Wednesday, December 30, 2015

The 2015 Chatties: My Top 10 List Of Most Talked-About Yankees Among Yankee Fans



By Barry Millman

In a year of up and down performances that ran the gamut from Oscar-worthy to the unintentionally comedic, the 2015 Yankees displayed a range of dramatic presentation that held their audience's interest from opening credits to final fade to black. Based solely on my personal eavesdropping live in the stands and in the virtual lobby of social media, these are the ten Yankees I believe charted highest for discussion and comment among the team's fan base in 2015, and the roles that won them their place on this distinguished list.

10) Chris Capuano -  The Thing That Couldn't Die
Brutal enough to be designated for assignment three times, yet confoundingly brought back again and again and again, the club's other C.C. provided Yankee fans steady comic relief  (if not the actual bullpen kind he was paid $5 million to provide) throughout the year with his zombie-like mound appearances and repeated returns from the dead via the transaction list.


9) Chase Headley -- Pulp Fiction
Headley's 23 errors and scattershot aim won him the top spot on the MLB leaderboard for defensive miscues among third basemen (fifth overall) and the gratitude of Eduardo Nunez fans everywhere. Henceforth in the Bronx, routine throws landing in another borough will be known as Headleys instead of Nunees. 


8) Nathan Eovaldi -- Ferris Bueller
Yankee Hall of Famer Lefty Gomez, who once famously said he'd rather be lucky than good, might have rather been Nasty Nate. The Yankees won 24 of the 27 games started by the young fireballer, an unworldy 89-percent team winning percentage untouched by Gomez even in his most dominant years; and his won-loss percentage was second only to  Zack Greinke's among all qualifying MLB pitchers.


7) Mark Teixeira -- Scarface
Before going down for the count with a fractured leg in August, Tex had re-locked and loaded his nosediving career arc with a gluten-free slugging spree that saw more than half  his 100 hits go for extra bases, included his highest home run total in four years and his best OPS since his 2009 debut in pinstripes.


6) Adam Warren - The Manster
A beast in the rotation until it got overcrowded and in the bullpen until he was needed back in the rotation, Warren swung between his roles like a two-headed monster all year with nary a complaint while vocal fan clubs advocated for him to be locked into one or the other --  until Joba Rules and at least one higher salary ultimately blocked him from having any place at all.


5) Masahiro Tanaka - The Crawling Hand
Tanaka's decision to forego Tommy John surgery on his torn UCL transformed his throwing arm into an anatomical obsession and every talking head and ex-pitching pundit into amateur medical experts -- with all too many of them prematurely diagnosing each blip on the mound a sure sign of imminent career-threatening disaster. 


4) Didi Gregorius -- Captain America
Initially signed as a platoon project who might one day grow to fill the giant shoes of a legendary captain, Sir Didi struggled early on when he was unexpectedly thrust into a full-time role on Opening Day. By year's end, though, he was wielding a solid bat and turning plays his illustrious predecessor could only dream of making.


3) Stephen Drew - Dracula
No two words were uttered, texted or tweeted more frequently by Yankee fans in 2015 than "Drew sucks." The second coming of  the infielder no other team wanted in the first place ended much as his first stint did in 2014; like a vampire, sucking the air out of rallies and killing innings with RISP far more often with a whimper than the bang his occasional home run bursts teasingly promised.


2) C.C. Sabathia - The Blob
The 2015 version of the highest paid Yankee was bigger and, by almost any measure, badder than almost every other starter in the sport, and such a destructive force that many openly questioned if his salary alone was buying him playing time. Only an onslaught of injuries to others, a small army of relievers burning their arms up in support, creative scheduling by manager Joe Girardi and an all-too-belated fitting for a knee brace kept him upright before he finally Gilhooleyed himself on the eve of the postseason.


1) Alex Rodriguez - Repo Man
ARod began the season radioactive, but by the time it was over he had rehabilitated himself in the eyes of team ownership, the fan base and media and repossessed his place in the record books and conversation as a bonafide Hall of Famer -- and, perhaps even more impressively, as an invaluable team leader and durable workhorse in the team's surprising bid for the division title.

You can email Barry Millman at nyyankeefanforever@ymail.com and follow him on Twitter @nyyankeefanfore.

