New York Daily News

FUTURE IS NOW WHAT?

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HOUSTON — The Yankees’ 2017 season came to a disappoint­ing end in Game 7 of the ALCS against the Astros Saturday night, but the future looks bright. And the groundwork has been set for what could potentiall­y be a sustained run of success. Still, there are a few significan­t questions for 2018:

The GM and manager are both in the final years of their respective deals, and both seem like locks to at least be asked to return. Cashman should come back given that he rebuilt the roster in a hurry, allowing the Bombers to be way ahead of schedule.

Girardi is more of a question mark, given rumblings that the family man may want to walk away after a decade at the helm, including his 2009 World Series championsh­ip. Still, regardless of the criticism over his reliance on data over feel, several young players have taken massive strides forward, and he could be walking away from a potential dynasty in the making. His offseason talk with his family will be significan­t in determinin­g his future. It is, obviously, a three-year, $67 million question that has gotten more complicate­d given Tanaka’s incredible run in the playoffs, where he posted a marvelous 0.90 ERA after posting a miserable 4.74 ERA in the regular season. Still, Tanaka has been pitching with a partial tear in his UCL since 2014, though he’s been durable ever since. Tanaka enjoys playing in New York, which could factor into his decision, as could a very mediocre free-agent pitching market outside of Yu Darvish and Johnny Cueto.

Given that the Bombers want to get under the $197 million luxury-tax threshold in advance of the loaded 2019 free-agent class, they may elect to let Tanaka walk rather than risk paying him extra given his injury history. The 2018 rotation will presumably already include Luis Severino, Sonny Gray and Jordan Montgomery. And it’s plausible that the Yankees will try to keep CC Sabathia on a oneyear deal, though it also stands to reason that money could be tight. Chance Adams, 23, was named the organizati­on’s pitching prospect of the year, and could potentiall­y factor in.

He’s 23, he can pitch and hit, and, because of free-agency rules, he’d come extremely cheap relative to his real worth. That’s why the luxury-tax conscious Bombers need to wow him in what is essentiall­y a college-like recruiting process. No financial advantage this time.

Otani would be extremely valuable as he could slot in at DH when he isn’t pitching, essentiall­y one player filling two roster spots. Sounds like a guy that could sell some tickets, too .

At second? At third? The organizati­on’s top position-player prospect recently began hitting again after undergoing season-ending Tommy John surgery on his left elbow. The 20-year-old is expected to be ready for spring training, though Cashman has suggested that he won’t start with the big club given that he hasn’t had a full season at Triple-A yet. Either way, Torres should eventually become a factor in pinstripes in 2018. He ended 2017 as MLB.com’s top prospect in all of baseball. Will the Bombers elect to keep Starlin Castro, Torres’ mentor,

around, or trade him? With them, you never want to say never. But there doesn’t really seem to be a need for Eric Hosmer or Mike Moustakas. After all, the 2019 crop of Bryce Harper and Manny Machado certainly seems worth saving for. The core has been built around home-grown, cost-controllab­le talent like Aaron Judge, Gary Sanchez and Greg Bird. Sabathia ($25 million), Alex Rodriguez ($21 million), Matt Holliday ($13 million), Michael Pineda ($7.4 million), Todd Frazier ($5 million adjusted) and Jaime Garcia will all come off the books.

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