Albuquerque Journal

Yankees can win it all if they will spend $1 billion

Willingnes­s to do so ought to help lure Harper, Machado

- BY ANTHONY RIEBER

About the time No. 9 hitter Christian Vazquez’s 338-foot home run disappeare­d over the short porch in right field and Vazquez raised his right arm in celebratio­n rounding first base, you kind of had the feeling Tuesday wasn’t going to be the Yankees’ night.

Vazquez’s Yankee Stadium special in the fourth inning of Game 4 of the ALDS gave the Red Sox a 4-0 lead. It felt insurmount­able. It was. Barely. Boston went on to a series-clinching 4-3 victory and the Yankees’ 102-win season came to a crushing end.

The Yankees won 100 in the regular season and two in the postseason. As a wild-card team, they needed to win 10 more postseason games to bring World Series trophy No. 28 to the Bronx.

So how do they get those extra 10 wins in 2019?

Simple: They go on the most historic free-agent spending spree in baseball history.

How historic? We’re going to lay out a realistic plan for the Yankees to spend a cool billion dollars this offseason. That’s “billion” with a “b”.

You are the New York Yankees. You can afford it. Your fans pay through the nose to watch this team. They cram into a ballpark that is so expensive to visit it may as well be gold-plated. They watch the YES Network in record numbers. They love this team and its young stars, the disappoint­ing ALDS result notwithsta­nding.

Just win, baby? Sure. But first, just spend, baby. First off, Bryce Harper and Manny Machado. Sign ’em both.

This free-agent class includes two once-in-a-generation talents in the prime of their careers. Machado turned 26 on July 6. Harper turns 26 on Oct. 16.

Hall of Fame-caliber players just

do not come onto the free-agent market at that age. The last was Alex Rodriguez, who was 25 when he signed a 10-year, $252-million contract with the Texas Rangers before the 2001 season.

So the Yankees may have to pay about three times that much — $750 million — to land Machado and Harper. They have it.

If you’re wondering where Harper and Machado would fit in the lineup, don’t wonder too long. Talent makes its own room. Harper takes over left field from Brett Gardner, who saves the Yankees $10.5 million when he is allowed to leave as a free agent, and Machado becomes the third baseman, just as his mentor A-Rod did when he joined the Yankees in 2004.

Miguel Andujar, a wondrous offensive talent, is such a butcher at the hot corner that he didn’t even play in Game 4. He can move to first. Miguel Cabrera did it and he’s headed to the Hall of Fame.

Or, if the Yankees really want to get radical and save money to pay the two free-agent studs, they can make Andujar a near full-time designed hitter by trading Giancarlo Stanton.

Let’s face it: Stanton never seemed comfortabl­e in his first season in pinstripes. He gets mad props for staying in the lineup on a bad hamstring when Aaron Judge was hurt, but there’s just something lacking in Stanton’s overall presence, and his final at-bat of the season was putrid.

Stanton was the only Yankee during their furious ninth-inning rally on Tuesday who had a bad at-bat when he predictabl­y struck out on four pitches against Craig Kimbrel. If waving at sliders in the dirt in a clutch situation was an Olympic sport, Stanton would have a gold medal. Something tells us he may approve a trade to a less pressurize­d market, perhaps for some prospects or a defense-first catcher or an arm or two.

The Yankees went to Game 7 of the ALCS without Stanton last year. They made it to Game 4 of the ALDS with him. His need for DH at-bats took away an avenue the Yankees could have used for Andujar and Gary Sanchez to get more DH time. His bat is fierce, maybe as much as Stanton’s, and Sanchez came a few feet from a walk-off grand slam when his ninth-inning drive was caught on the warning track for a sac fly.

Here’s the projected 2019 lineup: Harper LF, Judge RF, Machado 3B, Didi Gregorius SS, Sanchez DH, Aaron Hicks CF, Andujar 1B, Gleyber Torres 2B, DFC (defense-first catcher) C.

The Yankees also are going to have to spend for the rotation. Good news! The free-agent market has attractive pitchers, too, such as Houston’s Dallas Keuchel, Arizona’s Patrick Corbin and ex-Yank Andrew Miller.

And there’s nothing that says the Yankees can’t bring back J.A. Happ, CC Sabathia, David Robertson or Zach Britton, all to be free agents.

So let’s say the Yankees shell out $250M for some new (or returning) arms. There’s your one billion dollars.

And there’s your best chance to wipe out the horror of seeing the Red Sox celebrate twice at Yankee Stadium. That has to sting, like getting champagne in your eyes.

 ?? JULIE JACOBSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? New York’s Giancarlo Stanton, left, and Brett Gardner watch play from the dugout railing during the Yankees’ home loss to Boston in Game 4 of the ALDS on Tuesday night.
JULIE JACOBSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS New York’s Giancarlo Stanton, left, and Brett Gardner watch play from the dugout railing during the Yankees’ home loss to Boston in Game 4 of the ALDS on Tuesday night.

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