The deadline to tender contracts to arbitration-eligible players is December 12, just a few weeks away. The Yankees will have decisions to make on a few players, including Melky Cabrera, Brian Bruney, Chad Gaudin, and Sergio Mitre. Chances are the Yankees will offer arbitration to all four, though I still think there’s a chance they’ll non-tender Bruney. The biggest decision they face, though, is on Chien-Ming Wang. The Taiwanese righty might have already thrown his last pitch in pinstripes.
We learn this morning, via MLBTR, that Wang would consider pitching for the Dodgers. Really, he’ll probably consider pitching for all 30 teams, but the Dodgers have a comfort factor. Wang, always described as shy, would have not only two familiar coaches in Joe Torre and Larry Bowa (Don Mattingly, too), but he’d also have former schoolmate Hong-Chih Kuo. In picking his 2010 team, that will probably play a part for Wang.
Just because there’s a connection, of course, doesn’t mean that Wang is ready to don Dodger blue. If the Yankees do non-tender him, and the prevailing opinion in the NYC media is that they will, Wang and his agent Alan Nero will seek the best possible deal. Familiarity might help in that regard, making the Dodgers a strong possibility. And there’s no ruling out Wang re-signing with New York.
I’ve read opinions that the Yankees have mistreated Wang, though I don’t exactly buy that. They didn’t offer him a long-term deal, instead taking him to arbitration over $600,000 in 2008. It was a wise move by the Yankees. Wang, as we know, had two shoulder injuries before 2008, and the Yankees were proceeding with caution. The team and player then acted quickly last off-season, signing a one-year, $5 million deal before Christmas. Wang’s season-ending injury certainly had something to do with that.
It’s hard to see signs of disrespect in that. Not every pitcher gets a long-term deal from his original club. Some teams prefer to take that route, as the Giants did with Matt Cain. Others like to proceed with caution, especially with pitchers who have an injury history. Such has been the Yankees’ dealing with Wang. Now they’ll have another set of negotiations with Wang, presumably over a lesser contract that will bring him back for 2010.
Most of us, I think, would like to see Chien-Ming Wang back in pinstripes next season. We’ve seen him at his best, and if he can return to that level, or something near it, he can fortify the Yankees’ rotation mid-season. The Yankees have many factors to weigh in this decision, including the cost of keeping Wang around, weighed against the risk that he’ll fail. It’s doubtful Wang makes more than $6 million next season in arbitration, and my guess is that if the Yankees do tender him a contract that they’ll work out a one-year deal before the February arbitration hearings.
I think the Yankees have little to lose by offering Wang arbitration. That ensures that if he does return to form, it will be to the Yankees’ benefit. It’s essentially a $6 million bet on his health, though, and without his medicals in hand it’s impossible to make that decision. The Yankees have seen them, or else will see them. I trust they’ll make the right call.
Catchers tend not to age well. Baseball players typically start to decline physically in their early- to mid-thirties, but for catchers, who spend seven months a year squatting, it can come on earlier and more dramatically. For the past few years, Jorge Posada has defied the typical aging patterns of a catcher. He’s had two of his four best seasons, in terms of OPS, in the past three years, including his best overall two years ago, at age 35. That earned him a four-year, $52.4 million contract in the winter of 2007.
That year in the middle, though, was not good. He spent most of the year on the disabled list with shoulder issues which led to season ending surgery. When he was on the field he wasn’t terrible, hitting .268/.364/.411 in 195 plate appearances, but that’s not the production we’re used to seeing from Posada. At least not over the two years before that. It certainly left his 2009 status up in the air. Reports were that his shoulder would be ready for Spring Training, but there were no guarantees that it would hold up, or that Posada would return to his old form.
The Arizona Fall League regular season is over. Surprise finished 16-16, two games back of the Peoria Javelinas for the West Division title. The Javelinas will take on Phoenix in the title game on Saturday.
AzFL Surprise (11-9 loss to the Peoria Saguaros on Wednesday) Brandon Laird: 1 for 4, 1 2B, 1 BB, 1 K Colin Curtis: 3 for 5, 1 R, 1 HR, 2 RBI, 1 K - finishes the season on a 14 for 37 (.378) with 4 doubles, a triple, and a homer
AzFL Surprise (7-4 win over Phoenix on Thursday) Mike Dunn: 1 IP, 1 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 2 BB, 1 K, 1-0 GB/FB – 14 of 26 pitches were strikes (53.8%) PitchFX had the fastball at 93.94-95
Over the next week or so, we’ll again break down what went wrong and what went right for the 2009 Yankees. The series this year will be much more enjoyable than the last.
