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It's Deja Vu All Over Again
And now for something completely different ... let's play a little game. See if you can fill in the specific name or event to which each bracketed number refers.

Coming off a World Series defeat to a National League team [1] spurred to victory by one of the greatest catchers ever to play the game [2], the Yankees have to go all the way back to the dramatic home run by a corner infielder that ended the previous season's ALCS [3] for their last moment of glory. That's WAY too long for a certain impatient owner [4].

So what did The Boss do? You know. He ran right out and ... acquired a utility infielder from the Texas Rangers [5]? Um, well, yes, but really -- he also managed to acquire arguably the biggest star in the game [6] to return a little shine to the Apple. Now of course, there's concern that the new star might clash with the established team captain [7], based largely on an unfortunate magazine interview [8] given by the incoming star that the captain didn't take too terribly kindly to.

So what have we got heading into the season following that disappointing World Series loss? What, indeed, does the highest payroll in the game buy in a depressed American (League) economy [8a]?

Well, there are All-Stars behind the plate [9], at first base [10] and at third base; in fact, even in the glorious, championship-riddled annals of the Bronx Bombers, there's a chance that the greatest third baseman in the team's history [11] is taking up residence at the hot corner right now.

The middle infield is more of a question mark, with the team's one real offensive hole [12] partnering with what we might as well admit is an overrated All-Star around the keystone [13].

There's a solid, steadying influence in left field [14], a speedy but defensively challenged former All-Star in center field [15] and a bombastic slugger occupying the Babe's old slot in right field [16].

The designated hitter slot is up for grabs, but looks like it will be used for injury-prone [17] or defensively-challenged [18] sluggers, and maybe the occasional fading former star [19].

The starting rotation is packed with big names -- and, frankly, with question marks. While there are currently six pitchers who could end up taking a regular turn at some time during the season, there's just one solid young and (so far) injury-free guy [20] penciled into the rotation.

The others are veterans, including at least one righty with arguably Hall of Fame talent [21] just on the cusp of 200 career wins. Another former 20-game winner in from the West Coast [22] could also get to 200 in pinstripes, but he'll have to overcome injuries to do so. Either way, it's quite a turnover from last year's team as two of the top four starters [23] are gone.

The closer [24], of course, is a guy who could bust out and win a Cy Young Award any time and not surprise anyone in the least.

The manager [25] of this motley crew is a former All-Star infielder, but if he ever makes it into the Hall of Fame -- as many believe he should -- it'll likely be for what he accomplished as a manager, not as a player.

That's right, Yankee fans and foes alike, the off-season has come to a close, and it's time to kick off the new baseball season -- the 1977 baseball season.

What, you thought you knew all 25 answers above [not including the bonus political reference]? You probably got one right -- #4 (that's question #4, not Larrupin' Lou Gehrig) is the only one with an answer that hasn't changed. But the 2003-2004 offseason really was eerily similar to the 1976-1977 offseason in the Bronx, which might not be good news for the rest of the American League.

Meet the new boss, same as the old boss indeed.

Answer Key:
1. Cincinnati; Florida
2. Johnny Bench; Pudge Rodriguez
3. Aaron Boone off Tim Wakefield; Chris Chambliss off Mark Littell
4. George Steinbrenner; Steinbrenner
5. Brian Doyle; Mike Lamb
6. Reggie Jackson; Alex Rodriguez
7. Thurman Munson; Derek Jeter
8. Reggie to Sport; A-Rod to Esquire
8a. See also: Carter, James Earl; Bush, George W.
9. Munson; Jorge Posada
10. Chambliss; Jason Giambi
11. Graig Nettles; A-Rod
12. SS (Bucky Dent); 2B (Enrique Wilson?)
13. Willie Randolph; Jeter
14. Roy White; Hideki Matsui
15. Mickey Rivers; Kenny Lofton
16. Jackson; Gary Sheffield
17. Cliff Johnson; Bernie Willliams
18. Dave Kingman; Ruben Sierra
19. Jimmy Wynn; Tony Clark
20. Ron Guidry; Javier Vazquez
21. Catfish Hunter; Mike Mussina
22. Ken Holtzman; Kevin Brown
23. Dock Ellis, Doyle Alexander; Andy Pettitte, Roger Clemens
24. Sparky Lyle; Mariano Rivera
25. Billy Martin; Joe Torre

2003 By the Numbers
  • 101-61, won AL East and AL Pennant
  • Runs Scored/Allowed: 877/716
  • Pythagorean Record: 96-66

    Just for kicks ...
    1976 By the Numbers
  • 97-62, won AL East and AL Pennant
  • Runs Scored/Allowed: 730/575
  • Pythagorean Record: 97-62
  • Harbinger? 1977 World Series Champs

    Comings & Goings
    Headline: Ex-Yanks Take Three of Four from Tigers
    Let's imagine this, just for a moment. You're starting a baseball team from scratch and want to be better than, say, at least the Tigers.

    Lee Mazzilli abandons the Orioles to take up his first managing job with your club, knowing he'll be ably assisted by the Yoda of bench coaches, erstwhile Don Zimmer.

    Because you know pitching is the soul of the game, you blow your payroll on a starting rotation of Roger Clemens, Andy Pettitte, Jeff Weaver and David Wells, with solid lefty Sterling Hitchcock as a fifth-starter-slash-swingman. Hey kids ... that's a total of 761 career wins from your rotation's front five.

    The bullpen doesn't have a "closer" per se, but as an enlightened Ricciardi-esque GM, you hope that wily veteran Jesse Orosco can mentor Juan Acevedo and there's always stalwart Jeff Nelson in reserve. Chris Hammond, Al Reyes and Randy Choate round out the staff; they can all share in those valuable "save opportunities."

    Since the pitching staff has been the focus, there's less to spend on the regular lineup, and that's reflected in the fact that Michel Hernandez (five games, four at-bats, one hit) is the starting -- and only -- catcher.

    At least Hernandez can conserve energy by not having to run down any popups as youngsters Nick Johnson and Drew Henson, the latter back from that wacky windmill-tilting mission to Dallas and the NFL, man the corners at first and third, respectively.

    Now, the middle infield might be a bit defensively challenged, as miraculously recovered Aaron Boone slides over to second base, where he's showed up 21 times in a big league uniform previously. Boone's actually played slightly more at shortstop, but we'll entrust that to the athletic (that's SABR code for "erratic") Alfonso Soriano.

