Hartford Courant (Sunday)

5 questions Cashman and Co. need to address

- By Kristie Ackert

NEW YORK — After looking through different areas of the team — including coaches, players and manager Aaron Boone — to see what went so wrong with the Yankees 2021 season, there are still so many unanswered questions.

Yes, the Yankees’ hitters underperfo­rmed this season. And this week hitting coaches Marcus Thames and P.J. Pilittere paid for that with their jobs. The Bombers were thrown out a league-leading 22 times at home plate this season, and seemingly that cost thirdbase coach Phil Nevin his job.

But as everyone gets ready to watch the Bombers’ two mosthated rivals — the Red Sox and Astros — play in the American League Championsh­ip Series for another trip to the World Series, those are clearly not the answers to why the Yankees are home still trying to figure out how to get back there for the first time since 2009.

After the changes, the Yankees are still a team of big sluggers. The roster is still power-based and unathletic, with very few contact hitters. They have very little versatilit­y built into their roster and heading into 2022 a lot of questions about whether they are heading in the right direction.

After the season, we give the players and manager a grade.

If we were to do that for general manager Brian Cashman and the front office, it could be no higher than a D. They made some minor moves that had some big impact, like getting Wandy Peralta for Mike Tauchman, and they acquired Clay Holmes, who came in and was excellent for the Yankees down the stretch.

Anthony Rizzo was the right move, but he was hamstrung by COVID-19. Joey Gallo gave the Bombers another desperatel­y needed left-handed bat but is the same type of streaky hitter the

Yankees already had on the right side. Andrew Heaney was not a good acquisitio­n.

Ultimately, the Yankees’ success and failures land at Cashman’s feet, as the only face of the front office. But the majority of his work comes in the winter, when he tries again to rebuild into a championsh­ip team. Last winter’s work resulted in a 92-win team that fell short again.

This winter, Cashman has a high bar to reach again. Aside from the first step of deciding if Boone is the manager going forward, here are some things the Yankees have to address to have a successful winter.

Who’s on first?

Luke Voit had a nightmare season, beginning with knee surgery in March, from which he never seemed to entirely recover. In fact, he was placed on the injured list at the end of the season. He struggled the few games he played, and the Yankees went out and traded for Rizzo.

The 30-year-old slugger is under team control through 2024. He made $4.7 million last year and will likely get a raise through arbitratio­n. With Gleyber Torres now a second baseman, first is a spot that DJ LeMahieu could be moved to and Voit’s role would be

basically eliminated.

Who’s the shortstop of the future?

It’s clearly not Torres, who was demoted in September. Cashman admitted that Torres was more of

a second baseman than shortstop last winter but went ahead with having him start at short for the first five months of the season.

There’s a strong class of freeagent shortstops coming to the market. Corey Seager seems like an ideal fit. Will the Yankees go out and spend big to solidify that spot?

Is Gary Sanchez still the catcher?

The catcher had a bounceback year from a nightmaris­h 2020 season, where he lost his starting job, but is that enough? Sanchez’s defense has been a lightning rod for criticism, and the soon-to-be 29-year-old made over $6 million last year. He clubbed 23 homers, and his power is something other teams covet. The Yankees could sell if they want to move on.

At the center of it all

Finalizing the “strong up the middle to be a good team” theme, who is the Yankees’ everyday center fielder in 2022? Aaron Hicks missedmost­oftheseaso­nafterwris­t surgery. Since signing a seven-year, $70milliond­ealinthesp­ringof2019, Hicks has played in just 145 games over three seasons.

The Yankees used 38-year-old BrettGardn­er,whohadbeen­signed as a fourth outfielder, far too much. They hesitantly used Aaron Judge there, concerned about the wear and tear on his body. They need to makesureth­eyhavethis­spotlocked down, however, heading into 2022.

What are we doing?

Maybe first and foremost, the Yankees should take a hard look in the mirror and decide if they are actually headed in the right direction. They have become increasing­ly reliant on analytics, which many of the top teams in the game are doing but with more success.

The informatio­n across the game is largely the same now, so why have other teams been able to adapt and be more successful? No one is saying stick your head in the sand, but there has to be a hard look at how informatio­n is being used to make decisions.

 ?? JOHN HEFTI/AP ?? The Dodgers’ Corey Seager, left, shown during a National League Division Series game against the Giants on Oct. 9 in San Francisco, may be a good fit for the Yankees at shortstop.
JOHN HEFTI/AP The Dodgers’ Corey Seager, left, shown during a National League Division Series game against the Giants on Oct. 9 in San Francisco, may be a good fit for the Yankees at shortstop.

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