Monday, October 26, 2015

A Surprise Ending To Breakout Season
For NY Yankees Prospect Dustin Fowler

Tampa Yankees centerfielder Dustin Fowler

[This story was  originally published on 10/12/15 at http://www.scout.com/mlb/rumors/story/1598277-surprise-ending-to-dustin-fowler-s-big-year.]

By Barry Millman
Special report for HardballScoop.com 

Jim Callis, senior writer for MLB.com and MLBPipeline.com, may have raised some eyebrows when he named Tampa Yankees centerfielder Dustin Fowler one of the reasons he thinks the Surprise Saguaros are the most talented team kicking off the Arizona Fall League season this week.

After all, the unheralded 20-year-old 18th-rounder is one of the youngest players in a league dominated by Double A and Triple A prospects who average three to five years older, more than a few of whom have already seen some major league duty – not to mention he’s merely a taxi squad member on a roster peppered with Top 20 prospects and only eligible to play twice a week.

But for the powerfully built lefty-hitting former wrestler and football player from West Laurens High School in tiny Dexter, Georgia (population: around 500), a coveted assignment to play alongside and against many of MLB’s best prospects in the AFL is only the latest surprise in a breakout season that’s been full of them.

“It obviously came out of nowhere,” he told HardballScoop.com. “I wasn’t expecting it to be this year.”

A speedy six-footer who has caught the organization’s eye with his tantalizing blend of major league-potential grades in all five tools coupled with a relentless work ethic and coachability that has translated into steady improvement, Fowler has shot through the Yankees system like a comebacker through the box, jumping four levels since a brief stint in instructs following the 2013 draft; culminating this year in 487 AB between Charleston and a mid-season promotion to Tampa for a combined .298 BA, good for third best among all full-season prospects in the Yankees’ farm system, 70 RBI (second best) and 30 SB (fifth best).

“He’s strong, he has bat speed, his routes are good, he’s a plus runner, he’s getting better and better all the time,” said Tampa Yankees manager Dave Bialas, who played in the AFL in its inaugural 1992 season and managed in it eight year later in 2000. “It’s good for a player like Fowler to see some older players. ...He’s going to see some pretty good pitching. It’s going to be a good league for him.”

Fowler, who as a member of the High A Tampa Yankees already routinely sees players two to three years older, appreciates he got the AFL assignment because the Yankees want him to see and learn from even older, more accomplished players, and he’s candid about the particular areas he'll need to be watching and speaking with them about to upgrade his own game and make the most of the opportunity.

“Trying to get more walks, see more pitches, get deeper in the count,” he said. “Sometimes I’m too aggressive.  I trust my hands too much right now and it hurts me in cases. Stealing bases I can get better, work on that, get a little bit quicker… get jumps and figure out how to read balls a little bit better and a little quicker."

If Fowler does indeed keep getting better like Bialas expects and the Yankees hope, it should surprise no one if his 2016 Tampa Yankees season includes yet another mid-season promotion -- this time to the Double AA Trenton Thunder.

You can email Barry Millman at nyyankeefanforever@ymail.com and follow him on Twitter at @nyyankeefanfore.

Thursday, September 24, 2015


"Relax. We've been beating these guys for 80 years."

-- Lawrence Peter Berra

Friday, September 18, 2015

A Dozen Fun Facts Every Yankees And Mets Fan Should Know About Tonight's Game


Compiled by Barry Millman

1] The Yankees are 17-7 in games started by opposing rookie pitchers this season. In those 24 starts, those rookie pitchers have posted a 6-11 record and 5.23 ERA (127.1IP, 74ER).

2] RHP Masahiro Tanaka is is 3-0 with a 2.54 ERA (28.1IP, 8ER) over his last four starts and 8-3 with a 3.01 ERA (83.2IP, 28ER) in his last 12 starts. 

 3] Tanaka pitched at least six innings over his last 13 consecutive starts. That's the fifth-longest active streak in MLB and tied for the fourth-longest streak by an AL pitcher this season. He's gone  8-3 with a 3.11 ERA (89.2IP, 31ER) with 11 quality starts during the streak.