    The outfield has solid, if unspectacular Karim Garcia and Bubba Trammell flanking young Juan Rivera, with David Dellucci sure to get yeoman's work as a defensive replacement for all three. Fernando Seguignol, whose stock has dropped somewhat since he was once traded even-up for a 40-save John Wetteland moves into the DH slot.

    And that, Yankee fans and foes, is a nice little 75-win team made up entirely of players the pinstriped ones have lost just since the close of the 2003 season.

    Headline: New Yanks Can Play a Little, Too
    Bring on those Tigers, say the New New York Yankees, and maybe even bring on those Ex-Yanks. Sure, co-managers Roy White and Don Mattingly don't have the wizened old Zimmer on the bench to consult, but think how much less of a distraction that will be when the first trip to Fenway rolls around.

    The starting rotation doesn't quite compare with the fivesome tossed out there by the Ex-Yanks, but opening any short series with Kevin Brown and Javier Vazquez means there's a pretty good chance things could go your way.

    Orlando Hernandez returns to the Bronx as a theoretically healthy El Duque slides into the third slot in the rotation, while Donovan Osborne gets a shot to be the fourth starter. Not new to the Yankee organization, but new as a healthy -- er, well, hopefully someday healthy -- fifth starter is former 20-game winner Jon Lieber.

    The bullpen is, ah, shallow, but at least there are a couple of All-Stars filling the two seats that are occupied -- Paul Quantrill sets up Tom "Flash" Gordon. Felix Heredia was released then re-signed in the off-season; he might need to sneak onto this team so Quantrill doesn't throw in 135 games.

    It's the starting lineup that should scare the living bejeezers out of the Ex-Yanks, who must be a little nervous that Hernandez is catching and Garcia looks like the cleanup hitter.

    For the New Yanks, it's a lineup Alan Trammell would sell his 1984 World Series ring to manage, just once. Defensive stalwart Joe Girardi returns to backstop the Yankees, with Travis Lee and Mike Lamb working the infield corners. Former speedster Miguel Cairo picks it at second base, while some guy named Rodriguez is the shortstop -- yes, shortstop.

    The outfield is former All-Star Kenny Lofton in center field, flanked by slugger Gary Sheffield in right field and handyman Tyler Houston in left field. The DH is someone who hit nearly 100 homers over a three-year period not too long ago -- okay, 1997-1999 -- in former Tony the Tiger All-Star Clark.

    And the bench is well-rounded, with catcher Sal Fasano, infielder Homer Bush and outfielders Darren Bragg, Mike Kelly and Bubba Crosby.

    And that, Yankee fans and foes, is a nice little 75-win team made up entirely of players the pinstriped ones have acquired since the close of the 2003 season.

    That's right ... two complete teams, both of which would arguably be quite competitive at the Major League level in 2004, composed entirely of players who have either left or joined the Yankees since Josh Beckett hugged Pudge Rodriguez between first and home.

    Just for the sake of argument, could a third team be built entirely of players who have remained with the Yankees since last year? Yes, yes it could. And again, it just might leave Alan Trammell weeping over his Motor City Kitties.

    John Flaherty catches so Jorge Posada can move to first base; Jason Giambi becomes the DH. Enrique Wilson and Derek Jeter are the middle infield, while (yes, this is a stretch) Luis Sojo moves from his third base coaching box to actually play third base. The outfield is Bernie Williams flanked by Hideki Matsui and Ruben Sierra. Hopefully the offense will make up for the, ah, defensive shortcomings.

    The pitching staff, like that of the New Yanks, is shallow but talented -- Mike Mussina and Jose Contreras alternate starts while Steve Karsay and Gabe White are around to set up Mariano Rivera.

    Stability, thy name is ... well, it ain't "New York."

    Around the Horn, Around the Division
    How the lineup could play out for the 2004 Yankees, and how the Yanks stack up against the rest of the A.L. East.

    CATCHER
    Jorge Posada, backed up by John Flaherty or Joe Girardi.

    Best Case Scenario: Posada solidifies his position as an All-Star and the fifth best catcher in Yankees history (seriously ... Bill Dickey, Yogi Berra, Elston Howard, Thurman Munson); Flaherty catches enough games to give Posada time at DH and days off to stay fresh for October.

    Worst Case Scenario: Posada, who has caught 548 games (and appeared in 574) over the past four years, breaks down. Youngster Dionar Navarro is expected to step in and play regularly because nobody trusts Flaherty as an everyday player.

    Division Rank: Apologetic nods to Javy Lopez' career year last season and even to the apoplectic Red Sox fans who wouldn't trade Jason Varitek for Yogi Berra, but Posada is the best catcher in the A.L. East. Toby Hall, thanks for stopping by.

    FIRST BASE
    Jason Giambi, backed up by Travis Lee, with occasional hints of Jorge Posada or possibly Tony Clark.

    Best Case Scenario: Giambi stays in the All-Star 150-200 OPS+ range he's been in since 1999.

    Worst Case Scenario: Giambi can't handle the defensive grind at first, moving to DH, forcing either Bernie Williams or Kenny Lofton out of the lineup, and forcing either Travis Lee or Tony Clark into the lineup.

    Division Rank: Wow ... Carlos Delgado, Giambi, Rafael Palmeiro, Tino Martinez, Kevin Millar? The division is stacked at first base, with Giambi a smidge behind Delgado, but ahead of the aging Palmeiro, ex-Yank Martinez and Millar.

    SECOND BASE
    The Great Black Hole. Enrique Wilson? Erick Almonte? Miguel Cairo? Homer Bush? Aaron Boone in August? Willie Randolph? Bobby Richardson?

    Best Case Scenario: Cairo hits enough to hold the job, with occasional support from utility infielders Wilson and Almonte -- until August, when a healthy Boone, signing for a reduced rate as punishment for his basketball shenanigans, returns to revitalize the lineup by adding a ninth All-Star to the mix.

    Worst Case Scenario: The Boss panics and deals prospects for someone like D'Angelo Jiminez or Mark Ellis, overpaying in the process. Boone draws the line at taking a paycut and signs with the Mariners to join his brother, Bret, who the Yanks tried to acquire at the trade deadline, only to learn they didn't have nearly the depth of prospects required.

    Division Rank: Rey Sanchez, Jerry Hairston Jr., Pokey Reese and Orlando Hudson aren't making 2019 Hall of Fame Induction preparations, but the Yankee situation is still the worst of the five. When Homer Bush has a legitimate shot at the job ... well, then. The best second sacker in the division won't start the season as a regular -- Baltimore's Brian Roberts is behind Hairston.

