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Over the past three years, the pre-season New York Yankees previews have all forecast, incorrectly in each case as it turned out, a Bronx Bomber World Series trip.

Let's step back a little and ask a regular-season-level question of this ever-changing pinstriped ballclub. How do they stack up against the rest of the A.L. East? Getting into the playoffs is really the whole point of the regular season, and as the Red Sox, and more recently the seemingly overmatched Cardinals, have shown, once there, anything can happen.

So, do the Yankees "get there" in 2007 to see what happens?



Now, let's be clear ... we're going to do this using a completely unscientific and statistically unsupportable "methodology." Quite simply, I will list the projected starters for each AL East team at each roster position, then rank them according to my own perception of who I would most want on the team if I was organizing the roster. This is, of course, an open invitation for disagreement by the rest of you Bauxites out there, so let me start by providing a couple of caveats ...

First, the list of who will be doing what for each club is taken off the latest "Depth Chart" for each team provided by MLB.com. These charts are updated almost daily, so it is possible there have been changes by the time you read this. Barring a major injury or trade, I doubt very much any such moves would affect my rankings, but anyway, that's out there.

Second, speaking of injuries, minor setbacks are not considered here when providing rankings for the full season. Yes, yes, Chien-Ming Wang will start the season on the disabled list, and yes, he is still listed here as the Yankees #1 starter. Because, well, that's what he is.

Anyway, on to the position-by-position (or in the case of bullpens and benches and rotations, unit-by-unit) breakdowns and rankings ... Since this is the Yankees preview, the NYY player(s) are listed in ALL CAPS.

CATCHER
  1. BOS: Jason Varitek
  2. NYY: JORGE POSADA
  3. TOR: Gregg Zaun
  4. BAL: Ramon Hernandez
  5. TB: Dioner Navarro
From Behind the Plate ... I have finally come around and acknowledge that Varitek means more to the Red Sox than Posada does to the Yankees, but they might more appropriately be listed as 1 and 1A. Navarro has to prove something after being traded forty-six times in a few months, while Zaun and Hernandez are both capable backstops -- either could end up on the AL All-Star team, but frankly, either could also drop to the end of his team's bench by the All-Star break.

First Base
  1. TOR: Lyle Overbay
  2. BOS: Kevin Youkilis
  3. TB: Ty Wigginton
  4. BAL: Kevin Millar
  5. NYY: DOUG MIENTKIEWICZ
If at First ... Okay, let's finish that phrase for NYY -- "If at first you don't succeed ..." Seriously, all-alphabet Doug Mientkiewicz in the shoes of Gehrig, Skowron, Chambliss and Mattingly? And yes, that's right, the Blue Jays currently have the best first baseman in the AL East. (Carlos Who?) Hey, that'd be true even if Overbay got hurt, presuming Frank Thomas slid into the position. Maybe Youkilis or Wigginton -- more likely the former than the latter -- will have a big breakout season. Uh, maybe not ...

Second Base
  1. NYY: ROBINSON CANO
  2. BAL: Brian Roberts
  3. TB: Jorge Cantu
  4. TOR: Aaron Hill
  5. BOS: Dustin Pedroia
On Second Thought ... Cano is filling the Willie Randolph "valuable Yankee who gets overlooked because of all the big names around him" role ably and well. Roberts and Cantu are fine, but neither one is likely to get any MVP votes, someting that could happen for Cano. Hill and Pedroia ... who knows?

Shorstop
  1. NYY: DEREK JETER
  2. BAL: Miguel Tejada
  3. BOS: Julio Lugo
  4. TB: Ben Zobrist
  5. TOR: Royce Clayton
Stopping Short ... That's two guys who just might end up in the Hall of Fame at the top of this list -- and yes, there are plenty of good reasons to prefer Tejada, but give me Jeter. Young Ben Zobrist must be glancing northward and thanking the Jays for temping the fading Clayton into the six-hole.

Third Base
  1. NYY: ALEX RODRIGUEZ
  2. TOR: Troy Glaus
  3. BAL: Melvin Mora
  4. TB: Akinori Iwamura
  5. BOS: Mike Lowell
I Am Third ... Iwamura may be the biggest question mark in the entire division ... if he can replicate some of his Japanese seasons, he quickly becomes the best Devil Ray, like, ever, and moves higher up this list. He won't catch A-Rod (like, ever) as we remind everyone that this is a ranking based on talent, not production-per-dollar. Hey, here's a question worth asking -- Troy Glaus' "most similar" batter (by age) each of the last three seasons has been Mike Schmidt, and he could conceiveably hit his 300th home run in '07, just after turning 30. Is Glaus an eventual Hall of Famer?

