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River Ave. Blues » Justus Sheffield » Page 2

Game 150: Judge Returns

September 18, 2018 by Mike

(Presswire)

For the 20th time this season, the Yankees had a game affected by rain (or snow) today. Fortunately they will be able to play tonight. Today’s 1pm ET game became a 7pm ET game because of heavy rain in New York. Things have cleared up now though and they should have no trouble getting the game in tonight. Hooray for that.

Anyway, holy cow Aaron Judge is back! That was a nice surprise. I mean, he’s technically been back for a few days now, but now he’s back in the starting lineup. The wrist is feeling good and Judge has 13 games to get back up to speed at the plate. Is that enough time? I sure hope so. Glad the big guy is back either way. Here are tonight’s lineups:

New York Yankees
1. LF Andrew McCutchen
2. RF Aaron Judge
3. SS Didi Gregorius
4. DH Giancarlo Stanton
5. CF Aaron Hicks
6. 3B Miguel Andujar
7. C Gary Sanchez
8. 1B Neil Walker
9. 2B Gleyber Torres

LHP J.A. Happ

Boston Red Sox
1. 2B Ian Kinsler
2. 1B Steve Pearce
3. RF J.D. Martinez
4. SS Xander Bogaerts
5. DH Eduardo Nunez
6. 3B Brandon Phillips
7. LF Brock Holt
8. C Christian Vazquez
9. CF Jackie Bradley Jr.

RHP Nathan Eovaldi


The rain stopped a few hours ago and things will be clear for the game tonight. First pitch is scheduled for 7:05pm ET and you can watch on WPIX locally and MLB Network nationally. Also, you can watch on Facebook Live as well. Enjoy the game.

Injury Update: Judge (wrist) took simulated at-bats again today — he faced minor league righty Adonis Rosa, who Aaron Boone said was selected to pitch to Judge because the Yankees are comfortable with his command — and was deemed ready to hit in games. Here’s video of a simulated home run. Interestingly enough, Boone said Judge wouldn’t have been in the lineup for the original 1pm ET start. The delay gave them time to evaluate him and feel good about where he’s at … Aroldis Chapman (knee) feels good after yesterday’s simulated game and could be activated as soon as tomorrow.

Roster Moves: Welcome to the big leagues, Justus Sheffield. He was officially called up earlier today and is wearing No. 61. Clint Frazier was transferred to the 60-day DL to clear a 40-man roster spot. Domingo German was called up as well. The Yankees are up to 36 players on the active roster (19 pitchers, 17 position players). Aroldis Chapman (disabled list), Albert Abreu, Domingo Acevedo, and Thairo Estrada are the only 40-man roster players not on the active MLB roster right now.

Roster Note: This morning I mentioned A.J. Cole hasn’t pitched in eleven games. Turns out he spent some time away from the team to be with his wife, who gave birth to their first child. He’s back with the team now. The Yankees never bothered to put Cole on paternity leave because there’s no point with rosters expanded. Congrats to the Coles.

Filed Under: Game Threads Tagged With: Aaron Judge, Aroldis Chapman, Clint Frazier, Domingo German, Justus Sheffield

Justus Sheffield, Chance Adams will come to Spring Training as starting pitchers next year

September 18, 2018 by Mike

Adams. (Getty)

According to Conor Foley and DJ Eberle, senior director of player development Kevin Reese confirmed pitching prospects Justus Sheffield and Chance Adams will report to Spring Training as starting pitchers next year. Adams made a spot start for the Yankees last month, but both moved to the bullpen in recent weeks as preparation for their September call-up roles.

“I think looking forward, (the bullpen) is something we should try a little bit sooner with guys to give them the ability to kind of learn a routine,” said Reese, while noting lots of big league starters broke in as relievers. Chris Sale, David Price, Max Scherzer … they all initially broke into the show as relievers. Luis Severino did the bullpen thing for a bit too, remember.

In Sheffield’s case, he is one of the top pitching prospects in baseball, with the three-pitch mix necessary to start long-term. He has to develop consistent control and command (10.5% walk rate this year), which is nothing unusual for a 22-year-old. Sheffield would’ve been in the big leagues a while ago if he could throw consistent strikes. Let him continue to start and keep working at it, even if it means more time in Triple-A.

As for Adams, he had a rough year in Triple-A (4.78 ERA and 4.87 FIP) and there have been doubts about his long-term viability as a starting pitcher dating back to when he made the reliever-to-starter transition three years ago. Of course the Yankees should bring him to camp as a starter. I think the Yankees are much more willing to keep Adams in the bullpen long-term than Sheffield though.