    SHORTSTOP
    The Captain, Derek Jeter, backed up, that's right, backed up by Possibly The Greatest Shortstop Ever To Play The Game, Alex Rodriguez.

    Best Case Scenario: Flanked by the surprisingly excellent defensive efforts of Cairo and A-Rod, Jeter's defensive shortcomings are disguised well enough that his batting title, 45 steals and position as captain of the Yankees -- who coast to the best record in baseball -- earns him what the New York press reports is a long-overdue MVP award.

    Worst Case Scenario: Though they try to hide it publicly, the tension between Jeter and A-Rod affects the clubhouse chemistry. After Jeter turns an ankle sliding into Texas backup catcher Ken Huckaby, Rodriguez moves to short for two weeks, hits .550 and makes several brilliant defensive plays. Kevin Brown publicly comments on how nice it is to have a legitimate shortstop behind him. Mayhem ensues.

    Division Rank: Middle of the pack -- literally. Jeter is behind Nomar Garciaparra and Miguel Tejada, in that order, and ahead of Chris Woodward and Julio Lugo. Defensively, Jeter is the fourth-best shorstop ... on the Yankees. Hello, Messers. Rodriguez, Almonte and Wilson.

    THIRD BASE
    Alex Rodriguez. For the sake of everyone in the Yankee clubhouse, this had better work.

    Best Case Scenario: A-Rod dedicates his sublime athletic talents to becoming the next Mike Schmidt, both offensively and defensively. The defense comes slowly but surely, and the offense results in the first 60-homer season for a Yankee in 43 years.

    Worst Case Scenario: Something goes wrong. A Jeter injury moves A-Rod back to short, A-Rod himself gets hurt ... anything. But the fact is, Tyler Houston is a better backup option at the hot corner than many teams have starting.

    Division Rank: Okay, Geoff Blum surely has his fans somewhere. Eric Hinske is a nice player. Melvin Mora, hey, anyone who can be a father to quintuplets and make the All-Star team, he deserves props. Bill Mueller could play for most teams; he'd look great playing second for New York. But you know, just shut up if you think any team in baseball wouldn't trade their starting third baseman straight up for Alex Rodriguez.

    LEFT FIELD
    Hideki Matsui, with perhaps some residual of the Lofton/Williams combination chipping in after (OK, if) everyone gets healthy.

    Best Case Scenario: Matsui hits .305 with 25 homers and 115 RBI and is criticized in the New York media for not living up to his Godzilla nickname and Japanese statistics.

    Worst Case Scenario: Matsui hits .285 with 20 homers and 95 RBI and is criticized in the New York media for not living up to his Godzilla nickname and Japanese statistics.

    Division Rank: Frank Catalanotto and Manny Ramirez are different types of hitters, but both are DHs masquerading as left fielders. Carl Crawford is young and erratic, but shows great promise. Larry Bigbie is rumored to be on his way to Los Angeles for a pitcher, but for now he's penciled lightly into Baltimore's lineup. As much as Matsui's relative defensive prowess and arm strength compares favorably to the rest of the division, the best he can do is second behind Ramirez, and ahead of Crawford, Catalanotto and Bigbie.

    CENTER FIELD
    Kenny Lofton; Bernie Williams; if necessary, Hideki Matsui.

    Best Case Scenario: Lofton repeats last year's offensive performance (.802 OPS, 30 SB) and limits the offensiveness of his defense.

    Worst Case Scenario: Williams gets healthy and proceeds to sulk about his lack of playing time in the outfield, believing himself the rightful heir to DiMaggio and Mantle. If Lofton is Mickey Rivers, then Williams is the end-of-his-career, second-stop-with-the-Yankees Bobby Murcer. Great guy to have around; good bat; not much of a center fielder any more. Lofton and Williams both spiral into competitive slumps, bottoming out around .230 each.

    Division Rank: Honestly, this plays out disturbingly like second base. Lofton is a nice player to have on the team, but who wouldn't rather have Vernon Wells, Johnny Damon, Rocco Baldelli -- okay, let's draw the line at Luis Matos. We'll take Lofton over Matos.

    RIGHT FIELD
    Gary Sheffield; Ruben Sierra; Bubba Crosby.

    Best Case Scenario: Sheffield stays healthy and continues on his under-the-radar path to Cooperstown.

    Worst Case Scenario: Sheffield's season gets a quick "thumbs down" and Bubba Crosby anchors right field until Williams can return to play left, flipping Matsui back to right. Nightmare scenario: tabloid headline writers have four months to mess with "Bubba" puns.

    Division Rank: If Sheffield is healthy, then Trot Nixon, Jose Cruz Jr., Jay Gibbons and whoever ends up out there for Toronto can just stand in line to hold the man's batting doughnut.

    DESIGNATED HITTER
    Bernie Williams; a cast of dozens.

    Best Case Scenario: Williams discovers he loves being a designated hitter and posts .320/25/100 numbers while taking a turn in center just once a week or so to give Lofton a blow. Alternate scenario: The very same day Williams is healthy enough to play defense, Jason Giambi admits his health problems could use some time at DH. Joe Torre provides him with about 135 games of time as Travis Lee saves Derek Jeter a half dozen errors.

    Worst Case Scenario: Ruben Sierra, Tony Clark and the rest of the "cast of dozens" all get irreperably old at the same time. Giambi, refusing to move from his stationary post at first base, forces Torre to use Travis Lee, who is by far the better fielder, as the DH. Somewhere, Nick Johnson smiles.

    Division Rank: Hard to say; the days of teams having a "starting designated hitter" like Don Baylor seem destined to retire with Edgar Martinez. Will any team in this division give any one player 400 at-bats from the DH slot? Maybe Boston and David Ortiz. Let's call it a five-way draw even though the Red Sox and Yankees, with the deepest set of options, seem likeliest to get the most production out of the DH slot overall.

    ROTATION
    Best Case Scenario: Jon Lieber gets healthy and returns to 20-win form. Orlando Hernandez gets healthy and serves as the league's best swing man. Kevin Brown stays healthy. (Sensing a pattern here?) Mike Mussina finally breaks through the 20-win barrier. Javier Vazquez adjusts well to New York and posts the first of 12 excellent seasons in pinstripes.

    Worst Case Scenario: Mussina can't handle the media pressure of being the "ace" while Vazquez can't handle the media pressure, period. Brown, Lieber and Hernandez are all out for significant chunks of time. Donovan Osborne and an un-retired John Burkett (lured by a $10M signing bonus) tie for the team lead in quality starts.