4] His only  career start against the Mets on May 14, 2014 was a complete-game shutout  in a Yankees' 4-0 win (9.0IP, 4H, 0BB, 8K) making him and Andy Pettitte the only Yankees starters to throw a complete-game shutout against the Mets. Tanaka also recorded his first MLB base hit  in that game, stroking a two-out single off Jose Valverde in the ninth inning.

5] The Yankees are 10-6 at Citi Field since it opened and have won 4-of-6 series there.

6] The Yankees threw shutouts in both games at Citi Field in 2014 (May 14th and 15th) and carry an 18-inning scoreless streak into tonight’s game. They were the first visiting team to throw back-to-back shutouts at Citi Field and the first to blank the Mets at their home field in consecutive games since the Atlanta Braves did it in 1999 (July 2nd and 3rd). 

7] Yankee starters have allowed 1ER or fewer in five straight starts at Citi Field for a 0.54 ERA (33.1IP, 2ER)  and in 10 of 16 starts since the stadium opened in 2009 for an all-time ERA there of  2.09 ERA (99 IP, 23ER).

8] In interleague play this season, the Yankees lead all MLB clubs in OBP (.364) and OPS (.843) and rank second in batting (.290) and slugging (.480).

9] The Yankees 6.35 runs per game average in interleague play is nearly a full run ahead of the next best team in MLB  and is the highest scoring average in interleague play since the Angels' 6.56 runs per game in 2009.  

10] They are 10-3 in their last 13 road games and have won four consecutive road series for the first time since a four-series road streak in June of 2012. 

11] Over the last four games, Yankees starters are 2-0 with a 1.16 ERA (23.1IP, 3ER) and have struck out 24 against  just 3 walks. Their staff 2.42 BB/9  ratio is the lowest in the AL.

12] Yankees batters have homered in 11 straight games, and have slugged 35 three-run HRs and seven grand slams this season. Their 42 HRs with two or more runners on base  is the most by any MLB team in nine years.

You can email Barry Millman at nyyankeefanforever@ymail.com and follow him on Twitter at @nyyankeefanfore.

Sunday, September 6, 2015

Yankees Match 103-year-old Record For MLB Debuts, But For Different Reasons

Opening Day 1912: A good year for major league 
debuts and uniforms, but little else. 

By Barry Millman

As 24-year-old lefty James Pazos prepared to face his first big league batter Saturday in the ninth inning of a one-run game at Yankee Stadium, he found inner calm by repeating his mission to himself. 


"All you gotta do is throw strikes," the former 13th-round pick smiled. Ten pitches and eight strikes later  it was mission accomplished as he whiffed both Tampa Bays' Joey Butler and Daniel Nava. 


Pazos' successful debut marked the 17th by a Yankees' rookie this season, matching the club's all-time season record for major league debuts set by the 1912 Highlanders; the final year the franchise would be known by that name and the first season the uniforms bore the now familiar home pinstripes and interlocking NY logo. 


It's striking to note the difference between the composition of players who debuted on the struggling 1912 club and the division-contending 2015 Bombers of today. This year's first-timers have included eleven pitchers, four outfielders and two infielders while 103 years ago the mix was just five pitchers,  five outfielders and seven infielders.


In 1912, the team's record rash of rookie debuts was largely driven by a rookie manager's ill-fated attempts to shake up a mediocre lineup but who instead drove it into the ground, finishing a whopping 55 games back in the Amerian League race with a 50-120 record. It would be the last time the team would see the cellar for more than a half century.


By contrast, this year's record-tying run of rookies being sent into the show has been primarily fueled by the need for fresh arms to replenish the pen and rotation for a furious divisional race that has taken its toll on both.


Below are the dates, players and positions of the major league debuts for both clubs.



2015 Yankees Major League Debuts 

April 11   Matt Tracy, 26   LHP   
24th round, 2011 amateur draft.

April 15   Branden Pinder, 26   RHP   
16th round, 2011 amateur draft.

May 20    Slade Heathcott, 24   Outfielder   
1st round, 2009 amateur draft.

May 25   Jacob Lindgren, 22   LHP   

2nd round, 2014 amateur draft.

May 30   Ramon Flores, 23    Outfielder   

Amateur free agent signed 2008.

June 12   Mason Williams, 23   Outfielder   

4th round, 2010 amateur draft. 

