New York Daily News

THAT WINNING FORMULA

Pitching, health among keys to Yankee success

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Theycontin­ue to demonstrat­e the consummate home run or bust offense and have so far shown just marginal improvemen­t in their base-running acumen which last year was among the sloppiest in the game. And yet there can be no mistaking this is a vastly better Yankee team than last season. A team that went into the weekend boasting the best record in baseball, and if you’re wondering why, well, there are numerous factors that cannot be denied.

PITCHING

Going into the weekend, the Yankees’ overall 2.75 team ERA ranked third in baseball, their 2.51 bullpen ERA second. Most impressive, however, has been the uncanny consistenc­y of their starting pitchers. After April 21, when the Yankees were 7-6, Gerrit Cole, Nestor Cortes, Jameson Taillon and Jordan Montgomery all made four starts apiece — 16 in all — and in none of them did they give up more than two earned runs. The lone exception in the rotation was Luis Severino, who gave up one, four, three and three earned runs in his four starts over that span. Equally important is the fact that none of them have missed a start this year which brings us to the next key factor in the Yankees’ success:

HEALTH

Knock on wood on this one, but the Yankees so far have been the most injury-free team in baseball — quite a contrast from the last few seasons when they seemingly were hardly ever with the starting lineup intact. Since the start of the season they’ve had only one player — reserve outfielder Tim Locastro — go on the IL (By contrast, the Rays, last year’s AL East champs, currently have 10 pitchers alone on the IL) Heck, even Aaron Hicks has stayed healthy (if not productive) all year! Falling into that same category is:

ANTHONY RIZZO’S REVIVED LEFTY BAT

Though he, nor anyone around the Yankees, would ever admit it, Rizzo was never the same player after he contracted COVID last year. He hit just five homers after returning from the COVID list on Aug. 18. For that reason, the Yankees had reservatio­ns about re-signing him, first pursuing Freddie Freeman on the free-agent market and also inquiring about a trade for the A’s Matt Olson. The Yankees as a team had just 53 homers from the left side in ‘21, the 26th fewest in the majors. This year Rizzo has nine alone. There’s no denying the Yankees are still a home runsor-bust offense. (Thursday’s 15-7 whopping of the White Sox and Dylan Cease, one of the best pitchers in baseball, was a prototype Yankee win — four home runs/14 strikeouts. As scouts have been saying for years, if you want to beat the Yankees, you’ve got to keep ‘em in the ballpark.) According to the Elias Bureau, their 50.6% of runs via the home run is tops in baseball and they’ve been in the top five the last five years. But at least it hasn’t been a mostly righties affair, which was the

big criticism last year of Brian Cashman’s makeup of the club.

DEFENSE AND RUN PREVENTION

Cashman didn’t do a whole lot of re-making the club this offseason but what he did do — the trade of Gary Sanchez and Gio Urshela to the Twins for Isiah Kiner-Falefa, Josh Donaldson and catcher Ben Rortvedt — was significan­t. The athletic Kiner-Falefa has provided steady defense at short, allowing the Yankees to move Gleyber Torres back to second where he has proved far more comfortabl­e while slowly regaining the form that made him an All-Star his first two seasons in the majors (three of his five home runs either tied or gave the Yankees the lead). As noted last week by the Daily News’ Yankee beat reporter Kristie Ackert, the Yankees as of Friday ranked third in defensive runs saved in the majors, per Fangraphs, as opposed to 29th out of 30 last year. Kiner-Falefa ranked eighth among shortstops with three defensive runs saved whereas last year Torres ranked 120th among shortstops with -7 defensive runs saved but has five runs saved this year at second base. As for the other part of the trade, for years scouts were in agreement that the Yankees were never going to the World Series with Sanchez as their catcher and last year they threw out only 17% of opposing baserunner­s which was the second lowest in the majors. This year, under the quality control direction of coach Luis Rojas and the use of PitchCom for better communicat­ion between the catchers and pitchers, the Yankees, as of Friday, had allowed the fewest stolen base attempts and tied with the A’s for the fewest stolen bases against.

So, as is evident, the Yankees are clicking on all cylinders right now — pitching defense and power — at the same time staying healthy and discoverin­g to their delight there’s a lot of parity and mediocrity in baseball and not a lot of really good teams. They may not see one of those until June 23-26 when the Houston Astros come into Yankee Stadium. Given Cashman’s renewal of verbal hostilitie­s with Astros owner Jim Crane this week, I’d be circling those dates on my calendar. The Red Sox may be dead in the water this year, but the Yankees most definitely have a new arch rival.

 ?? AP ?? The Yankees have done a lot right so far this season, which is the reason they headed into the weekend with the best record in baseball.
AP The Yankees have done a lot right so far this season, which is the reason they headed into the weekend with the best record in baseball.

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