The Day

The future is bright for Yanks

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New York — Most teams' fans focus on the opening-day lineup. With the Yankees, the view is further ahead.

Catcher Gary Sanchez, first baseman Greg Bird and outfielder Aaron Judge figure to be on the field when the Yankees open today at Tampa Bay. But the team likely won't develop into a power until the arrivals of outfielder Clint Frazier, shortstop Gleyber Torres, left-handers Jordan Montgomery and Justus Sheffield, and right-hander James Kaprielian, who will start the season in the minor leagues.

"I think the one thing that I've realized in camp is the depth of our young players is bigger than I realized," Yankees manager Joe Girardi said.

New York made just three additions during the offseason that appeared to be significan­t: signing closer Aroldis Chapman as a free agent after trading him last July and adding right-handed hitters Matt Holliday and Chris Carter.

"It's a fine line we're walking, but one I think we're doing a good job of doing it," general manager Brian Cashman said,

New York could not overcome a 9-17 start last year. After getting back to .500, the Yankees sort of contended until September, remaining on the periphery of the wild-card race and finishing fourth in the AL East at 84-78.

First baseman Mark Teixeira retired and Brian McCann was traded after losing the starting catcher's job to rookie Gary Sanchez in the final two months. Much of the lineup is unchanged, led by outfielder­s Brett Gardner and Jacoby Ellsbury, third baseman Chase Headley and second baseman Starlin Castro. YANKEES AT RAYS 1 p.m., Tropicana Field (YES, ESPN)

Shortstop Didi Gregorius is likely out for the first month of the season after straining his throwing shoulder during the World Baseball Classic, and Ronald Torreyes appears to be the likely fill-in.

Rookies to watch

Judge showed tremendous power after his August call-up but must make more contact after striking out 42 times in 84 at-bats over 27 games. No longer a rookie, Sanchez will have to show he can bounce back from pitchers' adjustment­s. He hit .345 with 19 homers and 38 RBIs in the first 44 games after his Aug. 3 introducti­on into the lineup, then finished in a 2-for-29 slide that included one home run and four RBIs.

Rotation

Masahiro Tanaka, CC Sabathia, Michael Pineda and Luis Severino head an unimposing rotation with Adam Warren, Bryan Mitchell, Luis Cessa and Chad Green competing for the final slot.

Pen pals

New York's bullpen was its strength during much of last season, with the triad of Chapman, Andrew Miller and Dellin Betances holding leads. Chapman and Miller were dealt in the summer for prospects, but Chapman was brought back as free agent with a record contract for a reliever. Set-up men will include the losers of the rotation competitio­n plus right-hander Tyler Clippard and left-hander Tommy Layne.

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 ?? DAVID GOLDMAN/AP PHOTO ?? Greg Bird of the Yankees (33) is high-fived by Gary Sanchez after they scored on Bird’s two-run homer in a spring training game against the Braves on Friday night at Atlanta. Matt Holliday, right, looks on.
DAVID GOLDMAN/AP PHOTO Greg Bird of the Yankees (33) is high-fived by Gary Sanchez after they scored on Bird’s two-run homer in a spring training game against the Braves on Friday night at Atlanta. Matt Holliday, right, looks on.

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