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River Ave. Blues » Estevan Florial

DotF: Gio’s final start rained out; Ruta, Garcia have big games

April 19, 2019 by Mike

Some good injury news: OF Estevan Florial had his cast removed Wednesday and is 7-10 days away from resuming baseball activities, Aaron Boone told Brendan Kuty. Florial broke his right wrist crashing into the wall in Spring Training. If all goes well (I know, I know), it sounds like he could return to game action in mid-to-late May. Fingers crossed.

The Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders were rained out. The game will be made up as part of a doubleheader on June 3rd. LHP Gio Gonzalez, who will reportedly use his opt-out clause tomorrow, was scheduled to start tonight. Guess he won’t get to make one last Triple-A after all.

Double-A Trenton Thunder (13-10 win over Portland)

  • 2B Hoy Jun Park: 1-6, 1 R, 1 3B, 1 RBI, 1 K
  • SS Kyle Holder: 1-4, 1 R, 2 BB, 1 K
  • LF Ben Ruta: 4-6, 2 R, 1 2B, 1 RBI — now hitting .420/.500/.600 through 13 games … he played 36 games here last season, which ain’t a ton, so I think it’ll be a few weeks before the Yankees move him up to Scranton … he turns 25 in June and was a 30th round pick, but at some point the bat forces a promotion and forces the team to see what he can do at the highest level
  • 1B Brandon Wagner: 2-5, 2 R, 1 2B, 1 3B, 2 RBI, 1 BB, 2 K, 1 E (fielding)
  • CF Rashad Crawford: 1-4, 1 R, 1 RBI, 1 BB, 2 K
  • C Jorge Saez: 3-3, 2 R, 1 HR, 5 RBI, 2 BB, 1 E (catcher interference) — had been 3-for-16 (.188) on the season prior to this game
  • RHP Garrett Whitlock: 6 IP, 3 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 1 BB, 6 K, 2 WP, 9/2 GB/FB — 57 of 87 pitches were strikes (66%) … 16/3 K/BB in 18 innings

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Injuries Tagged With: Estevan Florial

An Important Year in the Farm System [2019 Season Preview]

March 26, 2019 by Mike

Florial. (Presswire)

Two years ago the Yankees had arguably the top farm system in baseball. Uncharacteristically, they traded veterans for prospects at the 2016 trade deadline, and several of their own players took big steps forward with their development. Gleyber Torres came over in the Aroldis Chapman trade. Aaron Judge, Luis Severino, Gary Sanchez, and Miguel Andujar? All originally drafted or signed by the Yankees.

That monster farm system of two years ago has become a powerhouse MLB team. The Yankees surprisingly won 91 games in 2017, not-so-surprisingly won 100 games in 2018, and now they go into 2019 on the very short list of realistic World Series contenders. They’ve graduated or traded many top prospects, and have tumbled down the farm system rankings as a result:

  • Baseball America: 20th
  • Baseball Prospectus: 12th
  • Keith Law: 19th

“Being ranked as everybody’s top farm system isn’t our goal. Our goal is to be ranked as winning the World Series,” said amateur scouting director Damon Oppenheimer to Greg Joyce last month. “… Everything’s a cycle in this thing. You get to a point where, if you’re going to try to win, you end up trading prospects. So we’ve traded quite a few guys over the last few years to help us acquire talent to help us win at the big league level, and that’s what we’re there to do. We’re in one of those cycles now where we gotta dump some more guys into the system.”

As the big league team contends this summer, the farm system will be in something of a rebuild, in that they have a plethora of young low minors prospects looking to take that step toward becoming the next wave of great Yankees prospects. The high-end upper minors talent isn’t there like it has been the last two years, and that could be an issue come trade deadline time. Time to preview the year ahead in the farm system.

Top Prospects Who Could Help This Season

There is only one: RHP Jonathan Loaisiga. In fact, the Yankees’ No. 2 prospect is set to join the rotation in a few days, after CC Sabathia’s five-game suspension ends. That is almost certainly a temporary move with Sabathia due to return in mid-April and Luis Severino hopefully sometime in early-May. Loaisiga is going to join the Yankees soon though, and that gives him a chance to help the team and force the club to keep him around longer.