There’s no harm in bringing Sheffield and Adams to Spring Training as starters. Same with A.J. Cole, Domingo German, Luis Cessa, Jonathan Loaisiga, and anyone else like that. Bring them to camp ready to start and adjust as necessary. It’s much easier to go starter-to-reliever at the end of camp than the other way around. Sheffield will get plenty of chances to show he can hack it as a starter. Adams might not have the same luxury.

Filed Under: Pitching, Spring Training Tagged With: Chance Adams, Justus Sheffield

Game 149: Trying for a series win on Sunday

September 16, 2018 by Mike

(Mike Stobe/Getty)

The Yankees were one stupid base hit with the bases loaded away from going for the sweep today. Instead, after yesterday’s loss, they’re looking to win the series today so they can avoid losing back-to-back series to bad teams. The Yankees are 1-3-1 in their last five series while only playing two good teams (Athletics and Mariners). Gross.

Lance Lynn is on the mound this afternoon and I’m not feeling too great about a pure fastball pitcher going up against a dead red fastball hitting team. Lynn has made two starts against the Blue Jays this year and neither went well (six runs in five innings and five runs in four innings). Third time’s a charm? Here are the lineups:

New York Yankees
1. RF Andrew McCutchen
2. DH Giancarlo Stanton
3. CF Aaron Hicks
4. 3B Miguel Andujar
5. SS Didi Gregorius
6. 2B Gleyber Torres
7. C Gary Sanchez
8. 1B Luke Voit
9. LF Brett Gardner

RHP Lance Lynn

Toronto Blue Jays
1. LF Billy McKinney
2. 1B Justin Smoak
3. DH Kendrys Morales
4. CF Randal Grichuk
5. 3B Yangervis Solarte
6. RF Teoscar Hernandez
7. SS Richard Urena
8. 2B Devon Travis
9. C Reese McGuire

LHP Thomas Pannone


It is a spectacular day in New York. Hope you brought your sunglasses to the ballpark. First pitch is scheduled for 1:05pm ET and YES will have the broadcast. Enjoy the ballgame.

Injury Update: Aaron Judge (wrist) took batting practice and hit against a high-velocity pitching machine today. He is “getting real close” to returning as a hitter and could be a full player at some point during the Red Sox series that begins Tuesday. Hard-throwing righty Nathan Eovaldi is scheduled to start Tuesday. Returning against lefty David Price on Wednesday or lefty Eduardo Rodriguez on Thursday seems more likely, in my opinion.

Roster Note: Justus Sheffield and Domingo German will join the Yankees on Tuesday. (Tomorrow’s an off-day.) Both pitched yesterday and will be unavailable for a few days anyway, plus it gives them a little breather after the Triple-A postseason and a chance to collect their things.

Filed Under: Game Threads Tagged With: Aaron Judge, Domingo German, Justus Sheffield

Yankees reportedly calling up Justus Sheffield

September 15, 2018 by Mike

(Patrick McDermott/Getty)

According to Conor Foley, the Yankees are calling up top pitching prospect Justus Sheffield. Triple-A Scranton was eliminated from the postseason Saturday, so, with their season over, Sheffield will join the Yankees for the rest of September. Also, Foley says Domingo German is coming up as well. No surprise there.

Sheffield, 22, pitched to a 2.48 ERA (2.98 FIP) with 25.9% strikeouts and 10.5% walks in 116 innings this season, mostly with the RailRiders. The Yankees moved him to the bullpen late in the season to prepare him for a possible big league role. He’s still a starter long-term. Even if he doesn’t pitch much, there’s value in letting Sheffield spend the rest of the season with the big league team.

“The transition to the bullpen, obviously, I knew there was something going on there. So it was hard for me to block it out and do my thing. When I did, I felt back to myself. It was one of those things where it was hard to block out,” said Sheffield to Jay Monahan. “I am still at a loss for words. I’m super excited. I just can’t believe it. I am pretty sure my whole town knows about it already.”

The Yankees need to clear a 40-man roster spot for Sheffield, who will be Rule 5 Draft eligible this winter. He was going to be added to the 40-man after the season anyway. The Yankees are just getting a head start on it. They won’t burn an option year or anything like that. I imagine Clint Frazier will be transferred to the 60-day DL to open up the 40-man spot.

