New York Post

RESOLVE THE PROBLEM

Yanks must find clutch grit to compete with Red Sox, Rays

- Joel Sherman joel.sherman@ nypost.com

DENVER — The list of Yankees shortcomin­gs is long, and it’s growing in disrepute in this disappoint­ing season. That list includes a lack of lefty hitting, defensive acuity and athleticis­m.

But should we include that the Yankees have a glass jaw?

Are the Yankees fake tough guys? Are they bullies who talk the talk, but tend to get walked off in key moments?

Gerrit Cole and Aaron Judge said all the punches the Yankees have taken in the first half should make them more resilient in the second half. Those were the right words delivered Monday during a media session 24 hours before the AllStar Game. But what perhaps spoke louder was the empty seat next to them with the placard overhead that read “Aroldis Chapman.”

Chapman was the lone no-show required to attend the media session. He is at least part of the game — as opposed to all four Astros named to the AL team, who begged out for one reason or another. It sure did seem, however, as if those Astros were not at the game because they didn’t want to deal with any questions or lingering resentment from fans and fellow All-Stars over Houston’s involvemen­t with illegal sign stealing in 2017.

But I do wonder if Chapman is representa­tive of the Yankees. Immensely talented, but questionab­ly clutch. Preening in good times, overwhelme­d in bad. In the sticky-stuff portion of this season, when he was pumping 100 mphplus and delivering one devastatin­g slider after another, Chapman was as nearly unhittable as he had been at any point in a largely unhittable career.

In the less glue-y part of the season, however, Chapman’s stuff has regressed, so has his success level and so has his confidence. The defiant, boasting stare has been replaced by bewilderme­nt and despair. During Saturday’s 1-0 win in Houston, Aaron Boone allowed himself to be talked out of going to Chapman, with two out and one on in the ninth inning, by Cole. On Sunday, the manager did not even warm up Chapman as Chad Green was giving away the last of a fiverun lead to send the Yankees into the break with what feels like a seven-way tie for their worst loss of 2021.

The final blow was delivered by Jose Altuve, part of the contingent of Astros who shunned the All-Star Game. But against the Yankees, the little Altuve has stood tall. Against them, he has two more walk-off homers — one off Chapman to clinch the 2019 ALCS and one Sunday off Green — than Judge has hit in his whole career.

Altuve’s homer Sunday came a day after Judge homered and tugged at his shirt to troll the Houston second baseman for his refusal to have his jersey removed after that ALCS walk-off. That refusal led to speculatio­n that Altuve was hiding a buzzer that alerted him to what pitch was coming.

Did Mike Brosseau have a buzzer when he homered off Chapman in the ninth inning of Game 5 of the AL Division Series last year, pretty much handing the series to the Rays? Was there ever a better standing-up-to-a-bully move, since the previous month, Chapman had airmailed a fastball over Brosseau’s head and was suspended

because it was so blatantly intentiona­l?

And should Judge already have learned a trolling lesson? In 2018, the Yankees won Game 2 of the Division Series at Fenway Park, and Judge loudly played “New York, New York” while passing the Red Sox clubhouse. The Yankees returned to The Bronx and lost the next two games and the series at home. The Red Sox then played “New York, New York” in their clubhouse after winning the World Series — their fourth this century.

There is a theme here. The Astros, Red Sox and Rays are all good at standing up to the Yankees. There is no mystique or aura any longer — perhaps that disappeare­d when they moved into a new stadium that is more placid mall than gladiatori­al hellhole. Maybe it is about the mix of players. Whatever happened to The Savages? The past two years, the Rays’ guerilla style of roster constructi­on and play, for example,

has distracted and unnerved the Yankees.

The Yankees begin the second half with four games against the Red Sox at home and they will play seven of their first 10 post-break games against Boston before three at Tampa Bay. Those games will be defining in many ways. The Yankees already are 0-6 against the Red Sox, and if that starts growing toward 0-10 in The Bronx, there will be a toxic level of fury and humiliatio­n.

And the Yankees must contend with a Red Sox squad that, under Alex Cora, plays with an aggression and real confidence that they lack. On Saturday against the Astros, in a 1-0 game, Tim Locastro reached first with one out in the fifth inning and Brett Gardner reached first with two out in the ninth inning with Kyle Higashioka up. Neither time did the Yankees attempt a steal. Speed is pretty much Locastro’s and Gardner’s skill. Why are they even on the team if Boone is not going to demand a steal try in that spot?

You can build a team that sits around and waits for homers. But what you get is a horrible combo of passivity and bullyism — if you land the punch, you win, if not, you absorb all the punches. There are no counters. Can the Yankees summon the

fight to get off the ropes of this season or do they really

have a glass jaw?