Of course, Loaisiga has a long injury history and very limited experience (184.1 career innings!), plus he has never thrown a pitch in Triple-A, so he would presumably benefit from some Triple-A time. I imagine he’ll be returned to the minors at some point. Loaisiga has a quality three-pitch mix as well as good control, plus he seems unflappable on the mound, which are good traits for a young pitcher. Point is, Loaisiga is the only high-end upper minors prospect we figure to see in the Bronx this year.

Top Prospects Who (Probably) Won’t Help This Season

OF Estevan Florial, the Yankees’ top prospect, will begin the season on the injured list after breaking his wrist crashing into the outfield wall this spring. I suppose the good news is he’ll only be in a cast three weeks, meaning his recovery may not be as long as you’d expect. Three weeks in a cast seems to indicate he could be back in games sometime in May. That would be ideal. We’ll see.

The injury is unfortunate because Florial has a clear flaw in his pitch recognition — “I’m a young player. It’s tough to know what pitch to select. Try to know the pitch I can drive, and what I can’t, too,” Florial said to Brendan Kuty last month — and the only way to improve on that is with game reps. There’s no substitute for seeing live action pitching. Florial missed time with wrist surgery last year, so he has a lot of catching up to do. Once healthy, he’ll likely go to High-A Tampa or Double-A Trenton. Either way, we won’t see Florial in the big leagues this summer.

After Florial and Loaisiga, the next five best prospects in the farm system are all teenagers: C Anthony Seigler, OF Everson Pereira, OF Antonio Cabello, RHP Deivi Garcia, and RHP Roansy Contreras. On one hand, hooray for having so many very talented teenagers. On the other hand, none of those guys will come close to sniffing the big leagues. Seigler, Pereira, and Cabello may not even see full season ball this year, and Contreras could spend the entire season with Low-A Charleston.

Garcia made one Double-A spot start at the end of last season but he is unlikely to start this season at that level. Not after making only six (excellent) starts with High-A Tampa. Seems to me Deivi will return to Tampa for a few weeks before being bumped back up to Trenton. His best case scenario will be a late-season cameo with Triple-A Scranton. If we see Garcia in the big leagues this year, either something went very right (he really broke out) or very wrong (everyone got hurt).

Secondary Prospects Likely To Help This Season

Tarpley. (Presswire)

The Yankees will have at least one of their non-top prospects on the Opening Day roster. LHP Stephen Tarpley, who pitched well last September and was great this spring, will be in the bullpen. He definitely has a chance to carve out a long-term role this summer. In all likelihood though, Tarpley will ride the shuttle up and down a few times. That’s just how it goes for a young reliever with options, especially when he’s the last guy in the bullpen.

Another reliever we could see at some point: RHP Domingo Acevedo. Lindsey Adler says Acevedo pitched in relief in minor league camp this spring and the Yankees wouldn’t do that unless he was moving into the bullpen full-time. I’m definitely down with this. Acevedo has struggled to stay healthy as a starter and he still hasn’t developed his slider into a reliable third pitch. Let him air it out for an inning at a time with the big fastball (and changeup) and there’s a chance very good things will happen. I’m looking forward to seeing Acevedo in short relief stints.

RHP Chance Adams and RHP Mike King are the top two Triple-A depth starters at the moment, though King suffered a stress reaction in his elbow early in camp, and is still working his way back. He’s expected to join the RailRiders in early May. Once he does, King could jump ahead of Adams on the call-up list. He had a monster 2018 season statistically and, at least prior to the injury, had firmer stuff and control than Adams, who’s taken a step back the last two seasons. Still, Adams is on the 40-man roster, so we’ll see him work shuttle duty at some point.

Double-A hurlers RHP Trevor Stephan, RHP Garrett Whitlock, and RHP Nick Nelson probably will not see the big leagues this summer. They’re not on the 40-man roster yet — Stephan and Whitlock don’t have to be added to the 40-man until after next season — and there are a few guys ahead of them on the depth chart, but, anytime you begin the season in Double-A, you have a chance to play in MLB. They will, they do. Pitch well in Double-A and they’ll find themselves in Triple-A in short order, and force a call-up conversation.