June 21   Danny Burawa, 26   RHP   

12th round, 2010 amateur draft.

June 21   Jose De Paula, 27   LHP   

Free agent signed 2014.   

June 22   Diego Moreno, 27   RHP   

Acquired as part of  A.J. Burnett trade 2012.

June 23   Nick Rumbelow, 23   RHP   

7th round, 2013 amateur draft.

July 11   Rob Refsnyder, 24   Second Baseman   

5th round, 2012 amateur draft.

July 29   Caleb Cotham, 27   RHP   

5th round, 2009 amateur draft.

July 30   Nick Goody, 24   RHP   

6th round, 2012 amateur draft.

August 5   Luis Severino, 21   RHP   

Amateur free agent signed 2011.

August 13   Greg Bird, 22   First Baseman    

5th round, 2011 amateur draft.   

September 2   Rico Noel, 26  Outfielder
Free agent signed 2015.


September 5   James Pazos   LHP
13th round, 2012 amateur draft.


1912  Highlanders Major League Debuts

April 13    Curt Coleman, 25    Third Baseman

April 20    Benny Kauff. 22    Outfielder

April 24    George Shears, 22    LHP

April 25    Jack Martin, 25   Shortstop, Third Baseman+

May 11     Bill Stumpf, 20    Shortstop

June 5     Tommy Thompson, 22    RHP

June 19    Pat Maloney, 24    Outfielder

June 20    Dutch Sterrett, 22    Outfielder, First Baseman, Catcher+

July 2     Jack Little, 21    Outfielder

July 3     John Dowd, 21    Shortstop

July 4     Bill Otis, 22     Outfielder

July 16    George Davis, 22    RHP

September 12     Ray Keating, 19     RHP

September 25    Al Schulz, 23    LHP

September 28    George Batten, 23    Second Baseman

September 28    Klondike Smith, 25    Outfielder

October 5    Homer Thompson, 21    Catcher

+Positions played in 10 or more games listed.


You can email Barry Millman at nyyankeefanforever@ymail.com and follow him on Twitter at @nyyankeefanfore.

Thursday, September 3, 2015

Rico Noel's Debut Places Yankees On Brink Of Tying 103-Year-Old Record For Rookies


By Barry Millman

For Rico Noel,  the 2015 season will be a memorable one for two debuts. 

The first came in a spring training game back in March when he stepped into the batter's box to face comic actor Will Ferrell in his pitching debut for the Los Angeles Dodgers

The second came Wednesday at Fenway Park in the bottom of the seventh inning when he entered the game to replace Carlos Beltran in right field for three outs and became the Yankees' 16th rookie to debut in a major league baseball game this season. 

That's the most debuts by far for any team in MLB and just one short of the Yankees' all-time season record of 17 set by the 1912 club.

Despite the minor stir created by manager Joe Girardi's decision to deny him his first big league at-bat,  Noel's 283 minor league stolen bases and strong defensive skills should assure him further late-game appearances before the season's over. 

LHP James Pazos is the last of the first wave of  Yankee callups with no prior MLB appearances and will tie the 103-year-old team record for debuts when he gets the call from the pen. 



2015 Yankees Major League Debuts To Date


April 11   Matt Tracy, 26   LHP   
24th round, 2011 amateur draft.

April 15   Branden Pinder, 26   RHP   
16th round, 2011 amateur draft.

May 20    Slade Heathcott, 24   Outfielder   
1st round, 2009 amateur draft.


May 25   Jacob Lindgren, 22   LHP   

2nd round, 2014 amateur draft.


May 30   Ramon Flores, 23    Outfielder   

Amateur free agent signed 2008.


June 12   Mason Williams, 23   Outfielder   

4th round, 2010 amateur draft. 


June 21   Danny Burawa, 26   RHP   

12th round, 2010 amateur draft.


June 21   Jose De Paula, 27   LHP   

Free agent signed 2014.   


June 22   Diego Moreno, 27   RHP   

Acquired as part of  A.J. Burnett trade 2012.


June 23   Nick Rumbelow, 23   RHP   

7th round, 2013 amateur draft.


July 11   Rob Refsnyder, 24   Second Baseman   

5th round, 2012 amateur draft.