    Division Rank: Second of five. Even if Lieber was healthy, it'd be second of five. C'mon, even if Pettitte and Clemens had stayed around (assuming at least one of Vazquez or Brown had not subsequently been acquired), it'd be second of five.
    1. BOSTON: Martinez/Schilling/Lowe/Wakefield/Kim
    2. NEW YORK: Mussina/Vazquez/Brown/Contreras/Osborne
    3. TORONTO: Halladay/Batista/Lilly/Hentgen/Towers
    4. BALTIMORE: Ponson/Ainsworth/Daal/Lopez/Riley
    11. TAMPA BAY: Zambrano/Gonzalez/Hendrickson/Halama/Moss

    BULLPEN
    Best Case Scenario: Tom Gordon, Steve Karsay and Paul Quantrill get Joe Torre from the sixth inning to the ninth, where a healthy, effective Mariano Rivera awaits.

    Worst Case Scenario: Rivera turns into Jose Mesa. The Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man descends to obliterate Bronx hopes for a 27th title.

    Division Rank: Has anyone noticed the Red Sox have five former All-Star closers on the roster (Foulke, Kim, Lowe, Timlin, Williamson)? Of course, two are in the rotation. Interesting note: the order of the division rankings for the bullpens precisely matches the order of the division rankings for the rotations.
    1. BOSTON: Foulke*/Williamson/Timlin/Mendoza/Embree
    2. NEW YORK: Rivera*/Gordon/Quantrill/Karsay/Heredia
    3. TORONTO: Lopez*/Speier*/Ligtenberg/Adams/Miller
    4. BALTIMORE: Julio*/DeJean/Groom/Ryan/Bauer
    5. TAMPA BAY: Baez*/Colome/Carter/Abbott/Waechter
    * Indicates projected "closer."

    MANAGER
    Joe Torre, with an eye on Willie Randolph, Don Mattingly and Roy White.

    Best Case Scenario: Yankees win division, roll through playoffs and World Series 11-0, Torre re-signs for 2005.

    Worst Case Scenario: Yankees start 11-14; Steinbrenner fires Torre and pays huge dollars -- now referred to as "Burkett Money" in baseball circles -- to lure Bobby Valentine back to New York to manage the Yankees. Six hours after Valentine arrives at JFK from Narita via LAX (in his spacious First-Class seat on American Airlines), he calls a team meeting. Gary Sheffield and Kevin Brown stuff Valentine into a locker after 20 minutes and nobody sees him again until November.

    Division Rank: Well, let's see ... the Orioles hired former Yankee coach Lee Mazzilli to manage their team. The Devil Rays actually traded a player to acquire former Yankee manager Lou Piniella to manage their team. Terry Francona and Carlos Tosca seem like decent enough sorts. Joe Torre has guided the Yankees to six World Series and owns four rings in eight years. Let's go with Torre.

    Yankees Baseball: No Kids Allowed
    Former organizational crown jewels D'Angelo Jiminez and Brandon Claussen are in Cincinnati -- Claussen for the since-released Aaron Boone and Jiminez (originally sent to San Diego) for the legendary Jay Witasick. Ruben Rivera is trying to peddle Derek Jeter memorabilia somewhere. Scott Wiggins is in Toronto for Raul "Babe" Mondesi, while Jason Arnold and John-Ford Griffin may soon join Wiggins, on their way to Canada via Oakland in a deal that netted the Yankees perennial Cy Young winner Jeff Weaver.

    Okay, to be fair, Weaver was flipped for Kevin Brown this year, and Brown has three, maybe four Hall of Fame quality healthy months still ahead of him.

    Eric Milton, Cristian Guzman and Brian Buchanan were sent to Minnesota for a few years of future Cooperstown denizen Chuck Knoblauch, with Milton eventually moving on to Philadelphia and Buchanan to San Diego. Erick Almonte's star has fallen, leading to his outright assignment to the minors earlier this year, though he was recently restored to the roster. Marcus Thames was shipped off to Texas for Ruben Sierra: The Sequel.

    Drew Henson is in the National Football League.

    Nick Johnson, Juan Rivera and Alfonso Soriano, who along with Claussen were designated as the team's four "untouchables" a while back, are all gone -- though again, to be fair, a return of Alex Rodriguez and Javier Vazquez has the potential to trump all of the above.

    If that all sounds -- uh, kindly put, less than overwhelmingly successful -- consider this: the best two first round draft picks the Yankees have made in the last decade, Griffin and Milton, have one thing in common. They're not Yankees any more.

    Has any team done a poorer job of drafting in the first round in ... well, in the history of the amateur draft? The last first round pick to make an impact for the Yankees is Derek Jeter -- drafted in 1992, when LeBron James was in first grade. Before that, go back to Thurman Munson in 1968 for a pinstriped impact. It seems if a player is selected in the first round by the Yankees, he's destined either for captaincy or mediocrity.

    Sure, some of the other first-round picks have made impacts elsewhere -- Charlie Spikes, Scott McGregor, Pat Tabler, Rex Hudler, even Carl Everett. But does anyone remember Brien Taylor? Matt Drews? How about Shea Morenz, who at least solidified the Yankees at quarterback until Henson came along.

    Who's left? Well, Dionar Navarro, mentioned briefly above, is ranked by Baseball America as the Yankees' top prospect -- but how much of an endorsement is it to write, "He's in line to take the job in 2007, when Posada is due either a $12 million salary or $4 million buyout" (emphasis added)?

    Other names bandied about by Yankee fans as future editions of Jeter or (Mariano) Rivera -- but are more likely to be Jiminez or (Ruben) Rivera -- include:

    Third basemen Eric Duncan and Bronson Sardinha, whose paths to the Bronx hot corner might be a little blocked for the next decade.

    Second baseman Robinson Cano, who may have the clearest path to the majors of any prospect in Yankee history.

    Shortstop Ferdin Tejada, who may someday yet form the center of a Jeter-Tejada-Rodriguez Dream Infield. However, given the renewed Yankee commitment to trading prospects rather than developing them, the likelihood of a Cano-Tejada-Duncan Dream Infield is just this side of nil.

    As for pitchers, as recently as late 2002, USA Today ranked the top four Yankee pitching prospects, in order, as Arnold (gone), Clausen (gone), Alex Graman (9-10, 4.48, 110/63 K/BB for Columbus at age 25 last year) and Adrian "El Duquecito" Hernandez (28 career innings for New York). Currently, the top 14 Yankee pitching prospects, according to aggregated scouting reports, all pitched at Staten Island (NY-Penn) or below.