The Mike Tauchman pickup and Tyler Wade demotion makes it less likely we will see IF Thairo Estrada this year, or at least see him anytime soon, especially after a lost season last year. A few weeks (months?) worth of at-bats with Triple-A Scranton is what Estrada needs right now, but, if the Yankees have a need at the MLB level and he’s the best option, they will call him up. I imagine we’ll see Thairo as at least a September call-up this summer.

Breakout Candidates

This is where all that young low minors talent comes into play. Guys like Seigler, Pereira, Cabello, and Contreras are prime breakout candidates who could put themselves into the top 100 prospect discussion after the season. (Deivi broke out last year, I’d say.) Pereira and Cabello in particular are very high upside players who could very well rank 1-2 in the farm system in a few months. They’re that good and that talented.

This year’s Pereira and Cabello, meaning the highly regarded international signings set to make their pro debut, should be OF Kevin Alcantara and RHP Osiel Rodriguez. Alcantara ($1M bonus) stood out for his hitting ability when he signed and he’s already growing into some power. Rodriguez ($600,000) boasts a deep power arsenal and, like many Cuban pitchers, he throws from a variety of arm angles to create deception.

Hard-throwing RHP Luis Gil kinda sorta broke out last year, and he might have the best fastball in the farm system. He’s upper-90s regularly and has a high spin rate on everything. Gil is the quintessential modern pitching prospect. RHP Juan Then and RHP Yoendrys Gomez are other young low minors guys who stand out more for their know-how and pitchability than lighting up the radar gun. That said, neither guy is short on stuff.

A few levels higher, the Yankees are finally set to turn 2017 first round pick RHP Clarke Schmidt loose. He returned from Tommy John surgery last year and pitched well in limited action. The Yankees will not be reckless with Schmidt — they don’t have him penciled him for 180 innings or anything — but he’ll finally get a chance to hold down a rotation spot and show what he can do. He’s been an afterthought since being drafted because of the Tommy John surgery. Schmidt’s kinda like adding a new prospect to the system all together.

Second tier outfield prospects like OF Josh Stowers and OF Anthony Garcia may not have the pure upside that Pereira and Cabello offer, though they do bring a lot to the table. In Garcia’s case, that means a lot of power. A lot. He’s a switch-hitter who can hit the ball a mile from both sides of the plate. Stowers is more well-rounded and will impact the game a lot of different ways. Offensively, defensively, on the bases, etc. He strikes me as a sneaky good breakout candidate.

Between international free agency and trades (Gil, Stowers, and Then were all acquired in trades), the Yankees have stocked the lower levels of the minors with exciting talent, and it was all by design. They picked up these kids very early in their careers — over the winter they traded for a pitching prospect yet to appear in a pro game — and will try to develop them into the next wave of top prospects. That’s the plan. The farm system may lack upper minors talent. In the low minors though, forget it. The Yankees are stacked, and that equals a small army of breakout candidates.

Returning From Injury

Technically, RHP Albert Abreu finished last year healthy, though injuries have given him trouble since coming over from the Astros in the Brian McCann trade. The power four-pitch mix is impressive. The lack of control and lack of durability are not. More than anything at this point, Abreu needs reps so he can work on refining his game. A full healthy season would be welcome in 2019. It could also land him a big league call-up at some point.

RHP Freicer Perez is a more traditional injury comeback story. He made six ugly starts last season before undergoing season-ending shoulder surgery. The good news? Perez only had bone spurs removed. His labrum, rotator cuff, and capsule are all intact. A lost season is a lost season though, and this year Perez will look to get back on track with a healthy shoulder. He went into last year as one of the top prospects in the system. Getting back to that level after shoulder surgery remains possible.

The forgotten pitching prospect in the system is RHP Glenn Otto, the Yankees’ fifth round pick in 2017. He made two starts with Low-A Charleston last year before having season-ending surgery to remove a blood clot from his shoulder. Yikes. When healthy, Otto showed a good low-to-mid-90s fastball with a hammer high-spin curveball that is seemingly allergic to bats. There were questions about his durability and changeup even before the surgery, but, even if Otto is a reliever long-term, he could be a good one. His coming out party is set for this summer.

Make or Break Year?

Holder. (Presswire)

The 2014-15 international spending spree, while well-intended, has worked out very poorly. Florial is far and away the best prospect to come out of that signing class and he was a small bonus guy later in the signing period, not a headliner. Many of those 2014-15 kids have already washed out. Others, like 3B Dermis Garcia and SS Hoy Jun Park, still have some prospect value. Not much, but some.