Filed Under: Minors Tagged With: Justus Sheffield

Even with the regular season winding down, the Yanks should call Justus Sheffield up

September 12, 2018 by Mike

(Times Leader)

For the third consecutive season Triple-A Scranton is in the International League Championship Series, and they opened the best-of-five series with a win last night. Journeyman Bruce Caldwell had the game-winning hit and George Kontos nailed down the save. Scranton is looking for their second Triple-A classification title in the last three years, which is pretty cool.

Justus Sheffield, the Yankees’ top prospect, tossed three innings and allowed a run in last night’s win. The Yankees moved him to the bullpen a few weeks ago in advance of a potential September call-up and so far his relief appearances have been a bit of a mixed bag. Some good, some okay, none really terrible. A quick recap:

  • August 21st: 2 IP, 2 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 0 BB, 2 K, 1 HR
  • August 25th: 2 IP, 3 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 0 BB, 1 K, 1 HR
  • August 30th: 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 0 K, 0 HR
  • September 2nd: 2.1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 4 K, 0 HR
  • September 5th: 1 IP, 4 H, 1 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 1 K, 0 HR
  • September 11th: 3 IP, 3 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 1 BB, 2 K, 0 HR

“I think just the preparation, kind of getting ready for the games, not knowing when I’m going to pitch and on what days and things like that,” said Sheffield to Conor Foley last month when asked about the biggest adjustment he’s had to make in his new role. “I think just the preparation, kind of switching up the routine are going to be the hardest part. But I feel like in all reality, same game, just a different role. Still out there playing baseball. That’s pretty much what it boils down to.”

The Yankees moved Sheffield to the bullpen in preparation for a September call-up a few weeks ago, but the RailRiders keep winning, so he remains with Triple-A Scranton. September call-ups usually don’t pitch much anyway, and, at this point, I think it’s better for Sheffield to pitch regularly in Triple-A than sparingly with the Yankees. Until the Yankees clinch, the regular relievers are going to see the majority of the work out of the bullpen. That’s just the way it is.

Scranton has at least three more games to play and as many five more games to play when you include a potential Triple-A National Championship Game trip to play the Pacific Coast League champion. That game is scheduled for next Tuesday, September 18th. If Scranton advances that far, it means Sheffield would join the Yankees for at most 12 games before the end of the season. Not much!

Twelve games and maybe three or four appearances (at most) isn’t enough for Sheffield to show the Yankees he belongs on the postseason roster. And that’s fine. September call-up pitchers are always a long shot to make the postseason roster, no matter how talented. And the Yankees, with their deep bullpen plus one starter (Lance Lynn) with bullpen experience, don’t really have room in the bullpen even with Aroldis Chapman sidelined.

That isn’t to say the Yankees should not call up Sheffield after the RailRiders finish their season, whenever that may be. There is still a benefit to getting him to the big leagues and getting his feet wet. He can pitch in a blowout or two, sit in on the scouting meetings, pick the brains of fellow lefties CC Sabathia and J.A. Happ, things like that. That way so when Sheffield is needed next year, he won’t be experiencing everything for the first time.

There’s also a “show him how great life as a big leaguer is and make him want to get back” angle here, and while it might not seem like much, it’s not nothing. Life in the big leagues is good. Very good. Minor leaguers who get a taste of the show talk all the time about how badly they want to get back. You don’t get to where Sheffield is — he’s a 21-year-old in Triple-A and that is damn impressive — without being driven. A little extra motivation wouldn’t hurt though.

Sheffield is not on the 40-man roster but that’s not much of a problem. Clint Frazier is, sadly, done for the season given his latest setback. That makes him a 60-day DL candidate. Sheffield has to be added to the 40-man roster this winter anyway. There’s no (service time) harm in sliding Frazier to the 60-day DL to clear a spot, and calling Sheffield up for the final two weeks in September. The roster part is easy.

Even if Sheffield doesn’t pitch much after a call-up, there is still value in bringing him to the Bronx and getting him to work with the big league staff. The Yankees called up Aaron Judge (and Tyler Austin) late in 2016 to let him get his feet wet and the same idea applies to Sheffield, even though he’ll spend much less time with the team and might not even play. Just getting him there has value, and it doesn’t have a negative impact on the roster, so why not?

“Still have work to do down here though,” said Sheffield to Foley. “That’s the way I look at it. Still got to go out there and do my job, if it’s here or it’s in New York. That’s the way I look at it. You’ve got to finish strong and do my job.”

Filed Under: Minors Tagged With: Justus Sheffield

Game 135: Still waiting for Good Sevy to return

August 31, 2018 by Mike Leave a Comment

(Jim McIsaac/Getty)

So. The Yankees lost that stupid game last night. It was annoying. Nothing they can do about it now though. The best and worst thing about baseball is that they play every single day. Can’t enjoy the successes or dwell on the failures too long. There’s another game tomorrow, or in this case, today.

