Well, the Yankees finally did it!
They aggressively traded with full focus on youth. Over the past few years they have been adding
so many pieces (mostly via the International Draft) for their farm system and
now, with 5 trades this past week (yes, “5” trades), they have accomplished the
finishing touches with additional top-tier prospects. Even the so-called experts have conceded that
the Yankees’ farm system has now positioned itself within the Top 3 (out of 30)! That’s quite a turnaround for the Yankees, a
team that has been constantly bashed as “old” with a farm system that was
ranked in the middle range. In fact, the
Yankees now have a total of 7 Top Prospects from the Top 100 according to most key publications who rank MLB’s prospects.
Here are the Yankees’ 5 trades that were made over the past week:
Aroldis Chapman - traded to the Chicago Cubs for Gleyber
Torres (SS); Billy McKinney (OF); and Adam Warren (RHP/Reliever), who
returns to the team after pitching in relief for the Cubs for only a half
season. Both Torres and McKinney have
very high ceilings.
Andrew Miller - traded to the Cleveland Indians for Clint
Frazier (OF); Justus Sheffield (LHP/Starter); Ben Heller (RHP/Reliever);
and JP Feyereisen (RHP/Reliever).
Both Frazier (who owns one of the best bat speeds of all minor players) and
Heller are AAA players who are expected to be on the MLB club by next year
(Heller will probably be on the NYY club first). I agree with the high praises from the press
regarding Frazier and somewhat Sheffield, but I am apparently the only one
excited about Heller!
Carlos Beltran - traded to the Texas Rangers for minor leaguers Dillon
Tate (RHP/Starter/Reliever) who was the fourth overall pick in the 2015 MLB
Draft mainly because his fastball & slider are well above average; Erik
Swanson (RHP/Reliever); and Nick Green (RHP/Starter), a pitcher the
NYY originally drafted during 2013 but didn’t sign. Tate is exceedingly regarded by most, but his
ERA this season was high. That was supposedly
attributed to a lingering hamstring injury that has reportedly healed now.
Ivan Nova - traded from the Yankees to the Pittsburgh Pirates for 2 players to be
named later. I’m sure one of them will
be fairly decent and the other will probably be very young with slight hope - we’ll soon find out the projected worth of this deal; but, as a
whole, Nova was way too inconsistent for all Yankees’ fans.
Tyler Clippard (RHP/Reliever) returns to the NYY - he was
originally drafted by them in 2003 and played for their Major League club back
in 2007 - as he was acquired from the Arizona Diamondbacks for Vicente Campos.
By the way, Chapman, Beltran, and Nova are set to become Free Agents
after this season. That condition made
each acquisition more challenging for Brian Cashman to acquire worthy
talent. Of course, all baseball fans
know that most prospects don’t reach their projected potential; but,
statistically (just like any other type of gamble) the more opportunities you
align yourself with, the better chance you have to gain dividends.
Now that this season’s non-waiver trades are complete, the Yankees are
still left with two players who are well below their prime years - CC Sabathia
and A-Rod. CC will probably remain on
the team; but, as for A-Rod, he’s been rumored as a consideration to be
released by the Yankees. If that
happens, the Yankees would still be obligated to fully pay his remaining contract
(which has one-and-a-half years left @~$30 million, assuming he is unable to achieve 18 more homers which triggers his contract's clause for yet another extra $6 million for attaining 714 homers).
They also still have a handful of players underachieving for more than
one consecutive season, now - Mark Teixeira (a free agent after this season),
Brian McCann, Jacoby Ellsbury, Bret Gardner, and Michael Pineda. Additionally, Chase Headley’s hitting has
been worsening rapidly. Aside from
Teixeira and Gardner, the high-priced multi-year contracts of McCann, Ellsbury
and Headley would typically qualify each as potential candidates for “waiver”
trades (allowable trades that continue through the end of the season only after
the team places such players onto the waiver wire for the other 29 teams to
claim, if they choose). The penalty for
such claiming teams would be risky because they could be obligated to take on the
full remaining balance of such high-priced contracts if they cannot work out a
dually agreed-upon deal with the Yankees.
If any one of these Yankees passes through waivers, then the Yankees’ team
would have the right to offer the unclaimed player in a trade.
All of the above offers the Yankees’ fans a lot of hope for this year
and for years to come as more and more open roster spots open for the Yankees’
rookies! In reality, we weren’t going
to win the World Series this year, anyway - even if we won nearly 90
games. So, next year, we will have a
full season that will allow many promising youngsters a chance to prove or
disprove themselves. That list should
include some we’ve already seen at a decent sample size (such as Rob Refsnyder,
Aaron Hicks, and Luis Severino) and some that we’ve barely seen or have not
seen yet:
Hitters:
Tyler Austin (OF/1B/3B), Aaron Judge (OF), Gary Sanchez (C), Ben Gamel (OF),
Jake Cave (OF), Kyle Higashioka (C), Jose Rosario (2B), Donavan Solano (3B),
Cesar Puello (1B), Mason Williams (OF), and now outfielders Clint Frazier and Billy
Mckinney.
Pitchers:
Conor Mullee, Mark Montgomery, Giovanny
Gallegos, Tyler Webb, and now Ben Heller.
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