Garcia’s calling call remains (and always will be) his power. He moved down the defensive spectrum to first base last year — apparently he’s going to give third base another try this year — and plans to turn him into a two-way player were apparently put on hold. Dermis did throw bullpen sessions late last season but he never appeared in a game as a pitcher. Alas. Garcia will move up to High-A Tampa this year after two seasons with Low-A Charleston. Another year of contact and defensive issues mean you can probably close the book on his days as a serious prospect.

After Florial, Park probably has the best chance to reach the big leagues among 2014-15 signees. He’s a very good defensive middle infielder who draws a lot of walks and can steal bases, but is short on power and exit velocity. Power is tough to project these days because of changes to the baseball, so perhaps we shouldn’t ding Park too much. He has a chance to rebuild some prospect stock with Double-A Trenton this year. The concern is advanced pitchers will knock the bat out of his hands. This is a big year for Park.

IF Kyle Holder has Major League ready defensive tools, but he hasn’t hit much in his career to date, and we haven’t seen much progress either. To be fair to Holder, he dealt with serious injury (broken vertebrae) and off-the-field matters (his brother passed away) last season, so we should cut him a break on the lack of development. That said, he is a soon-to-be 25-year-old defensive wiz with little to offer at the plate. Another year without much offensive progress and it’ll be time to look ahead to other infield prospects.

I think OF Isiah Gilliam has reached make or break status as well. He’s closing in on his 23rd birthday and saw marked declines in his power output, his walk rate, and his strikeout rate after moving from Low-A Charleston to High-A Tampa last season. As a non-elite bat-only corner outfielder, it doesn’t take much to get left behind. Gilliam has to rebound with a strong season this year, likely back with Tampa, to avoid becoming an afterthought.

Prospects I Am Excited About

Gosh, there are lots. Seigler, Pereira, and Contreras are at the top of the list. I also can’t give up on RHP Luis Medina yet, even after he walked 46 batters in 36 rookie ball innings last year. Medina turns only 20 in May, and he lights up the radar gun with his fastball and has a knee-buckling high-spin curveball, and I just can’t give up on that despite the extreme control problems. Medina’s going to be a long-term project and I am willing to be patient because the upside is so great.

OF Raimfer Salinas should be in the Pereira and Cabello group — Salinas ($1.85M) received a larger signing bonus than Pereira ($1.4M) and Cabello ($1.35M), which tells you how much the Yankees like him — but finger and knee injuries cut short his pro debut last year. When healthy, he features an advanced approach at the plate with some power, as well as very good defensive chops. Salinas probably belongs in the “Breakout Candidates” group. I really like him. He has a lot of ability.

OF Pablo Olivares has long been a personal favorite with his “do everything well but nothing exceptionally” skill set. RHP Frank German and RHP Tanner Myatt are two 2018 draftees I like for different reasons. German has already gained velocity as a pro and features a nice little slider. Myatt is a huge (6-foot-7) extreme hard-thrower (up to 101 mph) with an occasionally great curveball. He reminds me a bit of Kyle Farnsworth, which I know will drive some people nuts, but Farnsworth played 16 years in the big leagues as a late-inning reliever. That would be a heck of an outcome for an 11th round pick like Myatt.

Will The Yankees Trade Any Of These Guys?

Of course they will. The Yankees are a win-now team, so if when they need help at the trade deadline, they will trade prospects in an effort to get over the hump. They did it the last two trade deadlines and there’s no reason to think they won’t do it again this year. That’s the entire point of a farm system. To help address big league roster needs, either by graduating prospects to the show, or by using them as trade chips.

To me, Nelson stands out as a potential trade candidate. He will be Rule 5 Draft after the season and I get the feeling he falls into the same category as Dillon Tate and Josh Rogers last year. The “good prospect the Yankees don’t really know what to do with who is on the 40-man roster bubble” group. The other Double-A arms like Abreu, Stephan, Whitlock could all become trade candidates given the club’s lack of high-end Triple-A talent. Double-A starters are the next best thing.