Left Field
  1. BOS: Manny Ramirez
  2. NYY: HIDEKI MATSUI
  3. TB: Carl Crawford
  4. TOR: Reed Johnson
  5. BAL: Jay Payton
Feeling Left Out?... If you count defense as equivalent to ... ah, never mind. Hideki Matsui is a great player, but Manny Ramirez is a pantheon guy, the only position player in this preview (other than A-Rod) who is already a slam-dunk Hall of Famer. Maybe someday Carl Crawford will fulfill all those lofty projections and expectations, and maybe someday Reed Johnson will come crashing back to reality ... Jay Payton will be out of Baltimore before Canada Day -- mark it down.

Center Field
  • TOR: Vernon Wells
  • NYY: JOHNNY DAMON
  • TB: Rocco Baldelli
  • BAL: Corey Patterson
  • BOS: Coco Crisp
Front and Center ... My goodness, this is a good position for the AL East. In 2006, Patterson hit .276 with 16 homers and 45 steals; Crisp is a guy, who based on recent past performance, might well hit near .300 with 15 homers and a dozen steals himself. But they are pretty clearly fourth and fifth in the division, though you can argue which order they should be ranked in those slots. Wells is demonstrably best of show here; for the Yankees, Damon will never be Joe. D. or The Mick or even Bobby Murcer, but the Yanks would happily take a re-set of his '06 .285 with 24 homers and 25 steals, thank you very much. P.S. Vernon, Johnny, Rocco, Corey and Coco? Is this a boy band?

Right Field
  1. NYY: BOBBY ABREU
  2. TOR: Alex Rios
  3. BOS: J.D. Drew
  4. TB: Delmon Young
  5. BAL: Nick Markakis
That's All Right ... Markakis might make these rankings look silly someday, but for now, Abreu, while overpaid, is the class of the division while Rios needs to show he can "do it again" in 2007. Drew can't stay healthy, while Young -- well, for all of Tampa's over-hyped prospects of recent years, maybe he's the one that can actually live up to something? But he hasn't ... yet.

Designated Hitter
  1. BOS: David Ortiz
  2. TOR: Frank Thomas
  3. NYY: JASON GIAMBI
  4. BAL: Jay Gibbons
  5. TB: Jonny Gomes
Designated Drivers ... Giambi might prove to be over-ranked on this list eventually, while Thomas is at least possibly a retirement waiting to happen. Meanwhile, Ortiz, who is only 31 this year, may be the best bet of any active major leaguer to reach the once-hallowed ground of 62 homers -- he has 142 over the last three years. So it's Papi, then Hurt, then the division's three DH G-Men.

Rotation
  1. BOS: Schilling, Beckett, Matsuzaka, Wakefield, Lester
  2. TOR: Halladay, Burnett, Chacin, Ohka, Thomson
  3. NYY: WANG, MUSSINA, PETTITE, PAVANO, IGAWA
  4. BAL: Bedard, Cabrera, Wright, Loewen, Trachsel
  5. TB: Kazmir, Seo, Shields, Fossum, Howell
For Starters ... This may be the toughest position to rank in the entire division. Boston will grapple with age, injuries and foreign assimilation, but if everything goes as they hope, that's the best rotation in the division. Toronto has the best overall #1 guy and a collection of questions. The Yankees are sort of a combination of the Red Sox and Jays, with veterans and injury concerns on the one hand, a foreign import on the other, and a whole third hand of performance questions to boot. One thing about the Yankees -- no Rocket, no Big Unit, their rotation is, for the first time in a very long time, lacking a pantheon guy in the "ace" role. The Orioles may have the most prospective talent in the division stacking their rotation, but there's a lot of proving to be done. Tampa -- well, it's no "Spahn and Sain and pray for rain," but how about "Kazmir and Seo, then duck and say 'ow'"?

Closer
  1. NYY: MARIANO RIVERA
  2. TOR: B.J. Ryan
  3. BOS: Jon Papelbon
  4. BAL: Chris Ray
  5. TB: Dan Miceli?
Here He Comes to Save the Day ... B.J. Ryan is great, but that's the greatest closer in the history of the game in New York City, so he keeps the top spot until he does something to lose it. Papelbon back to the Red Sox closer's role, given the potential strength of the Boston rotation (see above), makes sense. Ray gets the fourth spot because Tampa still really has very little idea who will trot out there for the two or three save opportunities they face each month.

