Notice: Trying to get property 'display_name' of non-object in /var/www/html/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-seo/src/generators/schema/article.php on line 52
keyboard_arrow_uptop

The Yankees’ other fat toad

As the Yankees coast to their third division title in four years,
Joe Torre and company must begin to examine candidates
for the probable playoff roster, including choosing his postseason
rotation. The subject hasn’t received much press, but Torre should
consider leaving Roger Clemens out of that rotation entirely.

Clemens has been more or less dismal all season, posting the worst
ERA of the Yanks’ five main starters (0.03 above Andy Pettitte),
and putting up similar numbers before and after the All-Star Break –
even though his groin injury has allegedly healed. Were it not for a
strong outing against the mighty Twins, Clemens’ post-ASB ERA would be
around 5, which is hardly an argument in his favor.

Torre isn’t likely to leave Clemens out for several reasons. Clemens
is the team’s highest-paid pitcher, and George Steinbrenner won’t
stand for having that kind of money in the bullpen. Clemens is also
capable of the occasional dominating start, which weighs more heavily
in the mind of the average manager than it should. And Clemens’ competition
for the role hasn’t been stellar, with Hideki Irabu putting up a
6.95 ERA in August and Orlando Hernandez struggling with his control
at times.

However, Torre might do well to just shut Clemens down for the rest of the
season to try to give the groin a chance to heal further. It has clearly
affected Clemens’ mechanics past the point at which Rajah claimed it was
healed (that cackling sound you hear is from the Fenway bleachers), and
getting some rest in meaningless games can’t hurt him.

Fun and games in the Red Sox bullpen

Credit Jimy Williams for not oversubscribing to this closer
nonsense. Rod Beck has finished 2 games since his arrival – half
the number finished by erstwhile closer Derek Lowe – and has pitched
acceptably, giving up just a hit in four innings (albeit with three walks).
What’s more impressive is Williams’ tacit acknowledgement that the hot hand
is better than the experienced one. Lowe has been between good and excellent
in the closer’s role this year, and the acquisition of Beck makes more sense
if Williams isn’t handing the ball to the occasionally incendiary, always
portly reliever in crucial ninth-inning situations. None of this excuses
giving up Cole Liniak for him, but at least the Sox aren’t damaging
themselves any more than they must.

While everyone was focused on the Beck acquisition (and/or the disposal of
Mark Guthrie), no one noticed the strong performance by John Wasdin.
Wasdin, scapegoated earlier in the year for the team’s overall pitching struggles,
recovered from an unusually unlucky August (12 H and 3 BB in 13 IP, but 8 ER
allowed) to throw 6.2 dominating innings in the final month’s first 8 days.
Wasdin has surrendered just two hits – both doubles – this month, without allowing
either runner to score. While indicative of the dangers of small sample sizes, it
also could lead to more important work for Wasdin in the next few weeks. With Lowe,
Beck, and Rich Garces pitching well, and Rheal Cormier pitching
better than Rheal Cormier has any right to expect, the Sox are well-situated for
the next few weeks in an area of great weakness earlier this year.

Notes

OK, so the Blue Jays called Jose Cruz back up, but what are they going to
do with him? They’ve committed to playing Vernon Wells every day, and they’re
not going to sit Shawn Green or Shannon Stewart, so Cruz is left to
rot on the bench and curse the day Woody Woodward lost his senses. Cruz will
be a very good player next year for some other organization… The Devil Rays rewarded
Bubba Trammell with a rare start the other day, and he went 3-for-4 with a
homer and 3 RBI. The team’s unwillingness to play him is just astounding, given their
place in the standings, but like Cruz, Trammell is a breakout candidate if he moves
on this offseason.

Thank you for reading

This is a free article. If you enjoyed it, consider subscribing to Baseball Prospectus. Subscriptions support ongoing public baseball research and analysis in an increasingly proprietary environment.

Subscribe now
You need to be logged in to comment. Login or Subscribe