Pitching and defense wins championships, or so the saying goes. The 2008 Yankees were one of the game’s worst defensive clubs, ranking next to last in the AL, and third worst overall, with a -44.5 team UZR. They were particularly bad in rightfield, where Bobby Abreu shied away from walls (-25.3 UZR/150), and at first base, where Jason Giambi had the range of a life-sized cardboard cutout of Jason Giambi. If that wasn’t bad enough, both Derek Jeter (-0.7 UZR/150) and Robinson Cano (-7.0) were subpar in the middle infield.
Would Yanks pass up Holliday, Bay for Crawford? — 12:00 p.m.
Two years ago, the Yankees held off trading for left-hander Johan Santana so they could wait for CC Sabathia to hit the free-agent market the following winter.
Might they take the same strategy this offseason, bypassing free-agent outfielders Matt Holliday and Jason Bay in order to wait one more year for Rays left fielder Carl Crawford?
The Yankees might not be thinking that far ahead, but Crawford could be available for them at the right time.
Say the Yankees re-signed Johnny Damon to a two-year deal and lost their other big free-agent bat, Hideki Matsui. Crawford could take over for Damon in left in 2011, with Damon getting more at-bats at DH.
Of course, the Yankees would face competition for Crawford; White Sox general manager Ken Williams loves him, the Angels undoubtedly would see him as a perfect fit, and the Astros would love to bring him home to Houston. And those are just three teams.
Then again, the Yankees generally get the players they want. Crawford will be only 29 when he hits the open market. For a team seeking to get younger and more athletic, he would be an ideal choice.
Overhaul not in order, Yankees looking to tweak roster
By Anthony DiComo MLB.com
11/19/09 12:00 AM EST
NEW YORK -- One year ago, right around this time, the Yankees officially shed more than $80 million in payroll, losing the expired contracts of Jason Giambi, Bobby Abreu, Andy Pettitte, Mike Mussina, Carl Pavano and Kyle Farnsworth to free agency. That allowed them to head to the Winter Meetings flush with cash (even by their standards), freeing up enough payroll to sign CC Sabathia, A.J. Burnett and Mark Teixeira.
Those moves turned out all right.
Now, the Yankees will again set their sights on free agency, this time with an entirely different set of goals in mind. This offseason, once the free-agency signing period begins at 12:01 a.m. ET on Friday, New York will not be looking to overhaul its roster. Instead, the defending World Series champions are looking to tweak.
"Last year, we had very specific needs," general manager Brian Cashman said this month. "This year, we're going to approach things a lot differently."
Before attacking the free-agent market, the Yankees must first decide what they want to do with their own free agents. Hideki Matsui and Johnny Damon are both on the market, and New York is likely to keep only one of them. Moreover, Pettitte has an expired contract, and how the club approaches its rotation will depend upon whether or not he returns.
As it stands, the team's most pressing needs are an everyday left fielder and a middle-of-the-rotation starter. Should the Yankees re-sign either Damon or Matsui, who have both indicated that they want to return to New York, they would do so with the intention of using either player mostly as a designated hitter. That would free them up to pursue either Matt Holliday or Jason Bay, two of this winter's most coveted free agents.
Though the Yankees have been more fiscally conscious in recent years, actually reducing payroll last season despite their splashy winter, they remain one of the few teams capable of signing Holliday or Bay to a long-term deal.
They also must use caution when discussing Matsui and Damon. The Yankees have already revealed that they will not sign Matsui except with the intention of using him exclusively as a DH. And Scott Boras, Damon's agent, has made it clear that he is seeking a multiyear deal for Damon, annually comparable to the contract that pays Derek Jeter more than $21 million every year. The Yankees may balk at such aggression.
Other than that, though, the Yankees have few needs. They are set in the infield, with Teixeira, Robinson Cano, Jeter, Alex Rodriguez and Jorge Posada all signed at least through next season. They are content to proceed with Nick Swisher in right field and Melky Cabrera in center. And the top of their rotation is set with Sabathia and Burnett.
If the Yankees are to make a signing at a position other than left field, it will likely be for a starting pitcher. New York could pursue John Lackey, the top starter on the market, thus creating arguably the best top three in baseball. Or the Yanks could go the cost-conscious route, relying on the arms they have and pursuing someone cheaper, such as Randy Wolf, Joel Pineiro or Jarrod Washburn.
