Five reasons to be optimistic about the 2014 Yankees

This week Luke and I are going to be posting contrasting articles on the what we have to be positive and negative about for our teams next year. As the resident Yankee fan I’ll be starting us off with five things every Yankee fan should look forward to:

1) A younger pitching staff: Last year the three oldest pitchers in baseball played for the Yankees. Two, possibly three of them will not be returning. That means the Yankees get younger by default. We already saw Ivan Nova take a big step forward this season, if he has really figured something out he could be the number two starter out of spring training.

The team is also rumored to be in hot pursuit of Masahiro Tanaka a right handed Japanese pitcher with the Rakuten Golden Eagles. He could be a solid number three behind CC and Nova, that leaves the four spot for Micheal Pineda, who will finally be ready to contribute to the big league club two years after being traded to the Yankees. That leaves the five hole for Nuno, Phelps and Warren to fight over in spring training.

2) A full year of Soriano: I know this doesn’t sound like something to really get excited about, but he was a reborn player coming to New York. A full season could mean 30 homers 100 RBI with a smattering of stolen bases scattered in there to.

3) Less injuries: Let’s face it, last year was a fluke, even a team comprised of baseball playing Methuselahs like the Yankees can’t have that many weird injuries two years in a row. Now pardon me as I go knock on wood.

4) Girardi is back: While managers in baseball don’t have the on-field impact of say a football or basketball coach, having a good manager matters, and Joe Girardi is a damn good manager. He has the highest winning percentage of any active manager (.566) and after this year we have seen what he is capable of. Having Joe back is a big positive for this team going forward.

5) Resetting the luxury tax: This may sound odd, but I’m hoping the Yankees get under the $189 million dollar budget goal. First off, that’s a lot of money, even if they resign Cano there should still be around 60 – 70 million left in the budget for free agents this year. That’s the payroll of the Astros and Marlins combined; or a better example, more then the entire payroll of The Rays, Athletics, and Pirates. The Yankees should be able to compete with that kind of money being spent.

Once the Yankees get under $189 million for a season they will reset their luxury tax hit from 50% to 15%. If they do it this year it will let them spend heavily on the 2015 free agent class, which has a number of talented players that the team could use to retool and build for the future.

So that’s my top 5 reasons to be optimistic for next season, let me know what you think in the comments. Later this week I will be posting my top 5 reasons for Mets fans to be pessimistic about 2014 so stay tuned!

 

The Beards Beat the Brains

Joe Maddon is off to the Galapagos Islands to swim with the penguins and harvest inchworms. David Pryce will probably be a Yankee, and subsequently, his Twitter account will be immediately shut down. The stingray that was struck by the Jose Lobaton walkoff home run in game 3 was turned into sushi. The Red Sox ride on.

Calling upon the spirit of the drunken, bearded idiots of 2004, the Red Sox turned heartbreak into hangovers Tuesday night by finishing off the Rays in game 4 of their 5 game divisional playoff series and celebrated by shotgunning Budweiser’s. Koji Uehara appeared stoic on the mound while coming into the game in the bottom of the 8th to record a 4 out save, a night after blowing his first save since early August. While at the time this blown save set off a raucous celebration in Tampa and  a wave of panic in Boston, Koji bounced back and exercised the ghost of Byung Hyun Kim. The 38 year old Japanese reliever has written a new chapter in his long career, and has become a fan favorite in Boston with his emphatic post game high fives, gregarious nature, huge smile and domination of 9th inning opposition.

The Sox also saw middle reliever Craig Breslow come in and aggressively go after the tired, but dangerous Rays lineup. The Sox are looking to go all the way this year, and right now, they appear to be the team to beat. An explosive offense and clutch pitching (reminiscent of 04, and 07) has bode well for them so far, but this was only a third of the trip. The road ahead promises to be bumpy. But Boston is strong, BOSTON STRONG… “THIS IS OUR F*CKING CITY”

by Steve Lewis (Resident outsider.I.E Red Sox fan)