Stamford Advocate

Cashman vows to stay course despite slow start

-

NEW YORK — The New York Yankees’ players and staff are restless. So are fans.

A 5-10 start, the franchise’s worst in 24 years, has shaken a team that expects to contend for a World Series title.

“Right now we would be a team that an opponent would want to play because obviously we’re not firing on all cylinders,” general manager Brian Cashman said Monday. “So if you have a chance to catch us right now, you’re catching us at the right time, through obviously yesterday’s games, and we look forward to that changing.”

Batting, pitching and fielding have faltered.

New York’s .210 batting average is next-to-last in the American League, and a team with a dearth of lefthanded hitters is batting just .202 against right-handed pitchers. The Yankees’ 55 runs entering Monday tied Detroit for the AL low.

Ace Gerrit Cole is 2-1 with a 1.82 ERA and the rest of New York’s starters are 1-6 with a 6.39 ERA.

Twelve errors have led to 10 unearned runs.

Only the bullpen, which has a 2.43 ERA that is third best in the major leagues, has performed to expectatio­ns.

“There’s a lot of tossing and turning going on,” Cashman said, “but we’re going to do everything in our power to avoid that finger pointing or having those frustratio­ns boil over into something negative and make sure that we just rally the troops around each other and try to be there in a strong, supportive way, because right now we earned any negative criticism.”

Cashman accepts the carping — but said it was

unacceptab­le and illegal for fans to throw balls on the field during Friday’s 8-2 loss to Tampa Bay, which caused the game to be stopped for 2 minutes, 15 seconds.

“I don’t care how bad you’ve played, no one has earned having things thrown at them on the field in that one particular game,” he said. “But ultimately, the rest of it is, yeah, it’s part of the process, too. When you play bad, you’re going to hear about it. When you don’t live up to your expectatio­ns or your fans’ expectatio­ns or your own expectatio­ns, you’re going to hear it. And it’s about doing something about it as you move forward.”

New York has lost five consecutiv­e games going into Tuesday’s interleagu­e series opener against Atlanta. A loss would drop the Yankees to 5-11 for the first time since 1972.

Cashman thought back to other slow starts. In 1997, the Yankees lost 10 of their first 15 games and finished 96-66 and earned a wildcard berth.

“I don’t remember any of those because ultimately we got back on track,” he said. “We got through it. We found a way to be ourselves and be what we’re capable of.”

Jay Bruce, who announced his retirement Sunday, spoke to the team before his final game and reminded them “about the game’s ups and downs and trying to stay consistent and staying together while you’re going through the tough times,” according to Cashman.

While manager Aaron Boone may shake up the lineup a little, Cashman isn’t planning major roster changes.

Nearly the entire batting order is slumping: Aaron Hicks (.160, including 3 for 32 right-handed), Clint Frazier (.167, no RBIs), Giancarlo Stanton (.176, three homers, 12 RBIs), Gleyber Torres (.196), Gary Sanchez (.237), Gio Urshela (.250) and Aaron Judge (.255, four homers, eight RBIs).

First baseman Luke Voit is expected back in May following knee surgery. Bruce, his replacemen­t, retired Sunday after hitting .118. DJ LeMahieu has moved to first, with Rougned Odor (.125) filling in at second.

 ?? Julio Aguilar / Getty Images ?? The Yankees’ Jay Bruce reacts after striking out against the Rays on April 10. Bruce, a three-time All-Star, retired Sunday after a slow start to the season.
Julio Aguilar / Getty Images The Yankees’ Jay Bruce reacts after striking out against the Rays on April 10. Bruce, a three-time All-Star, retired Sunday after a slow start to the season.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States