Daily Southtown

Restore (some) order

After down ’23, Yanks aim to rise in stacked division

- By Noah Trister

It’s hard to tell what was most unusual about last season in the AL East.

The Orioles and Rays took the top two spots in the division, the first time that had ever happened. And the Yankees and Red Sox were the bottom two teams, which hadn’t occurred since before the start of divisional play.

The AL East has changed a lot from the days when the big-market behemoths would overpower the rest of the division. The Rays have been a formidable operation for a while now, and the Orioles capped a swift rise from the depths of a rebuild, winning 101 games and a division title in 2023. Their wealth of young, cost-controlled talent should make the Orioles a threat for years to come, and now they’ll take a shot at defending their AL East crown.

“We’ve proven it to ourselves that we can win a division and we can go to the playoffs, so I think you can just feel that in the atmosphere, how excited everyone is,” Orioles outfielder Austin Hays said. “Nobody’s scared. Nobody’s nervous.”

The Yankees won 99 games and the division two seasons ago, so it’s not as though their situation is hopeless in the face of the low-spending Orioles and Rays. What’s different about the AL East these days is you can look at the Yankees, Orioles, Rays and Blue Jays — and none of them seems like much of an underdog. 1. YANKEES: After barely finishing above .500 last year, the Yankees made a major offseason splash when they acquired three-time All-Star Juan Soto. A lineup with Soto, Aaron Judge, Giancarlo Stanton and Gleyber Torres is powerful enough to lift them back atop the division, but a lot will depend on the Yankees’ health after Judge’s troublesom­e toe was such a problem last year.

The stakes are high. Soto and Torres are entering their final season of team control, and manager Aaron Boone is under pressure to produce after last year’s disappoint­ment.

2. ORIOLES:

The Orioles haven’t made the playoffs in back-to-back seasons since 1996-97. Now they have a chance to become a postseason mainstay.

Gunnar Henderson and Adley Rutschman could be among the best players in baseball at their positions, and manager Brandon Hyde should have all sorts of options when filling out the lineup. A recent trade for Corbin Burnes gave the Orioles an ace they can lean on.

Whether the Orioles can repeat as division champions may come down to how they handle the absence of star closer Félix Bautista after Tommy John surgery.

Duplicatin­g last season’s 30-16 mark in one-run games will be a tall order.

3. BLUE JAYS: Other teams in the AL East could breathe a sigh of relief when Shohei Ohtani stayed out west instead of signing with the Blue Jays. They remain a dangerous team, however, with Vladimir Guerrero, Bo Bichette and George Springer in the fold.

Kevin Gausman leads all major league pitchers over the last two seasons in the FanGraphs version of wins above replacemen­t.

The Blue Jays have made the postseason in three of the last four seasons but haven’t won a pennant since 1993.

4. RAYS:

Discount the Rays at your peril — by now that’s clear.

The Rays are coming off a 99-win season in which they nearly held on to win the AL East despite major injury problems down the stretch. But now the Rays start the season with similar concerns. Starting pitchers Shane McClanahan, Drew Rasmussen and Jeffrey Spring are still recovering from injuries, and the Rays traded Tyler Glasnow during the offseason.

Shortstop Wander Franco’s status remains uncertain. He hasn’t played since August, when MLB and authoritie­s in the Dominican Republic began investigat­ing accusation­s that he had an improper relationsh­ip with a minor.

5. RED SOX: The Red Sox have finished last two straight seasons despite finishing with a not-that-terrible 78 wins each time. Such is life in the AL East.

The Red Sox have some punch in the lineup thanks to Rafael Devers and Triston Casas, but the starting rotation has plenty of questions even after Brayan Bello pitched well enough to earn a long-term deal. The team hired ex-pitcher Craig Breslow as its new chief baseball office, but he has his work cut out for him in the short term.

 ?? CHARLIE NEIBERGALL/AP ?? The Yankees missed the playoffs last season, but the offseason trade for slugger Juan Soto, above, should help them challenge for this year’s AL East title. The defending champion Orioles, Rays and Blue Jays also are in good position.
CHARLIE NEIBERGALL/AP The Yankees missed the playoffs last season, but the offseason trade for slugger Juan Soto, above, should help them challenge for this year’s AL East title. The defending champion Orioles, Rays and Blue Jays also are in good position.

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