Bullpen
  1. BAL: Penn, Baez, Bradford, Williamson, Walker
  2. NYY: FARNSWORTH, MYERS, PROCTOR, HENN, BRITTON
  3. BOS: Hansen, Timlin, Donnelly, Romero, Tavarez, Pineiro
  4. TOR: Accardo, Tallet, League, Frasor, Downs, Janssen
  5. TB: Dohmann, McClung, Camp, Orvella, Jackson
The Pen is Mightier ... First, it looks like Boston and Toronto will each go with a seven-man bullpen, the closer plus six more, which is why those two teams each have one more man listed above -- not that Scott Downs or Julian Tavarez will make THAT much of a difference ... Projecting bullpen effectiveness is always one of the toughest things to do in baseball pre-season forecasts, but if healthy, that Baltimore pen (including Baltimore's Penn) looks loaded. The rest -- hey, it's healthy guesswork, really.

Bench
  1. BAL: Bako, Huff, Gomez, Fahey, Stern
  2. BOS: Mirabelli, Pena, Cora, Hinske
  3. TB: Paul, Upton, Dukes, Norton, Harris
  4. NYY: NIEVES, PHILLIPS, CAIRO, CABRERA, PHELPS
  5. TOR: Phillips, Smith, McDonald, Stairs
What Can You Bench, Dude? ... As mentioned above, the Sox and Jays may go with a seven-man bullpen, which means a four-man bench. Toronto's bench is more versatile than Boston's, but Boston's has more talent. The most talented single bench player in the division is Tampa's B.J. Upton (though Baltimore's Aubrey Huff is a close second), while, yes, Jay fans, you are likely to see ex-TO ballplayers like Josh Phelps, Chris Gomez and Eric Hinske trotting off the bench for your divisional rivals. As with the bullpens, this sort of projection is largely guesswork, at least in part because so much of a team's bench personnel is likely to change throughout a season.

Manager
  1. NYY: JOE TORRE
  2. BOS: Terry Francona
  3. TOR: John Gibbons
  4. BAL: Sam Perlozzo
  5. TB: Joe Maddon
They'll Manage, Thanks ... Torre is looking for his tenth consecutive division title and the 12th of his career, so he wins here. Francona. who granted has the magic fairy dust that comes with the first Red Sox title in four generations, has managed in the majors for eight seasons and never won a division -- and remember, this preview is about the regular season. The other three guys on this list, frankly, could be ranked in almost any order, but if Joe Maddon takes the Rays to the title, he automatically earns Greatest Manager Ever in the History of the Game Ever status.

What's it all mean?
Well, as past years have shown, these pre-season previews rarely reflect much on anything bearing a resemblance to reality. But above we have broken each team into 14 ranked parts, so let's see who "wins." Granted, not all the above parts are equal -- a #1 ranking by a team's starting rotation will probably offset mediocre rankings at a number of other positions, for instance.

And some rankings are closer than other ... for example, the #5 CF is closer to the #2 CF than the #2 third baseman is to the #1 guy at the hot corner. So there is nothing remotely genuine and mathematical about this. That said, if we assign each #1 ranking five points on down to each #5 ranking earning one point, here's where we end up:
  1. NYY 56 (4.0 average rank)
  2. BOS 46 (3.28)
  3. TOR 44 (3.14)
  4. BAL 37 (2.64)
  5. TB 27 (1.93)
And that seems about right. Call it 97 wins for the 2007 Yankees, another AL East Division flag, and then on into the playoffs -- for who knows what?
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Mike Green - Wednesday, March 28 2007 @ 09:28 AM EDT (#164857) #
There is little question that the Yankees have the best everyday lineup in the division, and in baseball for that matter.  They do not seem to me to be as good as the Big Red Machine though, and they're going to need some pitching and defence.  That is the crux of it.  I like Kei Igawa more than most, and I think Phil Hughes will give them a boost when he arrives in mid-season, so I agree that the Yanks are the likely favourites.  97 wins might be a challenge though.

3RunHomer - Wednesday, March 28 2007 @ 09:46 AM EDT (#164858) #
These sorts of rankings are fun because they're so easy to disagree with. I'll just throw out that you aren't giving Mussina and Pettitte much credit .. they're "ace" quality for most teams in the league. Of course at their age they might not survive the season either.

