Hartford Courant

Tanaka’s last pitch as a Yankee?

- By Erik Boland

SAN DIEGO — The thought, Masahiro Tanaka said here late Wednesday night, did not “cross my mind.”

Not while warming up in the bullpen before his start in Game 3 of the Division Series against the Rays. Nor after the 8-4 loss that pushed the Yankees to the edge of playoff eliminatio­n.

The thought?

That Wednesday night’s outing might have been the last of his career with the Yankees.

“It doesn’t cross mymind even right now,” Tanaka said a few minutes after the game via Zoom.

But it is a thought that had crossed the righthande­r’s mind before.

It happened as Tanaka threw in the bullpen before his final regular season start Sept. 23 in Buffalo against the Blue Jays.

“I realized that this is the last start of the regular season for me, which means it would be the last start [in] my seven-year contract with the Yankees,” Tanaka said through his interprete­r that night.

Those thoughts didn’t impact his tough outing, one in which he allowed five runs (three earned) and eight hits over four innings-plus. Rather, Tanaka was acknowledg­ing something not exactly hiding in plain sight: the 31-year-old, signed to a seven-year, $155 million deal before the 2014 season, is a free agent at season’s end.

“It was a tough season to say the least,” Tanaka said after the regular season. “It was a short season with the pandemic and for me, this was the last season of my contract with the Yankees. It’s kind of frustratin­g to have to end the last regular season this way.”

The postseason, potentiall­y, too.

While Tanaka never developed into the No. 1 starter the Yankees envisioned, he nonetheles­s more than fulfilled his contract to the franchise’s liking.

In his time in pinstripes, Tanaka was among the most durable – and successful – pitchers in the American League, going 78-46 with a 3.74 ERA in 174 games (173 starts).

That includes 2020, a season in which Tanaka went 3-3 with a 3.56 ERA, an impressive performanc­e considerin­g the pitcher had the start of his season delayed after suffering a concussion after taking a line drive off the bat of Giancarlo Stanton during a live BP session July 4.

Tanaka’s 991 strikeouts rank 13th on the Yankees’ all-time list and are the most by any Yankee through his first 174 games and the second-most by a Yankees pitcher through his first seven major league seasons, trailing only Andy Pettitte, who had 998 strikeouts.

And, like Pettitte, Tanaka has generally raised his level in the postseason, this one, of course, being an exception.

Entering these playoffs – in which Tanaka has gone 0-1 with a 12.38 ERA in two starts – he was 5-3 with a 1.74 ERA in eight postseason outings.

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