July 29   Caleb Cotham, 27   RHP   

5th round, 2009 amateur draft.


July 30   Nick Goody, 24   RHP   

6th round, 2012 amateur draft.


August 5   Luis Severino, 21   RHP   

Amateur free agent signed 2011.


August 13   Greg Bird, 22   First Baseman    

5th round, 2011 amateur draft.   


September 2   Rico Noel, 26  Outfielder
Free agent signed 2015.


You can email Barry Millman at nyyankeefanforever@ymail.com and follow him on Twitter at @nyyankeefanfore.

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

Selected Notes From The Yankees' Front Office For Tanaka Wednesday At Fenway


Culled  from the team's official game notes and other sources and edited by Barry Millman.

Masahiro Tanaka has recorded  five straight quality starts, as well as in nine of his last 10 and 14 of his last 17 starts. His five-game quality start streak since August 4th is tied for the third-longest in the American League behind David Price and Dallas Keuchel, who have six each.

The Yankees have scored at least 13 runs in both of Tanaka's starts against Boston this season. Tanaka is 2-0 with a 4.91 ERA (11.0IP, 6ER) in those two starts and both were in the Bronx. In five career starts vs. Boston, he's 3-2 with a 4.66 ERA (29.0IP, 15ER, 7BB, 24K)  and 1-1 with a 7.00 ERA (9.0IP, 7ER, 2BB, 9K) in two starts at Fenway Park.

The Yankees are 16-7 in games started by opposing rookie pitchers this season and will face a rookie starter today in Henry Owens for the fourth time on this six-game road trip. In those 23 starts, rookie pitchers have posted a 6-10 record and 4.80 ERA (125.2IP, 67ER) while recording 107K with 56BB. Yankees batters have hit .265 (126-for-475) with 17HR against rookie starters. In Owens' August 4th major league debut in the Bronx, he gave up three runs in 5IP in a 13-3 Red Sox loss.

The Yankees have won their last five consecutive series at Fenway Park dating to the start of 201 and are 12-5 at Fenway since the start of the 2014 season.

Since July 1st, the Yankees lead the AL and rank second in the MLB with a 16-9 (.640) road record.

Second baseman Stephen Drew had his streak of consecutive hits (5) and consecutive times on base (7) snapped with a GIDP in the third inning Tuesday.In his last three games he is 6-for-8 with 4 runs, 1 double, 1HR, 6RBI and 2BB to raise his season BA from .192 to a season-high .205.

Shortstop Didi Gregorius had his career-long RBI streak snapped at five games on Tuesday. During the streak he batted .619 (13-for-21) with 4R, 1 double, 2HR, 11RBI, 1HP, 2BB and a .667 OBP. According to Elias, the only other shortstop in Yankees history with at least 13H and 11RBI in a five-game stretch was Hall of Famer Tony Lazzeri, who had 16H and 12RBI from July 4th-9th 1927.

RHP Dellin Betances logged his 19th scoreless appearance of at least 1.1IP on Tuesday, tying him with Arizona’s Andrew Chafin for the most in MLB. No other pitchers have more than 15 such outings this season. Since the start of 2014, Betances (44) and RHP Adam Warren (33) rank first and second in MLB in scoreless appearances of 1.1IP  or longer.

You can email Barry Milllman at nyyankeefanforever@ymail.com and follow him on Twitter at @nyyankeefanfore.

Saturday, August 29, 2015

Was Yankees' 15 Runs Message Or Mirage? Braves' Wisler Will Provide The Answer

[Post-game postscript at end of article for the answer.]


By Barry Millman

Did the Yankees send a message Friday night their great scoring slump of 2015 might finally be over or was it just a mirage?

Coming off a 15-run outburst that exceeded their total offensive output for the prior five games, the Yankees will learn the answer Saturday in the second game of a three-game series against the Braves -- and they'll have only themselves to blame if they don't continue digging their way out of their recent offensive ditch against Atlanta's struggling pitching prospect Matt Wisler.


A former seventh-round Padres draft pick who came to Atlanta in the Craig Kimbrel trade in April, the 22-year-old righty has been throwing batting practice to left-handed batters in the 12 starts since his June 19th debut to the tune of a collective .357 batting average (45-for-126) with 20 of those 45 hits of the extra-base variety, including nine home runs, giving him a grisly 1.100 OPS against southpaws.