And yes, Markakis will make your RF ranking laughable this season.
AWeb - Wednesday, March 28 2007 @ 10:40 AM EDT (#164862) #
My thoughts:

Cantu over Hill I would debate as of right now, and going forward. Cantu was awful at the plate last year, and Hill was better defensively as well. They're both the same age as well.

For such strong division, the first base position stinks. I like Overbay, but it's odd to me he's clearly the class of the position, and barring Overbay declining, none of the others look to have much further "upside" to gain on him.

The Yankees are, as usual, the favourites in the division. Also as usual, the bench they have right now stinks and they don't appear to have great depth anywhere. They are counting on Pavano (as the opening day starter?), Wang (currently injured), and Mussina/Pettitte, two similar older starters and unlikely to make 35 starts. So, as usual, I am hoping they will finally have an "unlucky" season and drop down the ladder a few notches. But then, they seem to have a raft of pitching prospects in the system, so I'm probably kidding myself.

Paul D - Wednesday, March 28 2007 @ 11:44 AM EDT (#164866) #

I'd be curious to see more of an argument for ranking Varitek over Posada.  Posada's been better virtually every yeah, and Varitek is cooling off.

I'm also not convinced that Carl Crawford isn't the best LF in the group.  I guess the hard part is evaluating Manny's defence.  I think I'd put Crawford first though.

Manhattan Mike - Wednesday, March 28 2007 @ 01:01 PM EDT (#164872) #

I think that the worst thing that can happen to us, as Jays fans, is for the rotation to be in enough of a mess that, come June, Cashman sends Roger a blank check signed by George. That's why I'm holding out hope that the Rangers or the Astros will start out strong enough that Clemens is incentivized to stay in Texas.

Hughes is another matter. Of course, if he's everything that "they" say he is, I would be inclined to make the same statement for Hughes that I just made for Roger; i.e. that the Yanks call him up early and he replaces a less-than-stellar Igawa, putting up Jered Weaver-like numbers.  On the other hand, with Hughes having never pitched above AA before, perhaps having him brought up sooner-than-expected isn't the worst thing in the world for Jays fans.

Living in New York and hearing the hype about Wang and his 19 win season makes me shake my head. I also think its interesting to note that, for what its worth, baseball-reference.com has Gus Chacin listed as one of the ten pitchers that are similiar to Wang (they both had almost identical ERA+'s in their first full years, Chacin in '05 and Wang last year).  To me, this makes sense; mechanics aside, both guys find a way to win.

Coincidentally, this is what annoyed me about the Sports Illustrated preview piece about the Blue Jays. Peter King wrote that the Jays are going to have pitching problems relative to New York and Boston. To back up his point, King noted the following about the AL East pitchers:

"Really? Let's take a look at the third starters for the Red Sox, Yankees, and Blue Jays, respectively: Daisuke Matsuzaka, Mike Mussina, Gustavo Chacin"

First, can we really say at this point that Chacin is the #3 Jays pitcher, ahead of Tomo Ohka? I don't know about that.  Moreover, no way is Wang the ace ahead of a healthy Mussina and Pettitte. And finally, if Beckett is the Sox's #2 starter - this is the Beckett whose ERA is ONLY 5.00 because he doesnt have to play against Toronto (ERA of about 6.25 in six starts) and New York (ERA of about 9.50 in 5 starts) more often - then I shudder to think about what King thinks of Dice-K's ability to pitch a full-season in the AL East. 

I would take any bet that Wang doesn't lead his team in wins again; and this is assuming that the other starters (Mussina, Pettitte, Pavano, Igawa, Hughes, and Clemens) either don't pitch a full season or get hurt.

Magpie - Wednesday, March 28 2007 @ 05:31 PM EDT (#164875) #
they seem to have a raft of pitching prospects in the system, so I'm probably kidding myself.

Ah, but (all together now)...

TINSTAAPP!!!!!
MrElbertBuffin - Wednesday, March 28 2007 @ 08:02 PM EDT (#164878) #
Due to spring optimism and the Jay's advantage over the Yankees in starting pitching, after reading this I thought that it might be worthwhile to increase the value of starting pitchers, as they seem to be just as valuable to a team as a position player (and if not quite, at least more than 1/5 as valuable).

So, I tried to rank them as best as I could, using their order as given.

