Nothing Ventured; Nothing Gained
I'm sure Brian Cashman spent the weeks, days, hours, and minutes, leading up to Wednesday's MLB trade deadline negotiating very earnestly. Cashman has been serving in his present capacity a long time and to coin a recent Aaron Boone quip, he's a savage in his general manager's office. If Cashman feels teams were being unreasonable in negotiations, he's entitled to that opinion. After all, the Yankees are dealing from a position of strength. And so in his view preventing the Yankees from getting ripped off is justified.
Unfortunately, reasonable minded thinking makes fans break out in a rash. They don't wanna hear that crap when the competition is making deals all around them. Yankee bugs wanted a starting pitcher or two, if not another relief pitcher. Coming out of this empty handed was completely out of the question, and at one time considered unfathomable. Bewildered fans will spend the next few nights talking in their sleep asking themselves what in the name of Col. Jacob Ruppert were they thinking.
LUIS SEVERINO IS NOT WALKING THROUGH THAT DOOR
Cashman leaves Aaron Boone to press forward with starters Masahiro Tanaka, James Paxton, C.C. Sabathia, J.A. Happ, and Domingo German. The five account for 95 starts over the Yankees 107 games played to date. Chad Green accounts for another eight other starts. Not one of them presently sport an ERA below four. Domingo German is their best at 4.08 through 17 starts and 97 innings pitched. He also leads the staff with a 1.11 WHiP. Here is the Yankees problem: Sabathia, Tanaka, Paxton, and Happ, together combine for a 4.88 ERA. The Yankees offset that with a +119 run differential. However, in a short playoff series we know the dynamics of baseball play out very differently.
When the Mets acquired Marcus Stroman they somewhat cornered the market on high end movable starters (if you include Noah Syndergaard and Zack Wheeler). However, the biggest news to impact the Yankees occurs when Houston acquires pitcher Zack Greinke from Arizona.
Brian Cashman is essentially telling Aaron Boone he had better win with what he has. Thus the manager's toughest assignment lay dead ahead; negotiating his deep and effective bullpen through the next 55 games of the season and getting them to October all in one piece. In other words prepare for more Sunny Gray days ahead.
And don't @ Cashman if someone gets injured.
Call Scranton.
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