able to win over, all season. First, tonight the Yankees will face the age-old rival Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park in Boston. It came down to the last week of the season to find out if they would have the desired home-field advantage, but when they lost a game, and the Sox won they ended up with identical records. Under the rules, when that happens, the team with the best season record against the opponent gets that home-field advantage. If the Yankees can win the wild card game, they will then fight the Tampa Bay Rays for the division win. Superstar slugger Aaron Judge has this to say about the wild card game:

“That’s going to be a fun game right there. It’s going to be action-packed,” Judge said. “They’re going to bring their A-Game. We’re going to bring our A-Game. It’s just going to be another great game in this big rivalry that we have and we’re looking forward to it. We love playing at home, but we’re excited anywhere we went. Getting a chance to go to Boston to play it is an exciting matchup for sure. We have a great starting rotation, our bullpen is fantastic. Even our offense… a lot of tough outs,” Judge said. “If you’re able to do that in the postseason and wear teams down, you can go far.”

The only thing Aaron Judge didn’t really touch on is that the Yankees have had long droughts of not hitting. The Yankees had only 13 hits in their last three games played and a total of six runs combined.

Getting back to tonight, the Yankees will send their best pitcher to the mound, Gerrit Cole, the Yankee ace, to face a former Yankee Nathan Eovaldi. Cole is 16-8 record, an ERA of 3.23, and an incredible 243 strikeouts. So far, with the Yankees, he is 23-11 with a 3.11 ERA in two seasons. Cole has pitched to the Red Sox four times this season, with the Yankees losing two of those games. Cole is coming off a loss to the Toronto Blue Jays when he gave up five runs in six innings of work.

On paper, the New York Yankees have an excellent chance of winning this game, but there is a concern. Although Cole has won a lot of games, his winning percentage was best earlier in the season. It got to the point that when Cole took the mound, the Yankees were nearly assured of a win. Unfortunately, that is no longer true. Cole had struggled at times during September when he lost as many games as he has won. His innings pitched is down, as is his strikeout rate. In addition, he seemed to have tired as the season progressed.

The Boston Red Sox will send Nathan Eovaldi to the mound to hold down the Yankees. Eovaldi is a former Yankee pitcher (2015-16, 23-11). With the Red, Sox Eovaldi has been 20-15 with an ERA of 4.11. This season he is 11-9 with an ERA of 3.75. The Yankees and Eovaldi have met in the postseason once before. In 2018 in game three of the divisional series, he pitched seven innings in the 16-1 Yankee loss, the Yankees’ most lopsided loss in their postseason history.

Eovaldi is coming off a September 29th win over the Baltimore Orioles when he gave up only four hits in a scoreless effort, striking out 7. Still, on the 24th, he lasted only 2.2 innings against the Yankees giving up seven earned runs in the Yankee win. Over the 2021 season, Eovaldi has a 2-4 record against the Yankees.

The New York Yankees hope that Cole will be at his best tonight and go deep into the game. If he doesn’t, the Yankee bullpen is rested and ready. The Yankees have more options in the bullpen than the Red Sox. The Yankees will pull out all the stops to get into the divisional series with the Tampa Bay Rays in a winner-take-all game.

Tonight’s wild-card game will be televised nationally at 8:08 pm EDT on ESPN. So tune in; there will be no shortage of excitement or nail-biting for either team’s fans in this winner take all event. The loser goes home to lick their wounds.