The Yankees lineup that put up 15 runs Friday night was all lefties and switch-hitters with the exception of pitcher Masahiro Tanaka, and should be in a position to exploit this weakness like few other teams can.


His 5.42 FIP and 70 ERA+ suggest his 5.43 ERA is no mirage and a spot-on accurate portrayal of his run-prone generosity.


His low strikeout rate (5.7 K/9) high walk and hit rates (3.2BB/9, 11.1H/9) and propensity to give up the long ball (1.7 HR/9) have resulted in just two starts lasting longer than six innings and none longer than 5.1 innings over his last five starts going back more than a month -- a span over which he's amassed a 9.03 ERA and gone 0-3.


Wisler is made-to-order cannon fodder for the Yankees bats and should be the perfect barometer to gauge the state of their slump.


If they light him up, it would at least mean they're hitting pitchers throwing baseballs they're supposed to be hitting, and that would spell genuine progress toward putting the slump behind them.


If they can't light him up and send him packing early, though, it will serve notice Friday night's 15-run game was definitely more mirage than barrage.


[Post-game postscript: The Yankee beat the Braves 3-1, but the struggling Wisler turned his season around with his first quality start in more than a month against them. The following game summary from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution wraps it up nicely:

"The Yankees scored a run on a wild pitch in the first inning and led all the way in a 3-1 win against the Braves, who stranded two runners apiece in the seventh and eighth innings. Braves rookie Matt Wisler had a strong performance, allowing four hits, two runs and four walks in six innings. But Yankees rookie Luis Severino was even better, pitching six shutout innings (four hits, three walks). The Braves have lost 11 of their past 12 games."

The difference between Wisler's and Severino's starts is almost negligible. The Yankees went 1-for-11 with runners in scoring position and left seven runners stranded against one of the most troubled pitchers on one of the most troubled teams in MLB. Therefore, the verdict is in on the 15-run outburst in the first game of this series: Mirage.]


You can email Barry Millman at nyyankeefanforever@ymail.com and follow him on Twitter at @nyyankeefanfore.

Sunday, August 23, 2015

It's The Gillooly Option For C.C. Sabathia: Girardi Gave Hints Knee May Be End Game


By Barry Millman 

The Gillooly option is at hand.  

Of the three possible final exit scenarios for Yankees' starting pitcher C.C. Sabathia detailed in my blog for several months now, it looks like Option #3 -- the one explicitly mentioned last month by manager Joe Girardi -- will be the door through which Sabathia is finally pushed from the Yankees' starting rotation forever. 








Early reports quote Sabathia saying he blames pushing through discomfort in his surgically-repaired right knee to throw his fastball harder as the cause for his impending exit. Another way to put that would be he never mastered the ability to get outs three times through a batting order any other way this year. 

Could he possibly have found those necessary skills had he acquiesced to a role in the bullpen to diligently search for them as Option #1 might have afforded him? Might the Yankees have been able to get anything useful in return for him had they shopped him around and offered to eat most of his remaining salary as Option #2 might have afforded them? 

Nobody will ever know now.  Of the three options, the third was the one offering the least added value to the team. However, it was probably the one affording Sabathia the least humiliating exit. So for those who place a value on such things, there's that at least.

[Update: Sabathia has at long last indicated a willingness to pitch out of the bullpen, but early reactions from the team to that offer are, not surprisingly,  guarded and subdued to say the least. ]

Below, I have re-published my July 5th post that identified the options and Girardi's first hint Option #3 had become Sabathia's most likely end game. 



Sabathia's Skipped Start May Be First Step 

Toward Pushing Him Out The Door Forever

Sabathia, in an all too familiar pose this year, watches one leave the yard.

By Barry Millman

It's taken them long enough, but the Yankees have finally decided it isn't too impolite after all to ask C.C. Sabathia, their highest-paid, worst-performing player to take a few days off and use the time  to work on his problems in extra bullpen sessions rather than during games.

By all accounts, including  team beat writer Brendan Kuty's, Sabathia's reaction to the idea he should be treated like any other player whose performance had slipped to the bottom of his peers in MLB was less than noble.

