New York Post

Bullpen help for Rockies

Rockies may be done dealing for relievers

- By JOEL SHERMAN

The Rockies continue to contemplat­e another reliever after acquiring Pat Neshek from the Phillies. But they also wonder if the combinatio­n of Neshek and internal additions could save them from making another deal.

Tyler Chatwood recently came off the disabled list and was put into the pen and Colorado believes his sinker/four-seam fastball/slider repertoire plays better out of the pen. Part of that will have to be the righty accepting the role because he is in his walk year and might believe the best way to maximize his free agent value is staying a starter.

Also, the Rockies recently recalled Carlos Estevez, who has yet to have major league success, but whose fastball/changeup combo is one the Rockies think should play in the big leagues.

One NL executive on AJ Ramos, whom the Mets obtained from the Marlins on Friday night: “He is a high-wire act. He has big [guts], but his stuff isn’t the same as it used to be.”

However, a scout who covers the Mets system described starter Merandy Gonzalez and center fielder Ricardo Cespedes — the pieces given to the Marlins for Ramos — as “fringe prospects.”

A day after Ben Gamel won the Internatio­nal League MVP last August, the Yankees traded him to the Mariners. They envisioned a crowded 40-man ros- ter, including lots of outfielder­s such as Aaron Judge, Clint Frazier and Dustin Fowler who they ranked ahead of Gamel, who has played so well this season with Seattle that he might finish second to Judge for AL Rookie of the Year.

Nothing has changed with the Yankees’ 40-man issues and volume of outfielder­s they like, which is why Billy McKinney and Jake Cave — lefty-swinging outfielder­s like Gamel — become possible trade chips between now and Aug. 31. Neither is on the 40-man roster. Both would have to be placed there after the season or risk being lost.

McKinney, the 24th pick in the 2013 draft by the Athletics, was the second piece after Gleyber Torres the Yankees received from the Cubs last July in the Aroldis Chapman deal. He was impressive during the spring, began this year slowly, but in 23 games at Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre has hit .333 with a 1.008 OPS.

Cave, whom the Yankees once lost to the Reds in the Rule 5 draft only to get back, was promoted to Triple-A in mid-June and in 38 subsequent games hit .366 with 20 extra- base hits, including 11 homers.

At the least, Cave and McKinney have put themselves on the radar elsewhere as it continues to be hard to see where they fit with the Yankees.

More than ever teams are looking to solidify their bullpens because they are needed to survive the season, plus the importance of relievers magnifies come the postseason.

Whether because of injury or de-emphasis, just 72 starters were qualified for the ERA title. That is barely more than two per team and would mark the fourth straight year that the total has dropped and be down from 93 as recently as 2011.

The Cardinals were under .500 and fighting to stay in the playoff hunt despite being the only team with five qualified starters.

Meanwhile, the two most dominant teams of 2017 — the Astros and Dodgers — were among the nine teams that had just one. The Dodgers one is Clayton Kershaw, who is on the DL.

The Yankees have three with Jordan Montgomery, Luis Severino and Masahiro Tanaka. The Mets, who thought a powerhouse rotation would again carry them to October, have just one with Jacob deGrom.

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