Even before the injury, I don’t think the Yankees would’ve hesitated for a second to trade Florial in the right deal. Would they give him away? No way. But Florial is their best chance to acquire an impact player on July 31st. As long as he comes back from the wrist injury well, his trade value should remain intact. The Yankees professed their love for Justus Sheffield right up until they traded him. I could see the same happening with Florial.

The Yankees traded 15 prospects in the days leading up to the last two trade deadlines. Some were big names (Blake Rutherford, James Kaprielian, Jorge Mateo, etc.) and many were second and third tier guys (Josh Rogers, Billy McKinney, Luis Rijo, Zack Littell). I think the Yankees are at the point where no prospect is off-limits. I thought Gleyber Torres was untouchable as it gets two years ago. Now? There’s no one in the system like that. Not even close.

Where Does The System Go From Here?

Because the system is built mainly around pitching and very young low minors prospects, the Yankees have a boom or bust farm system right now. If the pitchers stay healthy and some of those teenagers figure it out, this could again be one of the top systems in baseball, and I mean as soon as next spring. The Yankees have gotten pretty good at developing players, thankfully. The chances of a farm system breakout in 2019 aren’t small.

Then again, if some of those pitchers get hurt — I have 18 pitchers in my top 30 prospects list and normal attrition suggests a few of them are going to feel something that requires a lengthy shutdown, that’s just baseball — and those teenagers need more than one or two pro seasons to hit their stride, the Yankees will again have a system ranked in the bottom half of the league next year. It’s not the end of the world, but a great farm system is a heck of a lot more fun than a mediocre one.

“I believe our system is one of the stronger ones in the game. It’s just the timing of everything. (The top talent) just happens to be at the lower levels. We are very pitching deep with a lot of high-end young arms,” said Brian Cashman to Randy Miller last month. “I’m not saying the system rankings are wrong. I will tell you this: As long as our guys stay healthy and develop the way we think they’re capable of developing, the system rankings are going to be radically different next year.”

Filed Under: Minors Tagged With: 2019 Season Preview, Albert Abreu, Anthony Garcia, Anthony Seigler, Antonio Cabello, Chance Adams, Clarke Schmidt, Deivi Garcia, Dermis Garcia, Domingo Acevedo, Estevan Florial, Everson Pereira, Frank German, Freicer Perez, Garrett Whitlock, Glenn Otto, Hoy Jun Park, Isiah Gilliam, Jonathan Loaisiga, Josh Stowers, Juan Then, Kevin Alcantara, Kyle Holder, Luis Gil, Luis Medina, Mike King, Nick Nelson, Osiel Rodriguez, Pablo Olivares, Raimfer Salinas, Roansy Contreras, Stephen Tarpley, Tanner Myatt, Thairo Estrada, Trevor Stephan, Yoendrys Gomez

March 23rd Spring Training Notes: Severino, Bird, Loaisiga, Montgomery, Roster Cuts, Tarpley

March 23, 2019 by Mike

The Yankees dropped this afternoon’s game to the Blue Jays. Gleyber Torres provided the only offense with a three-run home run. Miguel Andujar doubled while Brett Gardner, Austin Romine, and Tyler Wade had singles. Masahiro Tanaka was sharp in his two scoreless innings. Next time we see him will be Opening Day. Aroldis Chapman faced four batters and retired one. It was ugly. Better he gets it out of his system now than next week.

Gio Gonzalez made his Yankees debut and gave up five runs (four earned) in two innings. Gonzalez told Coley Harvey he is “just a tick off” right now but woof, he did not look big league ready. He looked like a guy who hasn’t gone through a proper Spring Training. Based on today, Gonzalez will need to some Triple-A time before potentially helping the Yankees. Here are the box score and video highlights, and here are the day’s notes from Tampa:

  • In case you missed it earlier, the Yankees traded lefty reliever Phil Diehl to the Rockies for outfielder Mike Tauchman. There’s a chance Tauchman will make the Opening Day roster, which would seem to be bad news for Greg Bird or Tyler Wade.
  • According to a report during the YES Network broadcast, Luis Severino (shoulder) played catch at 90 feet today as scheduled, and everything went well. He’s doing better mechanically after feeling a bit off during his first day of throwing. Not sure what the next step is for Severino.
  • Greg Bird (elbow) was scratched from the lineup after taking batting practice today. Aaron Boone said Bird is “fine,” but he wanted to sit him one more day so the swelling can go away completely. Bird is tentatively scheduled to play tomorrow afternoon. [Erik Boland, Lindsey Adler]
  • Jordan Montgomery (Tommy John surgery) is targeting mid-August for his return. Right now he is throwing fastballs only and at less than full effort from a half-mound. He’s about a week away from graduating to a full mound, though offspeed pitches are still a ways off. [Lindsey Adler]
  • Jonathan Loaisiga was sent to minor league camp today and Boone said he will rejoin the Yankees after CC Sabathia’s five-game suspension ends. Domingo German (or an opener) will start the fourth game of the regular season, Masahiro Tanaka the fifth game (on normal rest), and Loaisiga the sixth game. Luis Cessa will pitch in long relief. Didn’t see that coming! [Bryan Hoch]
  • Following last night’s game Gio Urshela and Kyle Holder were reassigned to minor league camp, the Yankees announced. Nestor Cortes, Estevan Florial, and David Hale were sent down today. The Yankees will begin the regular season with a 24-man roster while Sabathia serves his suspension, so there are still five more cuts coming following the Tauchman trade.
  • And finally, Stephen Tarpley was named the James P. Dawson Award winner as the best rookie in camp prior to today’s game. Congrats to him. Tarpley threw 11.1 scoreless innings during Grapefruit League play. Andujar and Torres won it the last two years.

The Yankees wrap up their Grapefruit League season on the road against the Twins tomorrow. Unlike Tanaka today, James Paxton will make a full start tomorrow because he won’t pitch again until the second game of the regular season next Saturday. Lindsey Adler says Greg Bird, Luke Voit, Tyler Wade, Clint Frazier, and Austin Romine are making the trip. Tomorrow’s game will be televised live.

Filed Under: Spring Training Tagged With: David Hale, Estevan Florial, Gio Urshela, Greg Bird, Jonathan Loaisiga, Jordan Montgomery, Kyle Holder, Luis Severino, Nestor Cortes

March 21st Spring Training Notes: Sevy, Bird, Wade, Frazier, Florial, Gonzalez, Sabathia, Mazzilli

March 21, 2019 by Mike

The Yankees got thumped pretty good by the Cardinals today. Gleyber Torres had a double and a walk, Gio Urshela had a double and a single, and Miguel Andujar had a single. The B-Team couldn’t get much going on offensively. Then again, when Ryan Lavarnway leads the starting lineup in service time, what do you expect?

Domingo German gave up five runs, including three homers, in only 3.2 innings. He’d given up only three runs in 11.1 Grapefruit League innings going into today’s game. Given all the injuries, I doubt today’s outing hurt German’s chances of making the Opening Day roster. Anyway, Stephen Tarpley continued his strong spring with a scoreless inning. Here are the box score and video highlights, and here are the day’s notes from Tampa:

  • Luis Severino (shoulder) made 50 throws at 60 feet today as scheduled and everything went well. Tomorrow is a rest day. I’m not sure what comes after that. He probably has more flat ground work ahead of him before getting back up on a mound. [Bryan Hoch]
  • Apparently that pitch did not hit Greg Bird’s elbow pad yesterday. He was swollen today and sent back to Tampa for tests. “As a hitter, I don’t want to mess with his mechanics,” Aaron Boone said. X-rays and a CT scan came back negative, so all is good, at least in theory. Bird is likely to return to the lineup this weekend. [Coley Harvey]
  • Tyler Wade is fine after leaving yesterday’s game with tightness in both hits. He was examined today and is good to go for Opening Day. Clint Frazier fouled a pitch into his calf during today’s game but he’s fine too. Sore, probably, but fine. Estevan Florial (wrist) will only be in a cast three weeks, so that’s good news. [Bryan Hoch, Coley Harvey, Joel Sherman]
  • Gio Gonzalez threw a bullpen session today (here’s video) and is tentatively scheduled to pitch in a game Saturday, though it could be on the minor league side. Larry Rothschild said he “looks pretty close,” for what it’s worth. Also, Gonzalez said he added a cutter over the winter and likes where it’s at. [Erik Boland, Coley Harvey]
  • CC Sabathia threw two innings and 26 pitches in a minor league game today and everything went well. Here’s some video. Tommy Kahnle pitched in a minor league game as well, throwing 1.2 innings and 33 pitches. James Paxton and Luis Cessa threw bullpen sessions. [Bryan Hoch, Erik Boland, Kristie Ackert]
  • Billy Burns, Matt Lipka, and Ryan Lavarnway were all reassigned to minor league camp following today’s game, the Yankees announced. There goes any slim chance Burns had at making the team as Aaron Hicks’ replacement. I count 47 players still in big league camp, which is an awful lot with Opening Day one week away.
  • And finally, Lee Mazzilli is doing well after being hit in the head by a batted ball during batting practice yesterday. The Yankees say he’s in good spirits and will remain in the hospital one more night for observation. Good news. [James Wagner]