    Story to watch for around July 25:
    TRANSACTIONS
    NEW YORK YANKEES: Trade minor leaguers Dionar Navarro, Ferdin Tejada and Eric Duncan, plus huge wads of cash, to ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS for 2B Roberto Alomar.

    So ... What's Gonna Happen?
    After getting to 101 wins by playing five games better than their Pythagorean record would indicate in 2003, the Yankees play precisely to their Pythagoriean record in 2004 and win ... 101 games.

    Unfortunately for King George's blood pressure, this leaves his team squarely one game behind the Red Sox in the A.L. East, but easy winners of the A.L. Wild Card.

    In the Divisional Series, the ghosts of 1977 raise their pinstriped specter as Hideki Matsui hits a series-winning "walk-off" home run off Jeremy Affeldt to send the Royals home for the winter. Somewhere, Freddie Patek sits crying again, awash with memories of playoffs past.

    The Yankees and Red Sox square off in one of the greatest A.L. Championship Series ever played, alternating wins until Schilling and Vazquez match up in Game 7 at Fenway. The key off-season acquisitions trade zeroes until the eighth, when Erick Almonte hits a dying quail single just out of the reach of Nomar Garciaparra to reach first.

    Pinch runner Kenny Lofton flashes back to a bygone era of his career, steals second and third and scores on a Jeter sacrifice fly, cementing the captain's reputation as a "clutch hitter." Mariano Rivera re-asserts the Bambino's Curse with six quick outs to seal the win.

    Exhausted but energized, the Yankees head to Wrigley Field to start what will be the highest-rated World Series in television history. The rotation is set: Wood, Prior, Maddux and Clement will face Mussina, Brown, Contreras and Vazquez.

    Play Ball!
  • New York Yankees 2004 Preview | 31 comments | Create New Account
    The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
    Dave Till - Friday, March 19 2004 @ 10:12 AM EST (#32453) #
    Nice preview.

    The most depressing thing about the Yankees, from my perspective as a Jays' fan, is that the Yanks can always go out and "buy" a player to fill any holes that arise during the season. All they need to do is take on the contract, send a token warm body or two the other way, and voila! (What's the chance of Vidro winding up in pinstripes by August?)

    However, this state of affairs really isn't the Yankees' fault. You can't blame Steinbrenner or Cashman for trying to build the best team they can. The problem is with teams that are too busy stuffing revenue sharing cash into their trouser pockets to bother trying to build a winning team. In a better universe, other teams sometimes win the bidding wars for free agents, and tell the Yankees to go to heck when asked about acquiring their best players in trade.
    _Spicol - Friday, March 19 2004 @ 10:25 AM EST (#32454) #
    The last first round pick to make an impact for the Yankees is Derek Jeter -- drafted in 1992, when LeBron James was in first grade. Before that, go back to Thurman Munson in 1968 for a pinstriped impact.

    WOW! *cartoon eyes bug out, accompanied by this sound effect - ZEEEYOW ODDY ODDY ODDY*

    I had no idea it was this bad. I suppose I shouldn't use the word 'bad', as not all of the picks went for bust. Eric Milton (drafted first in '96) has had mild success, albeit with another team. Are there other first rounders who went on to have success with other teams? My own resources are limited to 90s draft picks.

    Great job, Mick. If American's seats are as comfortable as this preview was well written, they must be fluffy, pillowy clouds.

    That said, doesn't seeing clouds inside the plane freak people out?
    Joe - Friday, March 19 2004 @ 10:38 AM EST (#32455) #
    http://me.woot.net
    Much to my employer's dismay, this is one of the best previews I've read yet. I wasn't able to stop. Good show!
    Mike D - Friday, March 19 2004 @ 10:43 AM EST (#32456) #
    Spectacular job, Mick. Seriously. What a fantastic read!
    _5hoursahead - Friday, March 19 2004 @ 12:02 PM EST (#32457) #
    First time posting - an avid reader since late last year.

    Will any team in this division give any one player 400 at-bats from the DH slot?

    Let's hope the Blue Jays do...

    Best preview so far with no disrespect to the others. My employer this side of the pond had to wait for me to finish it too!
    _Jonny German - Friday, March 19 2004 @ 12:22 PM EST (#32458) #
    I'll join the chorus - this is a great preview.

    However, this state of affairs really isn't the Yankees' fault. ... In a better universe, other teams sometimes win the bidding wars for free agents, and tell the Yankees to go to heck when asked about acquiring their best players in trade.

    My theory on the problem that is the Yankees in the current universe is that it's due to other teams signing players to ludicrous contracts. The system would stop working as it does for the Yankees if other teams did a smarter job of planning ahead and allocating their resources. For example, you won't see any star-level Blue Jays going to New York as long as J.P. is running the show... the only truly big contract on the team for the next 4 years has Roy Halladay's name on it, and he won't be going anywhere unless his performance dips to a point where he's not worth top dollar. Think Raul Mondesi; that type of player will always be available to the Yankees and can conceivably provide some useful production, but he was only available because his contract was so severely out of line with his productivity. The Yankees can acquire the likes of him by the dozen, but it won't make them World Series favourites.

    Not so Alex Rodriguez, not so Kevin Brown (health concerns duly noted) - These are top players who deserve to be paid as much as anybody, but had to be dealt due to poor planning on the part of their former teams. (See also Curt Schilling).

    I'd like to hope this is a dying trend, that fiscal sanity is making headway with more and more clubs, that the ever more barren cupboard of Yankee trading chips will catch up with them (Brown & Rodriguez didn't come for free). But I don't think we're there yet - Mick's "Jeter-Tejada-Rodriguez Dream Infield" could indeed happen in a couple years, but featuring Miguel rather than Ferdin.
    _Tom - Friday, March 19 2004 @ 12:52 PM EST (#32459) #
    http://mothershipconnection.blogspot.com/
    "Defensively, Jeter is the fourth-best shorstop ... on the Yankees. Hello, Messers. Rodriguez, Almonte and Wilson."

    Does this make Derek Jeter the Ringo Starr of the Beatles? (Allusion to Ringo being labeled as not even being the best drummer in the band...but you all knew that.)

    Great review, made me realize how great being a Red Sox fan truly is, although I'm not THAT high on Varitek.
    _Jordan - Friday, March 19 2004 @ 12:55 PM EST (#32460) #
    Fabulous job, Mick!
    _Mick - Friday, March 19 2004 @ 03:48 PM EST (#32461) #
    okay, let's draw the line at Luis Matos. We'll take Lofton over Matos.

    I formally challenge the idiot who wrote the above, who is me, to declaim the claim.

