National Post (National Edition)

With Gray, Yankees back to old form again

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AGGRESSIVE BUYERS

DAVE SHEININ All of baseball knew that New York Yankees general manager Brian Cashman was standing by, waiting for the right moment to flip the switch that would shift his team out of transition mode and into go-for-it mode. The only question was when. Given the Yankees’ vast resources — not only in regards to their economic might but the formidable army of prospects they had been stockpilin­g during their rare downsizing — it was a scary propositio­n for the rest of the game.

That moment, as it turns out, came in July, with a pair of major trades that have turned the Yankees back into legitimate World Series contenders this summer and fall for the first time in perhaps half a decade. And now that the switch has been flipped, the Yankees also appear to have staying power, with a window for contending that, having now been thrown open, could stay open for years.

“We’re trying to go from good to great,” Cashman told reporters. “I can’t predict a time frame on that. I just know we’re the New York Yankees, and we’ve represente­d a championsh­ip-calibre effort on a year-in, yearout basis, and we’re trying to get closer to a championsh­ip and hopefully deliver one.”

Two weeks ago, the Yankees acquired relievers David Robertson and Tommy Kahnle and infielder Todd Frazier from the Chicago White Sox for three prospects — only one of whom, outfielder Blake Rutherford, was rated among their best — plus reliever Tyler Clippard, a deal that immediatel­y filled one hole in their lineup and made their bullpen arguably the deepest in the game in quality, backend options.

And then Monday, Cashman pulled off a second blockbuste­r, getting 27-yearold right-hander Sonny Gray, one of only a handful of front-end starters available at the deadline, from the Oakland A’s for three more prospects. While those three prospects were all highly regarded, two of them — pitcher James Kaprielian and outfielder Dustin Fowler — suffered serious, season-ending injuries this year, making their futures less certain, and the third, shortstop/centre-fielder Jorge Mateo, is 22 years old and still in Class A.

A year ago, the deadline trades of veterans Aroldis Chapman, Andrew Miller and Carlos Beltran for prospects signalled the start of an unusual transition­al phase for the Yankees, an acknowledg­ment that their old ways of throwing money at their problems had left the roster bloated, inflexible and old. But those deals, plus a stellar player-developmen­t system that produced 2017 all-stars Luis Severino and Aaron Judge, gave the Yankees a strong, youthful core, anchored by a farm system that had jumped from among the worst in the game to among the best.

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