First Pitcher:
1. TOR (Halladay)
2. BOS (Schilling)
3. TB (Kazmir)
4. BAL (Bedard)
5. NYY (Wang)

Second Pitcher:
1. TOR (Burnett)
2. NYY (Mussina)
3. BOS (Beckett)
4. BAL (Cabrera)
5. TB (Seo)

Third Pitcher:
1. BOS (Matsuzaka)
2. NYY (Pettite)
3. TOR (Chacin)
4. TB (Shields)
5. BAL (Wright)

Fourth Pitcher:
1. BOS (Wakefield)
2. TOR (Ohka)
3. NYY (Pavano)
4. BAL (Loewen)
5. TB (Fossum)

Fifth Pitcher:
1. NYY (Igawa)
2. TOR (Towers)
3. BOS (Lester)
4. TB (Howell)
5. BAL (Trachsel)

First of all, I am not as well aquainted with the players, or statistical analysis as many on this site, so I expect that there will be many objections to these rankings.

For the fourth and fifth pitchers, I divided the division into two halves, and alternated their scores so that the aggregate would be the same within each half (so Boston, New York and Toronto each scored 8 points total for these positions, and Baltimore and Tampa Bay each scored three).  I did this mostly because there are so many questions about these positions, from who will be filling them in two months, to how young pichers will fare, and older pitchers will recover from off seasons.  This seems slightly unfair to Baltimore, as they have a greater potential, and possibly too generous to Boston, as they have less to fall back upon if there are injuries and struggles.  Nevertheless, I leave it as is.

So, using the same calculations, the new scoring averages are as follows:

1. NYY (3.83)
2. BOS (3.44)
3. TOR (3.39)
4. BAL (2.39)
5 TB (1.94)

Things have tightened at the top.

Nevertheless, this has not satisfied my spring optimism, so I project a trade of Jeter for Clayton, and that Rivera will loose his form and end up the third most effective closer behind Ryan and Clayton. 

Now, we find that things have shifted quite nicely:

1. TOR (3.61)
2. tie - NYY/BOS (3.5)
4. BAL (2.39)
5. TB (1.94)

Much better.





MrElbertBuffin - Wednesday, March 28 2007 @ 08:15 PM EDT (#164879) #
Obviously, I meant to say that Rivera will end up the third most effective closer behind Ryan and Papelbon.  I'm almost positive that Rivera will remain a more effective closer than Royce Claton.
Dave Till - Wednesday, March 28 2007 @ 09:48 PM EDT (#164883) #
I believe that the Yankees will continue to win until other teams stop dumping salary by trading expensive players in mid-season. The Yanks serve as kind of an insurance policy for small-market teams: since they seemingly have a limitless budget, they're willing to take on tens of millions of dollars in salary commitments in order to pick up that extra couple of wins.

For example: when the Royals discover that Gil Meche isn't going to lead them to victory, they'll likely decide that they can just as easily finish last without him as with him. Then, he'll wind up in pinstripes.

The situation is better than it was a few years ago, though. Now, most teams are willing to sign a free agent or two every now and again, thanks to baseball's new supply of money. For a while, there was a real risk of the Yanks and Red Sox becoming the Manchester United and Chelsea of baseball: they win all the time because they have the most money, so they can sign the best players, so they win all the time, so the best players want to sign with them, and so on and so on.

I've semi-seriously advocated at times that the Yankees should be given their own division and be granted an automatic bye into the post-season. They're playing by different rules than the rest of baseball anyway - why not accept that fact? And everybody wants the Yanks in the postseason anyway, even if to experience joy when they get bumped out of the playoffs.

They could tour the country as a quasi-exhibition team, and then the three division winners and the Yanks could face off in the post-season.

SheldonL - Wednesday, March 28 2007 @ 10:51 PM EDT (#164884) #

There are tons of question marks on this Yankees team and it baffles me that everyone(Dayne Perry, et al) have them as odds on favourites to win the AL East.

Firstly, their pitching is very thin. Yes, Wang had a very year last year and I think he'll settle in as their best pitcher this year(don't worry about that hammy, he'll be alright). His WHIP is still pretty high which is what one would expect from an extreme-groundball pitcher with Jeter's range and A-Rod's subpar defence - he'll produce Westbrook-type numbers, which are good but not ace-worthy.
Mike Mussina overachieved last year! I think given his age and his performance the last 3 years, he'll return to a 4.50 ERA and 1.35 WHIP - and he'll still be their number 2 guy!
Andy Pettite hasn't pitched in the AL East - yeah, yeah, yeah, Minute Maid park is a hitter's haven but the AL East is the AL East! - and he pitched terribly in the first half of 2006. He's always had a high WHIP so I don't trust that sparkiling 2005 season.
Carl Pavano - um, opening day starter, um - has had just one albeit awesome season in which he achieved his potential - and that was in the NL!  As for the rest, Igawa has yet to throw a pitch in the majors, Karstens ans Rasner are unproven. The Yanks may have to rush Philip Hughes and maybe even insert Humberto Sanchez into the rotation!