The Yankees are back home tomorrow night against the Braves. Only four more exhibition games to go. Jonathan Loaisiga is the scheduled starter tomorrow night. The game will be televised live.

Filed Under: Spring Training Tagged With: Billy Burns, Clint Frazier, Estevan Florial, Greg Bird, Luis Severino, Matt Lipka, Ryan Lavarnway, Tyler Wade

March 18th Spring Training Notes: Gonzalez, Florial, Ellsbury

March 18, 2019 by Mike

(Presswire)

The Yankees beat the Braves this evening. Masahiro Tanaka was on top of his game, striking out seven and allowing one run on two hits and a walk in five innings. He has one more tune-up start before Opening Day. Adam Ottavino, who’s had a sneaky bad spring, allowed three runs on two hits and two walks in two-thirds of an inning. Time to panic? Nah. Wait until he does that a few times during the regular season.

Offensively, Luke Voit (home run) and Aaron Judge (triple) led the way. Judge is still looking for his first single this spring. Nothing but extra-base hits so far. Brett Gardner and DJ LeMahieu had one single apiece, Tyler Wade doubled, and Austin Romine had three base hits. Another good Grapefruit League game. The Yankees won and everyone made it out in one piece. Here is the box score and here are the day’s notes from Tampa:

  • In case you missed it earlier, the Yankees have agreed to a minor league deal with Gio Gonzalez. Brian Cashman called it a “verbal understanding” and said he’s not sure when Gonzalez will be MLB ready. Gio will join the Yankees in the coming days. [Erik Boland, George King, Joel Sherman]
  • Estevan Florial (wrist) will wear a hard cast for a few weeks and Aaron Boone didn’t have an exact timetable for his return. Florial actually has two fractures in his wrist, but the second fracture is small and won’t require as much time to heal as the main fracture. [Brendan Kuty]
  • When will Jacoby Ellsbury (hip) rejoin the Yankees? “The timetable is ‘As soon as possible.’ It’s hard to give an exact day or week, but we’re doing everything. I’m in baseball activity, so that’s the good news,” he said. Ellsbury reported to camp yesterday to continue his rehab. [Ken Davidoff]
  • The Yankees have back-to-back games on the other side of Florida on Wednesday and Thursday. Usually they have a group of players stay overnight rather than make the long bus trip back and forth. Miguel Andujar, Greg Bird, Clint Frazier, Gary Sanchez, Gleyber Torres, Luke Voit, and Tyler Wade are all making the trip. [Coley Harvey]
  • Conor Foley has the day’s minor league camp workout groups. Reminder: These are only spring workout groups. They are not regular season assignments. Here is video of Deivi Garcia and personal favorite Tanner Myatt from today’s games.
  • And finally, MLB is testing out a new device that allows the pitcher and catcher to communicate through watches. The Yankees tried it out last week and some said it slowed everything down. Meh, no harm in trying. [Jesse Dougherty, James Wagner]

The Grapefruit League season continues tomorrow afternoon with a home game against the Rays. Luis Cessa is the scheduled starting pitcher. Tomorrow’s game will be televised live.

Filed Under: Spring Training Tagged With: Estevan Florial, Jacoby Ellsbury

March 17th Spring Training Notes: Hicks, Betances, Florial, Ellsbury, Wilson

March 17, 2019 by Mike

Two games, two wins for the Yankees today. James Paxton no-hit the Phillies for 4.1 innings before reaching his pitch count, though he did give up a run because he walked a batter and Chad Green let the inherited runner score. Green gave up three hits in his two-thirds of an inning. Greg Bird, Gleyber Torres, and Troy Tulowitzki all hit home runs, plus Tyler Wade and Matt Lipka had two hits apiece. Here are the box score and video highlights for this game.