    LOFTON at age 36 in 2003:
    140 G, 547 AB, .297/12/46, 30/39 SB/A
    .801 OPS, 109 OPS+
    CF Range Factor: 2.48

    MATOS at age 24 in 2003:
    109 G, 439 AB, .303/13/45, 15/22 SB/A
    .811 OPS, 117 OPS+
    CF Range Factor: 2.97

    We'll take Matos over Lofton. The rest was a simple typographical error.
    _Jeff Hauser - Friday, March 19 2004 @ 04:50 PM EST (#32462) #
    http://www.hauserreport.com
    Great piece, one nit to pick -- Randolph overrated? By most sophisticated sabermetric measures... he ought to be receiving serious HOF consideration (as well as a managerial job!). Excellent defense, high OBP, and good baserunner in an era in which his solid batting average sufficed for a fine SLG relative to position.
    _Mick - Friday, March 19 2004 @ 05:36 PM EST (#32463) #
    I thought those very things as I wrote that, Jeff, but honestly I come down on the side of Randolph being overrated ... at least in New York and/or by New York fans.

    I absolutely agree he deserves a managerial job. But, as much as I love Willie (acquired by the Yanks from Pittsburgh before the '76 season along with Dock Ellis and Ken Brett for Doc Medich in a terrifically lopsided deal), I don't see him as a Hall-of-Famer. Yet most Yankee fans will stomp and holler that of course he, along with Phil Rizzuto, deserves Hall space.

    I think Randolph is like Torre. Not quite Hall-worthy as a player, but after he's done managing ... watch out.
    _not trying to b - Friday, March 19 2004 @ 06:57 PM EST (#32464) #
    Great article, hadn't seen the 77 similarities.

    Now, is the phrase "to give Lofton a blow" a typo or a phrase I'm not familiar with?
    _jason - Friday, March 19 2004 @ 09:01 PM EST (#32465) #
    Does history repeat itself? It wasn't long after 77 that things started to unravel for the Yanks, and for the same reason it could happen here. 1) Huge monetary commitments to playes in the decline phase of their carreers. 2) A complete abscence of good young players to replace the aging stars or to use as capital in trades. The Yankies became a bad team in the ensuing years as GS kept throwing money at problems with any sort of a plan. It wasn't until George was suspended that Cashman et al were able to bring some sanity to the nuthouse and start drafting and developing players from within. Jeter, Rivera, Williams, the backbone of this dynasty was player developement. But that has changed drastically. Think about it, how much is Derek Jeter owed and what will be his value at the end of his contract? It was also back in the late 70s that we heard the same complaints we hear now. The Yanks play on a different playing field; we can't compete in this financial enviroment, etc. etc.

    On a lighter note, I fondly remember a Saturday Night Live sketch from the period. The Yanks were playing the Dodgers for the W.S. and Bill Murray was playing a loutish Yankie fan and regaling his neighbour, a member of the studio audience, with tales of Yankie prowess. One of the lines which as always stuck in my head is "yeah the dodgers built their team from the ground up, but hey we bought our team."

    jason
    _John Northey - Friday, March 19 2004 @ 10:57 PM EST (#32466) #
    Best review on the Yanks I've read too.

    As for the worst drafting record for the first round, does anyone remember a funny little team in Canada during the 80's? Stats are lifetime no matter who they played for. BA/OBP/Slg for hitters.

    Jays 1st round draft picks (June draft)
    1977 - Tom Goffena - Didn't make it
    1978 - Lloyd Moseby - 5815 AB, 257/332/414 102 OPS+, 1 All Star game
    1979 - Jay Schroeder - Didn't make it
    1980 - Garry Harris - Didn't make it
    1981 - Matt Williams (RHP) - 34 IP, 5.29 ERA
    1982 - Augie Schmidt - Didn't make it
    1983 - Matt Stark - 28 AB, 179/207/214
    1984 - Dane Johnson - 63 G, 67 IP, 4.70 ERA (99 ERA+)
    1985 - Greg David - Didn't make it
    1986 - Earl Sanders - Didn't make it
    1987 - Alex Sanchez - 4 G, 11 2/3 IP, 10.03 ERA
    1988 - Ed Sprague - 4095 AB, 247/318/419 89 OPS+, 1 AS game (in Pitt)
    1989 - Eddie Zosky - 50 AB, 160/173/260

    Total of 2 players who got more than a cup of coffee over 13 seasons. A 9 year period where no one did more than 67 IP or 28 AB's. Ugh. Gillick did a great job in everything else, but he sucked at drafting until the 90's.

    ------------------
    Now it gets good, damn good
    1990 - Steve Karsay - 567 IP, 3.88 ERA, traded for Rickey Henderson
    1991 - Shawn Green - 4935 AB, 284/357/513 125 OPS+, AS in TO and LA
    1992 - Shannon Stewart - 3720 AB, 303/368/448 110 OPS+, no AS games
    1993 - Chris Carpenter - 871 IP, 4.83 ERA, 99 ERA+
    1994 - Kevin Witt - 338 AB, 249/287/393
    1995 - Roy Halladay - 842 IP, 3.84 ERA, 123 ERA+, 2 AS Games
    1996 - Billy Koch - 358 IP, 3.82 ERA, 125 ERA+, '02 AL Rolaids win
    1997 - Vernon Wells - 1472 AB, 296/332/491 112 OPS+, 1 AS Game
    1998 - Felipe Lopez - 656 AB, 232/299/369 traded for Jason Arnold
    1999 - Alexis Rios - not yet, but soon
    2000 - Miguel Negron - 303/330/422 in the OF for Mid-A Charleston
    2001 - Gabe Gross - not yet, but soon
    2002 - Russ Adams - not yet, maybe in a year
    2003 - Aaron Hill - not yet, maybe in 2 years

    So, in the 90's just one player hasn't made the majors but he looks like an impact player once he gets here. Witt was a flop, but still had more AB's than all but two draft picks (Sprague & Moseby) pre-1990 combined(!) So I think it is very safe to say that the Jays pre 1990 (especially in the 80's) did worse than the Yankees did in the 1990's, unless you think Sprague is a better player than Jeter 8)

    Wonder how the 00's will go for draft picks? One still hot, one not, two who are too early to tell.
    _Matthew E - Friday, March 19 2004 @ 11:50 PM EST (#32467) #
    It was a great article, but honestly, I don't think you can say that the '04 Yankees have the same future ahead of them that the '77 Yankees did. The '77 Yankees weren't particularly old and only had one year of success behind them. Not that that was the point of the article, but I would say that the answer to jason's question is 'no'.
    _Lylem - Saturday, March 20 2004 @ 04:31 AM EST (#32468) #
    http://www.lyleblog.com
    two words "Damn Yankees"

    There pitching is real fragile. But they are the Yankees, they can trade/buy what they need.
    _John Northey - Saturday, March 20 2004 @ 10:00 AM EST (#32469) #
    The Yanks can buy what they need, which sucks for those of us who aren't Yankee fans. Although I doubt anyone here complained in the early 90's when the Jays bought what they needed whenever they needed it. Ah, for the days of letting Dave Winfield go due to the fact an upgrade was available in Paul Molitor.