Sure, who needs to worry about a suspect pitching staff when you have the Yankees offence! But how dominant is this offence? Yes, Jeter's a hitting machine with speed on the basepaths, Matsui is good for .300 and 25 homers, and A-Rod is primed for a mindblowing season in his "walk year".
Giambi and Abreu still walk at a ridiculous rate but the latter has had his power numbers sharply reduced since that fateful home-run derby and the latter had an erratic season with plenty of slumps - he's a shadow of the player he used to be! Could a decline be in store for the36 year old Giambino?
As for Posada, he may still be the best offensive catcher in the division but I think he may post Zaun-type numbers; let's not forget that he slugged just .430 in '05 and he carved out good numbers last season only thanks to a hot September.
Most suspect of these hitters is Johnny Damon - here's a guy who's had two very good seasons recently ('04 & '06). I don't see him even coming close to 20 homers again.
But people aren't mindful of the fact that Cano has never hit .300 in the minors. Could .342 be a fluke? I highly doubt it but one can't help but wonder what would his performance be if the lineup was to falter a bit.

Call me crazy, but the wheels are finally going to spin off this team with dare I say  - a third place finish! Looks alot like the Texas Rangers of 2002 with A-Rod, Pudge, Palmeiro, Juan Gonzalez - all bat but no pitching worth a darn! That is of course unless they trade for some overpaid starter(s)!

I'm betting against it.

Ryan Day - Thursday, March 29 2007 @ 10:19 AM EDT (#164888) #

The problem with the Yankees is that whatever holes may appear in the roster - and I agree there are a few, mostly in pitching - they'll be able to patch midseason by taking a couple big contracts, or maybe just by throwing a lot of money at Roger Clemens.

 It'll probably take a real collapse - say, Jeter breaks his ankle on opening day, A-Rod fizzles out, and Mussina suddenly pitches like an old man - to really dent their playoff hopes. Unfortunately, everything going wrong for the Yankees is probably about as likely as everthing going right for the Jays. (But wouldn't it be nice?)

Manhattan Mike - Thursday, March 29 2007 @ 11:45 AM EDT (#164892) #

Here are, according to mlbtraderumors.com, the best five free agent pitchers in next year's market:

SP - John Smoltz
SP - Carlos Zambrano
SP - Jake Westbrook
SP - Curt Schilling
SP - Jason Jennings

Zambrano has stated that he doesn't want to pitch in Yankee Stadium  http://www.google.com/url?q=http://chicagosports.chicagotribune.com/sports/baseball/cs-0703270119mar27,1,5994752.story%3Fcoll%3Dcs-baseball-print&sa=X&oi=news&ct=result&cd=1&usg=__rKO0q1F3-aZcrtKN9yh68KilQ6k= but, of course, could be a scary rental.

One would think that the Indians will still be in contention and would thus be reluctant to part with Westbrook.

I have this gut feeling that even if Boston was in dead last, Schilling wouldn't go anywhere near a Yankees jersey.

Other pitchers due to be free agents are Bartolo Colon and Freddy Garcia, who both probably fall into the same general situation as Jake Westbrook.

So you really only have Smoltz, who has said that he would like to retire as a Brave, and Jennings, who isn't all that special a pitcher, as top mid-season replacements for the Yankees rotation.

I think that the new, more budget-conscious Yankees reach into their system before going out and blowing the bank to get mid-season pitching help. But, then again, who knows what goes on in the mind of George.

 

Mylegacy - Friday, March 30 2007 @ 12:58 AM EDT (#164928) #

The Yanks offense is very good to even better than that. The bullpen is good to very good. The starting pitching is a different matter. No real Aces.  Wang, Mussina and Pettitte are all real good number 3 guys to OK number 2 guys. Pavano and Igawa are...yawn. It's only a matter of time till the vunderkid Hughes is called up. Judging from his spring era over 7.00...they'll be disappointed.

The Yanks could, and I think it's a 50/50 chance...finish 3rd. They might do better but they DO NOT have playoff pitching, nothing new for them...they haven't had it this century.

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