Much of that will depend upon Pettitte, who has yet to decide if he wants to return to the Yankees or retire. It is extremely unlikely that Pettitte will sign somewhere other than New York, and the Yankees have reason to desire a return for one of their most consistent pitchers.
Once they have an answer, they can then also go about the business of deciding what to do with Joba Chamberlain and Phil Hughes, two starters by trade who have found success in the bullpen.
All that's clear right now is that the Yankees, as usual, will do something this winter. Coy in their pursuit of Teixeira last year, the Yankees made their biggest splash when few saw it coming. Whether they have something similar in mind with Holliday, Bay or Lackey this offseason remains to be seen. But it's a good bet that, at the very least, New York will sniff around all three.
Anthony DiComo is a reporter for MLB.com. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.
"Never seen a payroll on a ring" "Leave the gun, take the cannoli "
Yankees hurlers show their talent against big league prospects
By Anthony DiComo / MLB.com
11/20/09 1:50 PM EST
NEW YORK -- The Arizona Fall League, if nothing else, opens eyes. Strong performances in the desert can lead to big reputations -- just ask Tommy Hanson of the Braves -- and big opportunities.
Such was the autumn for Mike Dunn, who struck out 20 batters in 10 1/3 innings with the Surprise Rafters of the AFL, showing flashes of the talent that spurred the Yankees to convert him from an outfielder to a pitcher after drafting him 999th overall in the 2004 First-Year Player Draft.
Dunn also walked 10 batters in his AFL stint, pitching to a 4.35 ERA. But the AFL is less about results and more about approach, making Dunn an intriguing case study. Lefty power arms are hot commodities at the Major League level. So if Dunn, who only recently began to find Minor League success as a reliever, can translate his AFL success to next season, then the Yankees may just have found their next homegrown power reliever.
And Dunn was not the only bright spot for New York in the AFL, which ended its regular season on Thursday. Starting pitcher Ian Kennedy, who returned to the Yankees in September after two surgeries, the first to remove an aneurysm in his right arm, led the league in innings pitched -- a far more telling stat for Kennedy than wins or ERA.
"Everything health-wise is back to normal," Kennedy said after recording the final out of his 29 2/3 AFL innings, in the process striking out 28 batters, walking just five and posting a 4.25 ERA. "It was real nice to feel good after surgery, and all the way through the rehab, I've had no health issues."
Kennedy, 24, a former first-round Draft pick often lumped in with Joba Chamberlain and Phil Hughes as the future of the franchise, made one relief appearance for the Yankees in September, pitching a scoreless inning in Los Angeles. He will enter Spring Training with an outside shot to make the rotation, depending in large part whether or not Andy Pettitte retires, how the team approaches the free-agent market and how it opts to use Chamberlain and Hughes.
"I'll basically do whatever they tell me, but they haven't talked about it," Kennedy said. "I'll ask them, but we didn't talk about it a whole lot when I was up there."
The AFL, which runs from October through late November, affords Major League prospects extra development time after the regular season ends. Many current and former Yankees, most notably Alfonso Soriano in 1998, have used the opportunity as a springboard to big league success.
Every Major League team is allowed to send seven players to the AFL. The other five Yankees, all playing for the Surprise Rafters, wrapped up their AFL seasons as such:
Colin Curtis, LF: After hitting just .250 in 126 games split between Double-A Trenton and Triple-A Scranton this season, Curtis, 24, broke out by batting .397 in 20 AFL games. He led the league with a .731 slugging percentage, hitting five home runs and seven doubles.
Brandon Laird, 3B: The only Yankee to outhomer Curtis was Laird, who bashed six long balls over the span of 90 AFL at-bats. Laird, a 22-year-old third baseman, also hit .333 and drove in 24 runs.
Austin Romine, C: Romine, who turns 21 on Sunday, caught four games for the Rafters, finishing 6-for-15 at the plate. All six hits were singles.
Grant Duff, RHP: After thriving at Double-A Trenton this season, Duff performed equally well in the AFL, posting a 2.89 ERA over 9 1/3 innings out of the bullpen. Duff, 26, saved two games for the Rafters.
Zach Kroenke, LHP: The 25-year-old struck out 14 batters over 15 1/3 relief innings, finishing with a 1-0 record and a 5.28 ERA in 11 appearances.