    The key in NY is injuries. Even Steinbrenner can't trade for something if all he has is cash, and from the looks of their minor leagues it is all they have. I doubt Bud would allow the Yankees to send $10 million to Montreal for Vidro, or to Arizona for Alomar. Come the offseason he'll blow a fortune again, but until then I think the Yankees are what they are with few additions available. Are there any overpriced but still good second basemen out there? What about $10 million+ pitchers on teams who are cutting payroll?
    _Cristian - Saturday, March 20 2004 @ 02:58 PM EST (#32470) #
    Even Steinbrenner can't trade for something if all he has is cash

    They may not be able to pay a team $10M for a player but they can easily trade for a $10M player and send back table scraps (i.e. Scott Wiggins). The effect is really the same. I'm sure their farm system can scrounge up a few more table scraps.

    Expensive pitchers they can pick up (off the top of my head)
    Brad Radke
    Freddy Garcia
    C.H. Park
    Randy Johnson
    Tom Glavine
    Al Leiter
    Eric Milton
    Kevin Millwood
    Kris Benson
    Mike Hampton

    Of course, many of these pitchers are on contending teams and unavailable now; but it is likely that some will be on teams that will want to shed payroll at the deadline. Cheap pitchers are also available to the Yankees if they agree to a package that sees the cheap pitcher packaged with another organization's millstone (Charles Johnson, Jason Kendall, Jeff Cirillo, etc.). There isn't one pitcher in the league that is unavailable to them as long as they can throw cash around.

    As for second basemen, I think the most likely scenario sees Aaron Boone make a quicker recovery than expected and sign on for the stretch drive. Or would you put it past the Yankees to get Soriano back and give Tom Hicks more of that 'financial flexibility' that he values so much.

    I'm sorry but I can't agree with anyone who claims that the Yankees lack depth. Their depth may not be in the Yankee organization at the moment but that doesn't mean their depth is nonexistent.
    _Mick - Saturday, March 20 2004 @ 07:59 PM EST (#32471) #
    I appreciate all the comments.

    First, not-troll, to "give someone a blow" is a colloquialism meaning the same thing as to give someone a break or a rest. It's most commonly used in sports terms.

    Second, Jason:
    It wasn't long after 77 that things started to unravel for the Yanks

    I know a lot of people think that, but in truth the Yankees only had one season in the next 11 in which they weren't serious contenders. Now, in Yankee circles, a season as a "serious contender" not ending in a World Series title (see Gonzalez, Luis; and Beckett, Josh) is considered a disappointment.

    The real slide started in 1989, when they fell to 74-87 in the start of one of the worst periods in Yankee history, until the '95 season and Mattingly's sole playoff appearance against Seattle.

    Jays fans should remember and appreciate how insanely competitive the AL East was throughout pretty much the entire decade of the 1980s, but consider this track record for the Yankees after '77:

    1978: 99-64, World Series Champs
    1979: 89-71, 4th in AL East (better than West champ Angels)
    1980: 103-59, Lost ALCS to Royals
    1981: 59-48, Lost World Series to Dodgers
    1982: 79-83, 5th in AL East
    1983: 91-71, 3rd in AL East (4th best record baseball)
    1984: 87-75, 3rd in AL East (3rd best record in AL)
    1985: 97-65, 2nd in AL East to Jays (3rd best record in AL)
    1986: 90-72, 2nd in AL East
    1987: 89-73, 4th in AL East
    1988: 85-76, 4th in AL East

    If we pro-rate the strike-shortened '81 season to 162 games, the Yankees averaged 90 wins over that 11-year span, including three playoff appearances and one title. In the current structure, they would have made the playoffs three or four additional times depending on tie-breakers.

    Frankly, there aren't many teams who can point to an 11-year run like that at any point in franchise history, and this was one of the low points in Yankee history.

    All that said, I do think -- and have written on Da Box previously -- that the Yankees might be on the precipice of a quicker fall; it happened in the '60's, it happened in the early '90's. It may happen again.
    Mike Green - Saturday, March 20 2004 @ 10:21 PM EST (#32472) #
    I'll add to the chorus. Fine, fine piece.

    My only quibble was going to be Lofton over Matos, but I see that you've come around on that one too.
    _Simon - Sunday, March 21 2004 @ 03:04 AM EST (#32473) #
    "As for the worst drafting record for the first round, does anyone remember a funny little team in Canada during the 80's? Stats are lifetime no matter who they played for. BA/OBP/Slg for hitters."

    I was about to bring this up, but I see you've beat me to it. Between 1979 and 1989, the Blue Jays' best first round pick was Ed Sprague. Ed Sprague!!! The sad thing is that no one is even close to Sprague. Looking at your numbers, their next best draft pick in terms of actual major league service was Dane Johnson. I had no idea who the hell Dane Johnson was, the but the Williams/Johnson/Stark/Sanchez/Zosky combination makes Ed Sprague look like Mike Schmidt in comparison. That is one sad, sad decade of drafting.
    _Matt - Monday, March 22 2004 @ 03:14 AM EST (#32474) #
    I keep saying this... When o' when, will there ever be a hard cap? Something that puts an end to the madness of one team being able to send out a bullpen that makes more money than another teams entire roster? To make it so that there are 30 true major league teams and no one team can look to the rest of baseball as their farm system instead of their actual AAA/AA/A affiliates? It'll never happen, I know... Maybe I'm a naive soul who merely spouts off pipe dreams...

    Still a wonderful game, but when I think about these disgusting payroll disparities it just reminds me that it is a wonderful yet messed up game in a wonderful yet messed up world...

    The three teams of former, new and returning yanks was a nice touch to the article btw... Lovely read.
    _Matthew E - Monday, March 22 2004 @ 10:34 AM EST (#32475) #
    [b]Matt[/b]: There are a lot of smart people who think, and I agree with them, that a hard salary cap:

    - would do little if anything to solve whatever competitive balance problem baseball has, and
    - is something baseball owners want not for the sake of competition but to increase the amount of money they can put in their pockets

    My question is, at what amount should salaries be capped?

