The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Yankees’ SS dishes out nicknames on Twitter

Gregorius gives teammates new nicknames on Twitter

- By Ronald Blum

NEWYORK » A franchise known for the Babe, the Boss and the Iron Horse has a new set of nicknames.

Clown face is in left, Bow and arrow competes for time in center and Male judge is stationed in right.

These monikers are all bestowed by the New York Yankees’ Didi Gregorius. After wins, the shortstop tweets highlights and praise using emojis for teammates in his own digital hieroglyph­s.

“Just spur of the moment,” he said. “Whatever comes into mind, what I think will fit in best, and that’s what I do.”

Snarky sobriquets have given a cool edge to a usually staid-looking group known for puritanica­l pinstripes.

Man in tuxedo starts at third — Todd Frazier, a.k.a. The Todd father. Glowing star (Starlin Castro) mans second and Squid (Gary Sanchez) is behind the plate. There’s a compound emoticon — Flexed biceps and Pouting face for first baseman Chase Headley.

Oh, that Clown face: Brett Gardner. Jacoby Ellsbury is Bow and arrow and, if you haven’t figured it out yet, Aaron Judge is Male judge.

“I think that’s just maybe the im- pression that I give off sometimes just in my facial expression­s,” Headley said. “Certainly not how I feel, but I think maybe when I’m playing I’m focused or whatever and I look like that.”

Stopwatch (Masahiro Tanaka) is on a rotation that also includes Baby — Luis Severino. Fire (Aroldis Chapman) finishes close wins.

“Some of them laugh about it,” Gregorius said. “I don’t think everybody knows that I’m doing it.”

His emoticons keep gaining in prominence. The Yankees’ tweeted their batting order with emoticons on June 22 and a Tweet Like Didi

hashtag has gained traction. The team’s YES Network analyzes Gregorius’ tweets in the manner of Jean-Francois Champollio­n decipherin­g Egyptian artifacts in the 19th century.

Todd Frazier, acquired by the Yankees from the Chicago White Sox, feels honored by Gregorius’ pick for him.

“I’m looking sharp, man, because that’s probably the opposite of what I dress like,” he said. “It’s got like the Mafiosa kind of scene in there.”

Rookie Clint Frazier quickly earned a triple emoji: Boxing glove, Carrot and Top with upwards arrow above.

“I wanted the lion emoji, because it had the big red mane,” explained Frazier, who was forced to trim his long locks by the Yankees during spring training. “I like the boxing hands, too. He uses that as a reference for my quick hands, is what he says.”

Gardner, called the “heart and soul” of the Yankees by pitcher CC Sabathia, wasn’t surewhethe­r his emoji meant he was a clown or a joker.

“Maybe a little bit of both. Maybe more the class clown.” he said. “I’m not sure exactly what the meaning is behind it, but I know he has a lot of fun with it. People enjoy it. It’s great.”

Tanaka is Stopwatch followed by “time” because Gregorius considers it Tanaka Time when the Japanese star takes the mound. Castro sometimes gets a “lin” after his Star. Aaron Hicks is Older man.

“Didi, he’s a trip,” Hicks said with a wide smile.

Ellsbury got his Bow and Arrow because his mother is a Navajo. Sanchez became a Squid because general manager Brian Cashman referred to him two years ago as the Kraken, a legendary sea monster. First baseman Chris Carter was Rhinoceros. Backup catcher Austin Romine is Rowboat , and Miguel Andujar was dubbed Japanese ogre after getting three hits in his major league debut. When he got his first big league hit in June, Tyler Wade was referred to as Sleuth or spy.

“I got no idea,” Wade said.

Rookie pitcher Jordan Montgomery is Turkey , he thinks maybe because he played college ball for the South Carolina Gamecocks.

“That’s the only thing I can do with,” he said.

Designated hitter Matt Holliday has perhaps the most boring emoticon combo: Flexed biceps and Neutral face . When rookie Garrett Cooper had a fourhit game this week, he earned “mini” followed by Automobile, a MINI Cooper.

“That’s what he’s called me the whole time I’ve been up here,” Cooper said. “I kind of knew he was going to go with that.”

Acquired from Arizona after the 2014 season, Gregorius arrived in New York with a title: The Dutch-born infielder was knighted a member of Order of Orange-Nassau after helping the Netherland­s win the 2011 Baseball World Cup . His noble rank is even on his Twitter account, and the Yankees referred to himwith a crossed swords emoji.

Gregorius initiated game recap tweets the following April , began inserting emojis the following month and started his Spreadthen­ews hashtag in August. Individual teammate emoticons were added starting in April 2016 , andtwomont­hs later he tweeted: “An emoji is worth 1000 words!”

Gregorius, an artist who also draws and edits video, doesn’t readily reveal the thought process of his emoticon decisions, even to teammates.

“They have to guess,” he said. an MMA fighter eager to charge his opponent, something he obviously can’t do in a boxing match.

But with as much hype and promotion being thrown into the ring with both fighters,

McGregor left plenty of intrigue and insists he didn’t show half the boxing skills he honed has a youth in Ireland, simply teasing anyone in attendance and everyone else whomay have tuned into any livestream­ing on social media.

“I don’t know how many times I’ve shocked the world, and I’m going to shock it once again,” McGregor said. “It’s not going to end well for Floyd. It’s not going to end well for all the people doubting me.”

The 29-year- old Irishman insists nothing has changed in his training, other than the fact he can’t use his legs or take his opponent to the ground, and he’s the same hard-working fighter that won two Ultimate Fighting Championsh­ip titles.

“I show up to the gym, I work hard, and through my hard work I gain my confidence — that’s been the same since day one,” said McGregor, the reigning UFC Lightweigh­t Champion and former UFC Featherwei­ght Champion. “The fundamenta­ls are still there, I show up, I work hard.”

While speculatio­n is McGregor will be the aggressor early on, his gameplan and strategy remain a mystery since this will be his first profession­al boxing match. What hasn’t been a mystery is the air of confidence he displays, combined with a clear disdain for his opponent that has him assured he will hand Mayweather his first profession­al loss.

“You can’t prepare for me, you can’t prepare for me, you can’t prepare for the movement, you can’t prepare for any of it,” McGregor said. “He can sit here and watch this (workout), and I’m sure he has been watching that. Let him watch, let him try and study, but you cannot prepare for this. There is nobody in the game that moves like me, that strikes like me and that has the confidence like me.

“This is a fight that has been in my crosshairs since Floyd’s been opening his mouth, simple as that. I see a beaten man in his eyes, in his body language, in everything he does. I’m going to knock him out bad, he’s too small. I know he’s fast, I know he’s got good reflexes, I know he’s experience­d. I don’t care. I hit you, you fall, and that’s it. He will be unconsciou­s.”

 ?? JEFF HAYNES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? New York Yankees’ Didi Gregorius smiles during batting practice before a baseball game against the Chicago White Sox in Chicago. A franchise known for the Babe, the Boss and the Iron Horse has a new set of nicknames thanks to Gregorius’ Twitter account.
JEFF HAYNES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE New York Yankees’ Didi Gregorius smiles during batting practice before a baseball game against the Chicago White Sox in Chicago. A franchise known for the Babe, the Boss and the Iron Horse has a new set of nicknames thanks to Gregorius’ Twitter account.
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