Anthony DiComo is a reporter for MLB.com. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.
"Never seen a payroll on a ring" "Leave the gun, take the cannoli "
Matsui's bat, Damon's spikes, Lee's lid among items on display
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By Alden Gonzalez / MLB.com
11/20/09 3:10 PM EST
The Yankees' latest feat has already been deemed Hall of Fame-worthy.
Artifacts from baseball's most memorable moments from this past postseason -- one that saw the Yankees notch their 27th World Series championship -- have been put on display at the Autumn Glory exhibit at the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in Cooperstown, N.Y.
Following New York's Game 6 Fall Classic win over the Phillies on Nov. 4, the museum acquired nearly a dozen artifacts from the Yankees and Phillies to put in the exhibit, which will be on display through the 2010 postseason.
Additional items from the Yankees' World Series title may be added in the coming weeks, but here's what they have so far:
• Hideki Matsui's bat from Game 6, when the eventual World Series Most Valuable Player drove in a record-tying six runs.
• Mariano Rivera's postseason cap. Rivera saved five of the Yankees' 11 playoff wins and posted a 0.56 ERA.
• The Game 6 bat of captain Derek Jeter, who posted a .407 average in the World Series.
• Johnny Damon's spikes from his Game 4 double steal.
• Jorge Posada's and Jose Molina's catching masks from the postseason.
• Suzyn Waldman's scorecard from Game 6. Waldman became the first woman to broadcast a World Series game when she served as a Yankees radio broadcaster.
• The cap worn by Phillies starter Cliff Lee, who was 4-0 with a 1.56 ERA in the playoffs.
• The No. 46 jersey worn by Andy Pettitte when he was the winning pitcher in Game 6 of the American League Championship Series.
• Pettitte's World Series cap.
• The first ball to come out of play during Game 1 of the World Series, which was the first Fall Classic game at the new Yankee Stadium.
• A bat used by Phillies second baseman Chase Utley during the World Series, when he tied a record with five Fall Classic home runs.
Alden Gonzalez is a reporter for MLB.com. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.
"Never seen a payroll on a ring" "Leave the gun, take the cannoli "
Andy Pettitte is a free agent which means he wants to play baseball in 2010.
I was never the biggest Andy Pettitte fan. I never disliked him but I never went crazy over him. I guess it has to do with the fact that I took him for granted all these years.
He went 14-8 with a 4.16 ERA in 32 starts in 2009. That wasn’t too bad but it was his guidance and wisdom he gave to the newest free agent pitchers CC Sabathia and A.J. Burnett about pitching in New York that made him valuable.
Andy Pettitte was also a big time pitcher in the playoffs and out pitched some of the biggest named pitchers in baseball. The Yankees should sign him for that reason alone. If he misses some time in the regular season, so be it but have him ready for the playoffs.
He pitched the clinchers in the ALDS, the ALCS and the World Series so we know he’s a winner.
We all know that if the Yankees want Pettitte back, it would be easy to get him back because the Yankees have the resources to get him back.
Andy Pettitte has leverage however when it comes to resigning with the Yankees. The Yankees have only two reliable starters that are signed and that’s C.C. Sabathia and A.J. Burnett. Who else can you count on after that? The Yankees used a three man rotation in the World Series and Andy Pettitte was one of the pitchers used in the rotation.
Chien-Ming Wang is a question mark and you don’t know how he’s going to pitch after having shoulder surgery.
Joba Chamberlain and Phil Hughes have not fared well as starters so you know that the Yankees would want to sign another free agent pitcher.
The free agent market isn’t that strong and the best pitcher available is John Lackey even though he’s no slouch.
The Yankees gave Andy Pettitte five million dollars last year with five million in incentives which he reached. The question is who much should the Yankees offer Pettitte this time around after a strong post season?
Would it take 12 to 16 million to get him back? I don’t think another club would offer him that much but if the Yankees don’t offer him a bigger contract than this year, he might feel insulted and sign with another club.
The bottom line is, the Yankees need him back and I hope they get him to pitch again for the New York Yankees in 2010.
The Pirates claimed pitcher Chris Jakubauskas off waivers from the Mariners, according to a team press release. The Pirates designated Jeff Karstens for assignment to clear roster space. Jakubauskas, 31 next month, allowed 91 hits and 27 walks in 93 innings for the Mariners last year, striking out 47 for a 5.32 ERA.