    $150 million? That'd only affect the Yankees, and then not very much.
    $100 million? Still not many teams up here. If the Red Sox came down to $100 mil, would it help the Devil Rays compete with them? Not so you'd notice, it wouldn't.
    $75 million? The Texas Rangers have enough problems without having to get rid of players to get down to a $75 mil payroll.
    $50 million? Once you get down here, you start running into the problem, I think, of there not being enough money in permissible payrolls to cover the contracts of all the ballplayers. Although I suppose you could grandfather that problem away.

    (The salary floor has a similar objection. What are cheap teams spending on their bad rosters these days - $30 million? So you'd set the floor above that, right? Except Oakland fielded a really good team not long ago for about $30 million. Why should they be forced to pay more when they can make the playoffs for less?)

    I'm not a football fan, but I have heard that one effect of the hard cap in the NFL is that good teams can't stay together - teams are forced to get rid of their good players to stay under the cap. I don't think this is something we want in baseball.
    _Tom - Monday, March 22 2004 @ 12:08 PM EST (#32476) #
    http://www.elguaposghost.blogspot.com
    Well done.

    My Sox have not done so well with #1s too - Nomar and Nixon - over 10? years.
    Coach - Monday, March 22 2004 @ 01:51 PM EST (#32477) #
    Belated kudos on a superb preview, Mick. Great take on the comings and goings, and I thoroughly enjoyed the comparison of two teams 27 years apart. Except for the harbinger.

    The best case scenarios do make them seem invincible, but just enough of your worst case scenarios seem plausible that I think we should play out the season. Of course, by the time the Jays and Yankees meet in July, George III will have bought a few more superstars.
    _Matt - Monday, March 22 2004 @ 02:31 PM EST (#32478) #
    but matthew e,

    I realize that it'd never happen as players would have to take large paycuts... I wouldn't do it if I were a player, but that's a concern more of a player who's looking out for #1... So I'm not arguing that such a change is easily implementable, otherwise it might've been implemented... What I am arguing is that the economics of the game are made on an unfair basis...

    How is one guy going out and buying a championship good for the game? I mean its eluded him for a whole 4 seasons now, but with all that talent in one place its only a matter of time.

    Of course there are outliers like your oakland a's that can beat the unfair structure and manage to field competitive, fiscally responsible teams... And sure, there are your mets or rangers who've spent in quantity but have fielded terrible squads... But thats aside from the point. What I am refering to is an inherently unfair system.

    It was on this board that someone brought up the point that if I started a market based fantasy league and gave myself 190 mil while only giving you 40 mil, than you probably wouldn't really want to play. Why should you want to play if the deck is stacked that badly from the beginning?

    Of course, spending wisely takes precedent over spending in quantity... but those who have the luxury of spending in quantity have a distinct and YES unfair advantage over everyone else. All the arguments of how this is supposedly good for the game just do not get through to me. How am I supposed to have any admiration or respect for an organization that can get away with outright terrible personnel maneuvers and still come out of the season unscathed and holding that championship banner high above their heads?

    The NFL has somewhat of a dynasty going right now, and obviously the new englanders are quite proud of what Bill Belichick has done. Now Lawyer Milloy? No problem... He goes into the season with a sound system in mind, and he gets reasonably priced veterans to execute that system. He has not had a losing season in the 3 years with the pats and obviously has hoisted the 2 lombardi trophies over his head AND still has 2 #1 picks this year along with 2 #2's and 2 #4's.... More importantly, he does so without buying out all of the star players in his league.

    That is what a dynasty should be... It should be built on solid strategy, sound execution and hard work and NOT on some rich bastard's checkbook...

    Obviously, as stated from the beginning... any such system actually HAPPENING is highly highly unlikely... we all know that... but thats not my point. My point is that any competitive professional sport economic regime which allows for that kind of disperity in payroll is built on a fundamentally flawed basis. The key word is 'competitive'... How can you possibly argue that this regime encourages healthy competition? Right now, I'm just scratching my noggin....
    _Matthew E - Monday, March 22 2004 @ 03:41 PM EST (#32479) #
    I'm not trying to say that baseball's economics are perfect; just that a salary cap is not a good solution.

    Obviously having a lot of money is an advantage for a baseball team. I don't think it's an overwhelming advantage.

    I also haven't been convinced that there's a serious competitive balance problem in MLB.

    I could be persuaded to agree with plans to divide baseball's local TV money more evenly. I could be persuaded to agree with a plan to divvy up revenues according to the market size of the various ballclubs. I don't think I could be persuaded to agree with a salary cap.
    Gitz - Tuesday, March 23 2004 @ 05:12 PM EST (#32480) #
    As always, I'm late to comment on these kinds of things, but I really enjoyed reading this, Mick. Objectively, this is easily the best overall review out of the group, and there are some fine pieces in the collection.

    My suspicion is that American Airlines is a soul-less, vapid place to work, like any huge corporation, but that one Mick Doherty makes it far more tolerable by his presence.
    _Mick - Tuesday, March 23 2004 @ 07:13 PM EST (#32481) #
    Thanks, JG, though I have plenty of co-workers who'd disagree with you and might argue that "soul-less and vapid" applies to me, not to AA.

    AAnyway, the reason for this note is ... this note:

    The Rangers have officially announced that they have acquired shortstop prospect Joaquin Arias from the Yankees to complete the trade of Alex Rodriguez for Alfonso Soriano. [From the Newberg Report]

    So that's one less prospect in Yankee-land. I expected it to be Sardinha, and am surprised (and frankly relieved) that it wasn't, since reports were his name was on the list NYY provided to TEX for selection.

    Arias is behind Tejada in the farm system food chain, and there are a couple of All-Star shortstops already in the Bronx. So this isn't bad, from a Yankee perspective.
    Mike Green - Tuesday, March 23 2004 @ 08:58 PM EST (#32482) #
    Mick, oh, there is one other area of disagreement. If the Yankees do make it to the World Series (I don't think they will), I'm quite sure that Vazquez will pitch before the 4th game. Actually, my money is on him being the Yankees best starter this year.
    _Mick - Wednesday, March 24 2004 @ 09:55 AM EST (#32483) #
    I agree, Mike. Note that in the preview I had him pitching against Schilling in Game 7 of the ALCS. So he'd not come back until Game 4 of the World Series.
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