The Day

Cashman says the Yankees are interested in signing Darvish

- By ANTHONY RIEBER

General manager Brian Cashman on Thursday confirmed that the Yankees are interested in free-agent pitcher Yu Darvish and even suggested the club could abandon its quest to get under the luxury-tax threshold to sign the right-hander.

Cashman, appearing in studio for an hour on WFAN's new afternoon show, said the Yankees' current plan is to stay under the tax threshold. But, he added, "Unless ownership changes their mind on that."

Darvish, who finished last season with the Dodgers after a midseason trade from the Rangers, started this round of speculatio­n on Wednesday when he seemed to confirm a Fort Worth Star-Telegram report that listed the Rangers, Yankees, Cubs, Astros and Twins as teams he is considerin­g.

"I know one more team is in," Darvish playfully posted on Twitter in English. (It is believed he means the Dodgers are still in play.)

Darvish's tweeting skills are formidable, but the 31-year-old's pitching chops are what is likely to land him a contract in excess of $100 million. Even though he was lit up in Game 7 of the World Series against the Astros, Darvish and Jake Arrieta are the top starters on the free-agent market. Darvish has a career major-league record of 56-42 with a 3.42 ERA.

But would owner Hal Steinbrenn­er really sandbag the club's carefully crafted plan to stay under the luxury tax in anticipati­on of next year's massively attractive free-agent class just for Darvish?

"He's obviously a tremendous pitcher," Cashman said. "Do we recognize Yu Darvish as a unique talent and a premier starting pitcher available in this marketplac­e? The answer to that question is yes. Would we in the end be one of the last teams standing? I can't answer that. But I have talked to Joel Wolfe, his agent. I can acknowledg­e that. And I will continue to do my job, which is to stay engaged with what's available in the marketplac­e to make sure that any opportunit­y that does exist I share with ownership and share it in every way, shape and form so [I] can make the most informed decision for this franchise at his level. And I'll leave it at that."

Cashman, though, did not leave it at that when he was asked if there was a player for whom the Yankees would exceed the tax threshold.

"The answer is, 'I don't think so,' "Cashman said. "But there are no absolutes on anything. Like, the one thing I've learned over time [is] people do have the right to change their minds. And I'm not trying to encourage a great deal of social media or news coverage of, 'Hey, we may not do this.' We're absolutely committed to getting under that tax. I don't believe that will change. But, again, if asked the question, 'Is it possible it could change?' — yeah, I guess it's all possible.''

One thing the Yankees could do to "create more flexibilit­y" is trade Jacoby Ellsbury and the more than $68 million he is owed over the next three years. But they have been unsuccessf­ul in that pursuit, plus Ellsbury has a no-trade clause.

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