Meanwhile, against the Orioles, Jonathan Loaisiga allowed a hit and a walk in three scoreless innings. Didn’t strike anyone out though. At this point, I don’t think today’s outing is enough to land him a spot in the Opening Day rotation. Luke Voit, Miguel Andujar, and Zack Zehner all went deep. The Kyles (Holder and Higashioka) each had a single and a double. Here are the box score and video highlights for this game, and here are the day’s notes from Tampa:

  • Aaron Boone confirmed Aaron Hicks (back) will begin the season on the injured list. He received a second cortisone shot yesterday, which seems not great! “He could avoid a full (injured list) stay at the big league level because obviously we can backdate him … Hopefully this will knock it out once and for all, but it will slow him down by a couple of days,” Boone said. [Coley Harvey]
  • Dellin Betances threw a 1-2-3 inning today but his velocity was still down in the 90-92 mph range. Gary Sanchez even went out to the mound to make sure he was feeling okay. Betances, who has always been a slow starter velocity-wise, said he feels good and is still building arm strength after getting a late start to camp following the birth of his first child. [James Wagner, Sweeny Murti]
  • Estevan Florial (wrist) will see a specialist Tuesday and the Yankees will know more about his timetable then. “My understanding is he could potentially be in a cast, but the hand specialist may have him in something else. That’ll kind of unfold over the next 48 hours exactly how we attack it,” said Boone. Florial suffered a non-displaced fracture yesterday. [Randy Miller]
  • Jacoby Ellsbury (hip surgery) arrived in camp today. He had his physical today and is not close to returning to the lineup. Ellsbury is hitting off a tee and playing catch at short distances. That’s about it. His rehab work will gradually increase in the coming weeks. Needless to say, he’s not a candidate to fill in for Hicks. [Bryan Hoch, Pete Caldera]
  • Conor Foley has the day’s minor league camp lineups. Obligatory reminder: Those are only spring workout groups, not full season assignments. Just turned 20-year-old Saul Torres is not jumping to Triple-A after hitting .125/.172/.193 in rookie ball last season.
  • And finally, Russell Wilson is gone. His two days in camp are over. Wilson shagged fly balls and took batting practice, and presumably mingled with the young players, which was the entire reason the Yankees acquired him in the first place. [Bryan Hoch]

The Yankees open the final full week of the Grapefruit League season with a road night game against the Braves tomorrow. The game won’t be televised. Last time the Yankees will play an untelevised game in 2019. Hooray for that. Masahiro Tanaka is Monday night’s scheduled starter.

Filed Under: Spring Training Tagged With: Aaron Hicks, Estevan Florial, Jacoby Ellsbury, Russell Wilson

Estevan Florial fractures right wrist crashing into outfield wall

March 16, 2019 by Mike

(Presswire)

Estevan Florial suffered a non-displaced fracture in his right wrist after crashing into the outfield wall during today’s game, the Yankees announced. They did not give a timetable for his return. Florial will undergo more tests Monday and I imagine we’ll learn more then.

For what it’s worth, George Springer missed two months with a non-displaced wrist fracture after being hit by a pitch in 2015. He was hit on July 1st and didn’t return to the lineup until September 1st. I guess the Springer injury tells us two months is a ballpark estimate for Florial’s return? Sucks. Here’s the play:

Florial, 21, was having an excellent Grapefruit League season (.355/.429/.516 in 35 plate appearances) and was slated to open the regular season at either High-A Tampa or Double-A Trenton. He missed seven weeks after having surgery to remove the hamate bone in the same wrist last year.

The injury doesn’t mean much for the Yankees at the MLB level. Florial was not a realistic candidate to make the Opening Day roster despite Aaron Hicks’ back injury, and the odds were against him playing in the big leagues this year. The injury does mean Florial will lose development time, which is not ideal given his pitch recognition issues.

Depending on his timetable, Florial’s injury could impact the Yankees at the trade deadline. He is their top prospect and would presumably be a trade chip to land a high-end starter or whatever else the Yankees need. Hopefully Florial will be back in action well before then. Either way, what a bummer. Florial was having a great spring.

Filed Under: Injuries Tagged With: Estevan Florial

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