Tonight we again turn our attention to Luis Severino, who is still trying to work out of his recent rut. He’s allowed 36 runs and a .325/.365/.579 opponent’s batting line in his last 46.2 innings. That is in the range of what Christian Yelich is hitting this year (.316/.378/.559). Severino has turned every batter he’s faced the last eight weeks into Yelich. Not good. A dominant start would be a welcome sight. Here are the lineups:

New York Yankees
1. LF Brett Gardner
2. DH Giancarlo Stanton
3. CF Aaron Hicks
4. 3B Miguel Andujar
5. 1B Luke Voit
6. SS Gleyber Torres
7. RF Neil Walker
8. C Austin Romine
9. 2B Ronald Torreyes

RHP Luis Severino

Detroit Tigers
1. 3B Jeimer Candelario
2. 1B Jim Adduci
3. RF Nick Castellanos
4. DH Victor Martinez
5. LF Niko Goodrum
6. SS Ronny Rodriguez
7. C James McCann
8. CF JaCoby Jones
9. 2B Dawel Lugo

RHP Jordan Zimmermann


It is cloudy and humid in New York and it was raining for a bit this afternoon. That’s supposed to clear out by game time, and here’s no more rain in the forecast until much later tonight/tomorrow morning. First pitch is scheduled for 7:05pm ET and YES will have the broadcast. Enjoy the game.

Roster Updates: In case you missed it earlier, the Yankees did indeed finalize the trade for Andrew McCutchen today. He is officially a Yankee. He is not with the team, however. He’s traveling from San Francisco today and will join the Yankees tomorrow. McCutchen is going to wear No. 26, apparently … Justus Sheffield will not be called up when rosters expand tomorrow. He’s still in the mix for a call-up though. Seems like the Yankees want him to get one more Triple-A relief appearance under his belt first, especially after missing time with an illness earlier this week.

Injury Updates: Gary Sanchez (groin) is back with the Yankees and will be activated tomorrow, when rosters expand. Today was a planned rest day anyway after playing the last four days with Triple-A Scranton … Aaron Judge (wrist) still hasn’t started swinging a bat but Aaron Boone is “very optimistic” he will return this season. Uh huh.

Filed Under: Game Threads Tagged With: Aaron Judge, Andrew McCutchen, Gary Sanchez, Justus Sheffield

DotF: Mike King flirts with perfection in Scranton’s win

August 29, 2018 by Mike Leave a Comment

LHP Justus Sheffield has been held out of action with an illness the last few days, according to DJ Eberle. He’s expected to pitch tomorrow. This will probably delay his call-up. I don’t think the Yankees would call him up with only one outing under his belt after an illness. I bet Sheffield sticks with the RailRiders through the end of their regular season Monday so he make one more relief appearance before coming up.

Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders (2-1 win over Syracuse, walk-off style)

  • SS Tyler Wade: 2-4, 1 K
  • C Gary Sanchez: 0-4 — caught all nine innings as scheduled … he’s going to catch nine innings again tomorrow night, then be reevaluated Friday … sure would be swell if that evaluation goes well and he rejoins the Yankees on Saturday, the first day roster expand
  • 3B Gio Urshela: 0-3, 1 R, 1 BB, 1 K
  • DH Mike Ford: 1-4, 1 K
  • 2B Abi Avelino: 2-3, 1 R, 1 BB, 1 K — he’d been out the last few days with a shoulder issue
  • 1B Ryan McBroom: 1-3, 1 RBI, 1 BB, 1 K — drew the walk-off walk
  • RHP Mike King: 6 IP, zeroes, 6 K, 8/2 GB/FB — 45 of 66 pitches were strikes (68%) … 18 up, 18 down … now has a 1.09 ERA and 27/4 K/BB and 56.5% grounders in five starts and 33 innings with the RailRiders … I wrote about him earlier this week
  • RHP Luis Cessa: 1.2 IP, 2 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 0 BB, 1 K, 2/1 GB/FB — 14 of 20 pitches were strikes … this was your standard “he’s going to get called up when rosters expand two days” tune-up appearance
  • RHP Chance Adams: 1.1 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 2 K, 1/1 GB/FB — 17 of 29 pitches were strikes (59%) … he entered the game in the middle of an inning with men on base, which is not nothing when you’re new to relieving

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Down on the Farm Tagged With: Justus Sheffield

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