New York Post

Yanks need his youthful energy

- Joel.sherman@nypost.com

TAMPA — Anthony Volpe is the Yankees’ shortstop because he has five tools. Because he brandished them under the glare of having to win a job this spring. Because every day in every way he looked as if he belonged. But don’t disqualify energy. This Yankee roster needed it. And the new rules are calling for it.

“Veterans feel the energy,” Willie Randolph said. “They like the enthusiasm. And teams sometimes need that.”

Randolph is an expert in this area. He was the 21-year-old injected into the veteran Yankees positional group in 1976 and helped the organizati­on to its first pennant in 12 years.

He was the third-base coach who championed a 21-year-old named Derek Jeter in the spring of 1996 when Jeter was not playing well and George Steinbrenn­er was wavering on whether to stick with him or to go get an experience­d shortstop to play with a win-now veteran cast. The Yankees, of course, stuck with Jeter and won their first World Series since going back-to-back in 1977-78 when Randolph was the second baseman.

And Randolph, who has been in Yankee camp this spring as a special coach, sees the 21-year-old Volpe offering the same intangible to yet another veteran group.

“I hate to compare to Jeter because right now there is no comparison,” Randolph said. “But I remember when I was one of the guys to go to bat for Jeter [in

spring 1996], one of the things I said was, ‘Hey, he is going to bring us some speed. He is going to bring energy. He brings youth and a different swag.’ Teams need that. The energy of that is important.”

This Yankee positional group, in particular, had grown a bit stale; the same basic group meeting the same basic fate. To that group, the Yankees added no positional piece this offseason and lost Andrew Benintendi and Matt Carpenter, two lefty bats and, in Benintendi’s case, contact and athleticis­m.

Think about what Opening Day was going to sound like at Yankee Stadium without Volpe, especially after he so clearly became the people’s choice this spring. It was going to be defined by Josh Donaldson, Aaron Hicks and Isiah KinerFalef­a being booed — even louder if any are in the starting lineup. Now, it will be fascinatin­g to hear whether Volpe or Aaron Judge gets the louder ovation when called to the line on Thursday. It is going to produce so much more goodwill and positive energy in the building. The Volpe decision is near perfect for the Yankees — it is what the fans wanted and what they think is the right choice.

But where it matters most is in the games. The Yankees have lost in the playoffs, notably to Houston. And it is hard to ignore how much better the Astros are at playing baseball. The Yanks have kept putting the band back together around one note — righty power. And when that was defused, they had nothing else. There was an attempt to diversify in the past few years that didn’t fully hold because Joey Gallo couldn’t handle New York and injuries derailed Benintendi, Carpenter and DJ LeMahieu last postseason.

The Astros, meanwhile, have renovated a lot of the positional group from their first controvers­ial championsh­ip in 2017 and won it all last year with a well-rounded rookie shortstop, Jeremy Pena, seamlessly replacing a star in Carlos Correa.

Volpe and Oswaldo Cabrera give the Yankees a chance to play at a different pace, and so does Harrison Bader when he returns and Oswald Peraza if he reaches the majors. This will be heightened in a season when new rules are going to increase the need for defensive athleticis­m/range and the ability to steal bases.

Volpe was 5-for-5 in stealing bases this spring, showed fine range at shortstop and played with zest. On Saturday, for example, he hit the first pitch Phillies co-ace Aaron Nola threw for a looping single to right. Nick Castellano­s dove and missed it and, bam, Volpe was headfirst into third. As Yankees manager Aaron Boone cited, “I don’t think he is a burner by any means. He’s a good runner. But he’s a great base runner.”

Teammates noticed it right away this spring. The skill, yes. But also the baseball IQ. And the daily passion. It is why — like Randolph in 1996 with Jeter — so many went to bat for Volpe. They understood the long season to come and saw the defibrilla­ting powers Volpe’s talent and temperamen­t could offer; the human jumper cables he could be.

“A guy who can impact the game the way he does with speed and power, that in itself brings excitement to a team because I think he has a chance to be a great player,” Kyle Higashioka said. “You see somebody like that come up and hopefully they succeed. I think that will potentiall­y bring a lot of energy.”

 ?? ?? Joel Sherman
Joel Sherman

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