Buster Olney of espn.com weighs in on the Yankees’ signing of Chris Carter:
“The first conversations that the New York Yankees had about Chris Carter took place in the fall, as the Milwaukee Brewers sorted through their options with a slugger who was tied for the National League lead with 41 homers in 2016. The two sides didn’t work out a deal, the Brewers released Carter, and the Yankees signed Matt Holliday, presumably to take a lot of plate appearances at designated hitter.
Carter remained unsigned into December, into January, the price tag seemingly dropping. Carter’s agent, Dave Stewart, mentioned in a radio interview the possibility that his client would have to think about signing in Japan. This was something that Carter had no interest in: He wanted to play in the major leagues in 2017, and was resigned to the reality that he would get far less than he expected after a season in which he posted an .821 OPS.
Carter’s context had changed, and so had that of the Yankees. Late in the 2015 season, it appeared that Greg Bird might be the team’s first baseman of the future, but he missed all of the 2016 with a shoulder injury. When he returned to action in the Arizona Fall League, Bird really struggled, batting .215 with one homer and 17 strikeouts in 65 at-bats. As the Cleveland Indians learned with Michael Brantley, no injury bears so much uncertainty for a position player — for a hitter — as a shoulder problem. For the Yankees, Bird is something of a mystery with spring training looming. Tyler Austin is a candidate to play first base after a nice showing late last season, but he’s young, he has options, and he can be sent back to the minors.”
SU gets the logic but surely there were better options. Apparently, they are very nervous about Greg Bird and how he will respond from shoulder surgery. But it will be unbearable watching Carter strike out 200 times against ridiculous shifts. I would much rather see Judge and Tyler Austin get those at bats, and I have faith in Bird coming around. We were down to Ellsbury and Headley in the unwatchable category. Wrong move, wrong time.
Tanaka has an out clause this year if he wants to forego $23 million for the next 3 years. Given his elbow situation, why would any team take that chance? SU says this will be a non-issue and he will stay a Yankee through 2020.
Did you see what Porzingis had to say the other day? This from a quiet 2nd year player who is not looking to make waves. But if you watched any of the Laker game the other night, you saw how no-one was helping on defense and how the seas parted every time a Laker drove down the lane past Derrick Rose (who may be the worst defender in the NBA at this point in his career). The quote from KP:
“It’s kind of everybody for (themselves) a lot of times. Both ends of the floor.”
His game is suffering and he is regressing. For Phil Jackson, the issue isn’t making a good deal for Carmelo. It’s just moving him off the roster and starting over. That should be the priority at this point. Kevin Love is younger and he just scored 39 points the other night. Not happening.