Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Pitching, defense the reason Yankees on historic pace

- By Bill Madden

The Yankees headed up to Canada for the weekend toting with them the overwhelmi­ng best record in baseball and a winning percentage which, if they can sustain it, would be the highest in their glorious history. We’ve seen enough, and are far enough along in the season, to believe these .750 Yankees are real (For the record, the 1927 Yankees were 110-44; .714 and the 1998 Yankees 114-48; .704.) and we’ll have an even better idea if they can be historical­ly real after this week when they play three games on the road in Tampa Bay and four games at home against the Astros.

The only question we have is how this has all come about, especially after last year when the Yankees were one of the worst fundamenta­l and defensive teams in baseball and GM Brian Cashman was under heavy criticism for having put together one of the most dysfunctio­nal Yankees teams in memory.

Number one is health. Other than Aroldis Chapman, who wasn’t pitching well anyway, the Yankees have so far not been felled by any significan­t injuries, particular­ly the starting rotation in which none of the five starters — Gerrit Cole, Nestor Cortes, Jameson Taillon, Jordan Montgomery and Luis Severino — has had to miss a start due to injury. Moreover, they’ve been a model of consistenc­y: In their combined 61 starts as of Saturday, they’d yielded more than three earned runs in only seven of them. Yankees pitchers as a whole have given up the fewest runs in the majors (187), the fewest in their first 64 games in franchise history.

The Yankee starters took a combined ERA of 3.00 and WHIP of 1.01 to Toronto, which, according to the Elias Bureau, were significan­tly better than their three deepest and best rotations of all time. The 1953 Yankees rotation of Allie Reynolds, Vic Raschi, Eddie Lopat and Whitey Ford had a combined

3.02 ERA and 1.27 WHIP; the

‘77 rotation of Ed Figueroa, Ron Guidry, Mike Torrez, Don Gullett and Catfish Hunter (3.72 and 1.26); and the ‘98 Yankees group of Andy Pettitte, David Wells, David Cone, Orlando Hernandez and Hideki Irabu (3.72 and 1.23).

While the pitching has obviously been the driving force in this 2 months of dominance, there will obviously be innings issues down the road for Cortes in particular (whose previous season high was 93 last year). But there is sufficient depth in Clarke Schmidt and close-to-returning Domingo German that Cashman probably won’t have to mortgage prospects for another starter at the trading deadline.

As it is, Cashman deserves credit for turning a mess of a team in 2021 into this runaway train in ‘22 with just two trades that didn’t cost much and brought shortstop Isiah KinerFalef­a from Minnesota (allowing Gleyber Torres to move back to second base) and catcher Jose Trevino from Texas to bolster the defense at the two most vital positions. Jettisonin­g Gary Sanchez in the Kiner-Falefa deal was a big part of that. “I have to believe just finally ridding themselves of Sanchez and all his drama behind the plate has played a huge part in the Yankees’ pitchers’ performanc­e this year,” a rival AL exec said to me Friday. “The Yankees are doing everything better in the field this year, catching the ball, making the big plays, curtailing the opposing running game. It’s night and day from last year.”

And two other really underthe-radar trades by Cashman last year that brought Clay Holmes from Pittsburgh and lefty Wandy

Peralta from the Giants, along with his 2017 deal with the Marlins for Michael King — all of them at minimal cost in terms of return talent — have reaped the second-most effective bullpen in baseball, even without Chapman.

Offensivel­y the Yankees are leading the majors in homers, second in OPS and third in runs per game (5.00 as opposed to

4.2 in ‘21). They are still heavily reliant on the home run, however — 39-7 in games they’ve homered and 9-9 when they haven’t. So the theory prevails: If you want to beat the Yankees, you’ve got to keep them in the ballpark. Much as Yankees fans love all those Aaron Judge home runs, if they’re paying attention, the real story behind this year’s record-chasing Yankee team is pitching and defense.

It’s a Madd, Madd world

What is turning out to be one of the worst seasons in Tigers history hit another low Wednesday when they were clobbered 13-0 by Tony La Russa’s flounderin­g White Sox and in the process had to resort to not one but three position players to get them through the game, including Roger Clemens’ son Kody, a rookie utilityman who surrendere­d three hits, a walk and an unearned run in his pitching debut. Without question the most disappoint­ing team in baseball, the Tigers were projected to contend in the AL Central after five years of tanking and having signed Javy Baez to that splashy six-year, $140M contract to play shortstop. Instead, the Tigers went into the weekend 24-40 ranked last in the majors in runs, homers, RBI, OPS, walks and stolen bases. Their entire infield, including Baez (.188) is hitting under .200, and that sigh of relief you just heard was Steve Cohen thankful his baseball people ignored the pleas of Francisco Lindor to sign his pal for second base. Not sure who you blame for this Tigers pratfall but have to wonder if the bloom is off A.J. Hinch’s rose. … Has anyone realized that that the Hall of Fame induction ceremonies coming up on July 24 also happen to be on Barry Bonds’ 58th birthday? How fitting.

 ?? BEBETO MATTHEWS/AP ?? The acquisitio­n of catcher Jose Trevino from Texas has played a key role in the Yankees’ turnaround.
BEBETO MATTHEWS/AP The acquisitio­n of catcher Jose Trevino from Texas has played a key role in the Yankees’ turnaround.

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