New York Yankees: One of the most cherished rivalry in sports has been thrown under the bus

For New York Yankees fans, what could be more perfect than a hot, humid summer night at Yankee Stadium and the beginning of a four-game series between the long-standing rivalry of the Yankees and the Boston Red Sox? Nothing, it’s a baseball fan’s dream. But that dream may have been thrown under the bus, no players on the field, no fans in the stands, and no hot dogs sold. Not because the tarp was on the field, Not because thunderstorms were forecast, It was because the horrid coronavirus has not left us.

Just like the Miami Marlins and the St. Louis  Cardinals last year lost games to the coronavirus, the Yankees have lost at least one game to the ugly virus. The Yankees had to postpone two games earlier in the season against the Phillies when 8 in the traveling squad had to go under the MLB mandated Covid protocols. Back then, it was staff, not players. This time that caused the postponement, it’s the players that have been affected.

Three players have tested positive, pitchers Nestor Cortes Jr., Jonathan Losisiga, and Wandy Peralta. Three others are waiting for further tests due to testing positive on a first quick test. Those include Aaron Judge, Gio Urshela, and catcher Kyle Higashioka. The pitchers were all vaccinated. Of those that have tested positive, all but one received the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. The New York Yankees were the first team in baseball to reach an 85% vaccination rate.

No vaccine ever developed has been 100% percent effective, and that is why we continue to see uncommon breakthrough cases, cases where individuals that have been vaccinated get the virus. The Johnson & Johnson vaccine is the least effective of the three vaccines. It is 72% effective against getting the virus, moderate Covid-19, and 85% effective against severe Covid-19. According to a March report from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Pfizer and Moderna vaccines were 90% effective at preventing infections following full vaccination.

With the new Delta variant of the virus, people are still dying from this dread and preventable disease. As an example, Connecticut has one of the fewest new infection rates in the country. Nevertheless, it is one of 42 states that has had increasing rates in the last two weeks, primarily due to the Delta strain that is far more infectious. In the past two weeks, the infection rate has nearly doubled from 0.67 to a 1.29%. The new infection rate means they had 126 new cases yesterday. Over 90% of the new cases are among people who have not been vaccinated. The only way we can return to complete normal is if everyone is vaccinated. There are extremely few valid reasons not to get vaccinated.

Adding to the alarm for the New York Yankees and all of baseball is that slugger Aaron Judge traveled to the All-Star game last week, where he accompanied Yankee ace Gerrit Cole and closer Aroldis Chapman and came in contact with dozens of other players from across the country. This leads to the assumption that the All-Star game could potentially turn out to be a spreader event.

New York Yankees general manager Brian Cashman spoke to reporters Thursday night.

“We have three positives, and we have three pending that we’ve had rapid tests on,” Cashman said, saying the three positive rapid tests are being confirmed with additional lab work.” He further added that the two teams are scheduled to play Friday night at Yankee Stadium. However he added the caviate “we are in a very fluid situation right now.”

It has yet to be seen what impact this will have on the New York Yankees short term. But losing their best reliever Jonathan Loaisiga and one of the best new starters in Nestor Cortes Jr. certainly won’t be helpful as the Yankees try to dig themselves out of a hole in the AL East. If slugger Aaron Judge and third baseman Gio Urshela lose time it could be catastrophic.

It has yet to be determined if the entire series will be played or if a weekend doubleheader will be scheduled to make up for the postponed game. Stay with EmpireSportsMedia.com for all the latest Yankee developments.

 

 

 

New York Yankees Recap: Yankees lose the first game to the Athletics

Tonight the New York Yankees were back at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx to face the first-place team in the AL West, the Oakland Athletics. It was the first time since 2019 that the Yankees were allowed a 100% capacity at the Stadium. The Yankees are coming off a sweep of the Toronto Blue Jays and hope they can do well against the A’s. Jonathan Taillon faced the A’s, James Kaprielian in game one of the three-game set. The A’s won the game 5-3.