Interestingly, in announcing that Ivan Nova would take Sabathia's normal turn in the rotation against the Rays today, manager Joe Girardi also opened the door a crack to yet another remedy to the Sabathia dilemma should the extra bullpen work prove fruitless by mentioning he thought the pitcher "could be dealing with issues with the right knee that caused him to miss almost all of 2014 and worried the Yankees in spring training."

As I've noted before, there's only three possible doors the Yankees can push C.C. through to get him out of the rotation where he's blocking better pitchers in the system and blowing up leads every week:

1) Sending him to the bullpen and converting him to a reliever so he doesn't have to face batters more than once or twice  per appearance,  which would improve his chances to become a team asset rather than a liability and rebuild his value -- a tactic that has had proven success elsewhere but would require his cooperation and willingness to admit he has serious problems, an as-yet-unrealized development;

2) Designating him for assignment with an offer to eat the vast majority of his remaining $53 million salary in the hope of getting a useful trade piece or two in return, or

3) The Gillooly option: Finding some medical excuse connected to his prior surgeries to send him on extended leave via the disabled list and then forcing him to the minors for rehab starts to fix his problems there-- assuming, of course, they're fixable.

Don't look now C.C. but those footsteps you're hearing may finally be headed toward one of those doors.

You can email Barry Millman at nyyankeefanforever@ymail.com and follow him on Twitter @nyyankeefanfore.

Thursday, August 20, 2015

Yankees Farm Is Sending Reinforcements
To The Big Club At A Record-Busting Pace

By Barry Millman

When 22-year-old Greg Bird banged out a pair of  two-run bombs in Yankee Stadium on Wednesday, he became the answer to a team trivia question by becoming just the third player to notch a multi-homer performance within five games of his major league debut in pinstripes.  

However, it was six days earlier when he took the field for his inauspicious 0-for-5 debut in Cleveland that he really made his mark on the Yankee record books by becoming the team's 15th farmhand to make it to the show this season  -- the most in MLB and surpassing the team's 1905 and 1914 clubs to make the 2015 Yankees the launching pad for the second-most major league debuts in team history.  Only the 1912 club which recorded 17 major league debuts had more. 

Contributions from the ten rookie pitchers, three rookie outfielders and two rookie infielders delivered into the fray to date by the team's retooled farm system have varied from the minor to the major, and represent the tip of a spear that could prove to be a potent weapon for the stretch run.

With a furious divisional battle testing the limits of all the big club's regulars and a farm system that's played no small part in a campaign whose success has been surprising to many, the coming expansion of rosters to their full 40-man potential in eleven days will almost certainly shatter the record  -- and along with it, quite possibly, the long-held image of a farm system too green and a big club too old to go the distance.



2015 Yankees Major League Debuts To Date


April 11   Matt Tracy, 26   LHP   
24th round, 2011 amateur draft.

April 15   Branden Pinder, 26   RHP   
16th round, 2011 amateur draft.

May 20    Slade Heathcott, 24   Outfielder   
1st round, 2009 amateur draft.


May 25   Jacob Lindgren, 22   LHP   
2nd round, 2014 amateur draft.


May 30   Ramon Flores, 23    Outfielder   
Amateur free agent signed 2008.


June 12   Mason Williams, 23   Outfielder   
4th round, 2010 amateur draft. 


June 21   Danny Burawa, 26   RHP   
12th round, 2010 amateur draft.


June 21   Jose De Paula, 27   LHP   
Free agent signed 2014.   


June 22   Diego Moreno, 27   RHP   
Acquired as part of  A.J. Burnett trade 2012.


June 23   Nick Rumbelow, 23   RHP   
7th round, 2013 amateur draft.


July 11   Rob Refsnyder, 24   Second Baseman   
5th round, 2012 amateur draft.


July 29   Caleb Cotham, 27   RHP   
5th round, 2009 amateur draft.


July 30   Nick Goody, 24   RHP   
6th round, 2012 amateur draft.


August 5   Luis Severino, 21   RHP   
Amateur free agent signed 2011.


August 13   Greg Bird, 22   First Baseman    
5th round, 2011 amateur draft.   


You can email Barry Millman at nyyankeefanforever@ymail.com and follow him on Twitter at @nyyankeefanfore.