DENVER — Shohei Ohtani yielded the floor to a fellow dynamo Tuesday night at Coors Field, and Major League Baseball is none the worse for it.

For if Vladimir Guerrero Jr. can’t match his lethal bat with a remarkable mound presence a la Ohtani, he sure can similarly rev up a crowd and a sport.

The prodigal Blue Jays first baseman did something his Hall of Fame dad never pulled off, becoming the youngest (at 22) to win MLB All-Star Game’s Most Valuable Player honors as he powered the American League over the National League, 5-2. The Junior Circuit picked up where it left off before the coronaviru­s pandemic canceled last year’s event, winning its eighth straight All-Star Game.

“I’ve got to say, I can’t wait to get back to hear what [Blue Jays teammates] Lourdes Gurriel and [George] Springer have to say about this,” Guerrero said through an interprete­r. “Right before I left, I made a promise to them that I was going to win the MVP and they said, ‘You’d better win the MVP. If you don’t, don’t come here.’ ”

Guerrero, making his Midsummer Classic debut in his third season, crushed a 468-foot, solo homer to left field off the Brewers’ Corbin Burnes in the third inning, doubling the AL’s advantage to 2-0. He added another RBI in the fifth when his grounder to second brought home his Toronto teammate Teoscar Hernandez from third base.

Ohtani, the AL’s leadoff pitcher and leadoff hitter, who deservedly drew most of the pregame hype, picked up the win by throwing a 1-2-3 first inning (and having the AL take a lead it didn’t relinquish in the top of the second) and went 0-for-2, grounding out twice, as the starting designated hitter. He said he slept until 10:30 Tuesday morning following his exhausting effort in Monday night’s Home Run Derby, when he dropped a first-round thriller to the Nationals’ Juan Soto.

“Definitely it was a lot more tiring than the regular season,” Ohtani said through an interprete­r after leaving the game. “But if everyone had fun, then I’m good with that.”

Actually, the game itself came off as relatively tame compared to its recent predecesso­rs, devoid of social-media stunts and extreme fraternizi­ng. Guerrero might have produced the most GIF-able moment in addition to the best highlight when, after his first-inning line drive nearly hit NL starting pitcher Max Scherzer en route to second baseman Adam Frazier for a 4-3 out, he made a left turn toward the mound and hugged Scherzer in a gesture of peace. Vladdy Jr. explained that during Monday’s festivitie­s, Scherzer jokingly asked the young slugger to take it easy on him.

That highlight, though, was something, joy coating Guererro as he watched the homer’s flight and trotted around the bases, pointing his finger skyward as a thanks to his higher power.

The elder Vladimir Guerrero knocked an All-Star Game homer in 2006, so Junior’s dinger put the family in an exclusive club, featuring Bobby and Barry Bonds and the Ken Griffeys, of fathers and sons to go deep in this game. Guerero’s specially made glove at first base sported photos of 3-year-old and his dad, in matching uniforms, from 2002.

The AL’s first run came when the Yankees’ Aaron Judge drew a fourpitch walk off Burnes, advanced to third base on a double by the Red Sox’s Rafael Devers and scored on a swinging-bunt single by the Blue Jays’ Marcus Semien. The visitors gave themselves a 4-0 cushion in the fifth when the Red Sox’s Xander Bogaerts followed Guerrero’s RBI groundout by grounding a single through the shift to plate the Orioles’ Cedric Mullins. Rays catcher Mike Zunino also slammed a sixth-inning solo homer off the Mets’ Taijuan Walker as the AL East accounted for all of its league’s runs.

The AL now leads the series, 46-43.

 ?? Corey Sipkin, Getty Imnages; AP ?? GET TOUGH: From Aroldis Chapman’s recent struggles to the lack of walk-off blasts by Aaron Judge (center) to questionab­le managerial decisions by Aaron Boone (right), the Yankees need to get better in the clutch to keep up with the resolute Red Sox and Rays.
Corey Sipkin, Getty Imnages; AP GET TOUGH: From Aroldis Chapman’s recent struggles to the lack of walk-off blasts by Aaron Judge (center) to questionab­le managerial decisions by Aaron Boone (right), the Yankees need to get better in the clutch to keep up with the resolute Red Sox and Rays.
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 ?? Getty Images (2) ?? Vladimir Guerrero Jr. watches the flight of his thirdinnin­g homer in the American League’s 5-2 win in Tuesday’s MLB AllStar Game at Coors Field in Denver. The Mets’ Taijuan Walker (below) served up a homer to Mike Zunino in the sixth inning.
Getty Images (2) Vladimir Guerrero Jr. watches the flight of his thirdinnin­g homer in the American League’s 5-2 win in Tuesday’s MLB AllStar Game at Coors Field in Denver. The Mets’ Taijuan Walker (below) served up a homer to Mike Zunino in the sixth inning.

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