With Taillon on the mound, he faced the A’s leadoff man Mark Canha who leads the A’s in triples; he ground out to short. Ramon Laureano struck out swinging. Matt Olsen homered into the stands in right field. Mitch Moreland struck out to end the half. In the bottom, LeMahieu flew out. Aaron Judge struck out. Gleyber Torres went down on strikes for a 1-2-3 inning for Kaprielian. Oakland 1 New York 0.

At the second, Jed Lowrie led off and flew out to Andujar in left. Matt Chapman ground out to Urshela. Sean Murphy ground out for the second 1-2-3 inning for Taillon. At the bottom, Giancarlo Stanton struck out. Gio Urshela struck out swinging. Rougie Odor ground out for Kaprielian’s second 1-2-3 inning. A’s 1 Yankees 0.

At the top of the third, Tony Kemp popped out to Judge. Elvis Andrus doubled to left center. Canha singled up center to drive in Andrus. Laureano flew out to Judge. Olson flew out to end the half. Miguel Andujar led off the bottom by grounding out. Kyle Higashioka flew out to short. Brett Gardner walked for the first Yankee base runner. LeMahieu got a two-run homer to right to tie up the game. Judge went down on strikes—Yankees 2 A’s 2.

Moreland doubled to lead off the fourth, Lowrie ground out. Chapman flew out to Gardner. Murphy was it by a pitch. Kemp popped out to LeMahieu to end the half. Torres led off the bottom by striking out. Stanton ground out to second. Urshela struck out for another quick inning for both pitchers. The game tied at 2.

Andrus led off the fifth and struck out swinging. Canha walked. Laureano went down on strikes. Wandy Peralta replaced Taillon. Olson flew out to Gardner at the center-field wall to end the half. Rougie Odor led off the bottom of the fifth by slamming a homer to right-center. Andujar flew out to right. Higashioka flew out to left. Gardner ground out to first, but the Yankees took the lead in the game. Yankees 3 A’s 2.

The top of the sixth inning was led off by Chad Pinder pinch-hitting for Moreland; he struck out. Lowrie ground out to short. Chapman got a base hit to left. Murphy singled to left for two on and two outs. Kemp hit a three-run homer for the A’s lead. Andrus flew out to Judge, but Kemp’s three-run shot did the damage. At the bottom, it was the top of the lineup for the Yankees. LeMahieu ground out to first. Judge looped to right for a single. Judge advanced on a wild pitch. Torres flew out to left, and Judge took third. Stanton faced the new A’s pitcher Yusmeiro Petit, and he got a long fly out to left to end the inning. A’s 5 Yankees 3.

Canha led off the seventh singling to center. A pitch hit Laureano. With two on and no outs, Olson popped out. The runners moved up on passed ball by Higgy. Pinder struck out. Lowrie struck out, saving the inning for Luetge. At the bottom, Urshela singled past short. Odor, who homered in the fifth, popped out to third. Andujar flew out to center. Sanchez pinch-hitting for Higashioka popped out to third to end the inning and strand Urshela. A’s 5 Yankees 3.

With Luis Cessa on the mound in the eighth, Chapman popped out to left. Murphy went down on strikes. Kemp hit to Judge at the warning track. Clint Frazier pinch-hitting for Gardner led off the bottom by striking out looking. LeMahieu ground out to second. Judge struck out, taking the game to the ninth inning. A’s 5 Yankees 3.

At the ninth, Andrus ground out to third. Canha went down on strikes. Laureano got a two-out single to left. Olson ground out up the first baseline on a toss from Cessa to LeMahieu to end the half. With last licks on the line, Gleyber Torres ground out to short. Giancarlo Stanton walked. Gio Urshela ground into a double play to end the game.

The final score was the Oakland Athletics 5 and the New York Yankees 3. The winning pitcher was James Kaprielian, the loser Wandy Peralta and the save was by Lou Trivino, his 12th.