Morning Sun

Steinbrenn­er vows to keep Boone, Cashman as Yankees struggle

- By Ronald Blum

NEW YORK » Yankees owner Hal Steinbrenn­er vowed to keep manager Aaron Boone, general manager Brian Cashman and the core of his team, shaking off a crushing loss to the Los Angeles Angels in which New York wasted a fourrun, ninth-inning lead.

Steinbrenn­er spoke with reporters Thursday, the morning after the 11-8 defeat in which New York scored seven runs in the first inning. The Yankees are 41-39, fourth in the AL East, 8 1/2 games behind first-place Boston.

“It’s absolutely aggravatin­g, maddening,” Steinbrenn­er said. “It has been tough to watch and the players know that. They’re better than this. This is not the product that we expect and it’s not the type of play that they expect themselves.”

New York had discussed the availabili­ty since Monday, and the 51-year-old owner was clear that he does not act like impulsive father George, who ran the Yankees from 1973-2008 and changed managers 21 times.

“He certainly did that a lot. I think what people forget is that often times it didn’t help, it didn’t work. And often times, quite frankly, he was criticized for it, right?” Steinbrenn­er said. “So I’m just a believer in seeing an entire body of work from an employee, irregardle­ss of what department they’re in. And we do that year to year to year and every year.

“Even somebody’s in the middle of a contract, at the end of the year, I’m going to look at their performanc­e and I’m going to make a decision whether to continue with that person or not continue with that person, irregardle­ss of whether or

not they’re under contract. And doing it knee-jerk reaction to appease this person or that person in the middle of a year when I really don’t think there’s a problem, that’s certainly is something I’m not going to do.”

Steinbrenn­er usually discusses the state of the Yankees after quarterly owners meetings, but because of the pandemic had not held a question-and-answer session with reporters since February 2020.

“I’m aggravated, frustrated, angry,” he said. “But again, that’s not going to push me into a knee-jerk reaction to get rid of somebody that I believe the players respect, want to play for, want to win for and overall has done a good job keeping that clubhouse together through this difficult three months.”

Steinbrenn­er is constantly compared with his father.

“It’s a very justified question to ever ask and to always ask, because he was one of the greatest at what he did,” Steinbrenn­er said.

“And all I can do is do my best, be my own person, make the decisions in the way that I’ve always made decisions, which is putting in as much thought into a decision as possible, taking

the time if I have the time to do just that. There’s no doubt I’m going to live a little bit less spur of the moment than he was in a lot of ways.”

New York has had just three managers in a quarter-century: Joe Torre (1996-2007), Joe Girardi (2008-17) and Boone. After Wednesday’s loss, some of the few fans who remained chanted “Fire Boone!”

“I’m not afraid to make changes as we saw with the manager a few years ago,” Steinbrenn­er said. “But the changes have to be made for more than just the sake of making changes. I know I’m stating the obvious, But again, I’m going to be looking at everybody’s performanc­e at the end of the year throughout the organizati­on, baseball ops or not, and that’s what I do every year, and it’s not something I tend to do in the middle of the year. Do I like consistenc­y, do I (like) having the same people around, that I am used to, that I communicat­e well with, that we can kind of understand each other? Yes. But not if we’re having serious problems with that person’s performanc­e or in the way that players or in other department­s, other employees look — respect or don’t respect that person.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Hal Steinbrenn­er talks with reporters during a baseball owners meeting in Orlando, Fla.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Hal Steinbrenn­er talks with reporters during a baseball owners meeting in Orlando, Fla.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States