New York Post

They’re under constructi­on

Buzz around Yanks hard to find, as team and facilities get face-lift

- joel.sherman@nypost.com Joel Sherman

TAMPA — The only buzz at Steinbrenn­er Field on the first day pitchers and catchers worked out came from the whirr of drills and electronic saws.

Constructi­on workers in hard hats outnumbere­d fans in Yankees caps Tuesday, as the substantia­l renovation of the facility continued concurrent­ly with the opening of camp.

If you are looking for overt metaphor, here it was — both team and stadium are undergoing an extensive face-lift. Hal Steinbrenn­er told me the facility overhaul is on schedule and should be completed in nine days, coinciding with the start of the exhibition season. The roster? That will continue as a work in progress. And beyond the obvious — forging championsh­ip-level talent — part of the Yankees’ reconstruc­tion is about recapturin­g a fan base’s attention and passion, making it fall in love with a new group of youngsters as it once did Derek Jeter and Mariano Rivera.

The Yanks have assembled one of the best prospect bases in the game — having recognized a graying, expensive, declining roster was not winning enough on the field or off. The general sense is that fans like the transition without fully embracing it yet.

For example, the constructi­on provided an extenuatin­g circumstan­ce to keep people away Tuesday. Still, that the Yanks were beginning their 2017 preparatio­n was no secret. I have been present at every first day since this building was christened in 1996, and this was, by far, the fewest attendees — perhaps 100 fans, most turned to mute.

In the not too distant past, the crowd registered in the thousands and the excitement as players hit the field could be heard: “Mr. Posada.” “Hey, Andy.” “Can you sign, Mariano?” At 11:30 a.m. Wednesday, players began to trickle out into the sunshine, and the only palpable sounds were “Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic” on the sound system and the “beep, beep” of work vehicles backing up.

It might be silly for fans to cheer batting practice, but there was loud appreciati­on for main-f ield homers in the past. At one juncture, Gary Sanchez put together an audacious homer round punctuated with a blast over the black in center and … Nothing.

This comes in the aftermath of Yankees TV ratings falling last year and the Mets eclipsing them for the first time since SNY debuted in 2006. YES ratings were hurt by its absence from Comcast, plus attention on the Olympics and presidenti­al race. But also because fans thought the team dull.

Most organizati­ons would kill for the Yankees’ attendance problems, since in 2016 they drew more than 3 million fans for the 18th consecutiv­e season. But the 3,063,405 marked a second straight drop and a nearly 10 percent fall from the 3,401,624 of 2014. Yankee Stadium also is being remodeled less than a decade after its opening.

Perhaps all the reconstruc­tion — of roster and facilities — will recharge the fan base. There certainly has been no love for the prices, acoustics and general soulless environmen­t of this newest Yankee Stadium. Combine that with the absence of playoff runs and titles, the retirement of legends and a roster that lacked greatness, personalit­y and energy, and a formula for apathy had arisen.

When I asked Steinbrenn­er about the indifferen­ce, he disputed the premise, saying, “My feedback has been the opposite. What we have seen on social media and heard during Instructio­nal League is that fans are excited about what we are doing. I am not getting that [apathetic] vibe. But it is Day 1. We’ll see.”

Part of the Yanks’ problem is about stars, not usually a problem. But who is the biggest star now on these Yankees? Sanchez, who has played two months in the majors? Aroldis Chapman, who plays 70-ish innings a year and was suspended 30 games last year under MLB’s domestic-abuse rules?

This is arguably the fewest acknowledg­ed icon/superstars the Yanks have had to open a camp since ’96. The homegrown Jeter, Rivera and Andy Pettitte quickly endeared themselves, largely because they were instantly excellent and the Yankees won.

“No,” general manager Brian Cashman said when I asked if he ever considers TV ratings, attendance and star power in personnel decisions. “My job is to put together the best talent package that accumulate­s wins. That is what sells. … That [thinking about stars] is how George [Steinbrenn­er] operated in the ’80s, and it didn’t work. It works in the winter for drawing attention, but not in the summer to win.”

George’s son conceded, “This feels different.” That is because the Yanks have committed to something approachin­g a youth movement. Rightfully, by the way. We will see if it works on the field and in rekindling the enthusiasm of a fan base. For as even Hal Steinbrenn­er said, “We’re in a good place right now, but now we have to prove ourselves.”

The reconstruc­tion continues.

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