The Norwalk Hour

Yankees haven’t been able to buy themselves a championsh­ip

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NEW YORK — On Nov. 20, 2008, Hal Steinbrenn­er was officially named Yankees general partner and the following year the team went to the World Series for the first time in six years, winning it for the first time in nine years. They did so with a major league-leading payroll of $201,441,289 which was nearly $70 million more than the second-highest payroll of the Mets.

Since then, the Yankees have consistent­ly had the highest or second-highest payrolls in baseball but have not been to the World Series. After finishing third in 2013 with 85 wins and the fourth straight highest payroll in baseball, Steinbrenn­er made the statement that the Yankees shouldn’t have to have a $220 million payroll to win. He’s reiterated that a few times since, at the same time the Yankees repeatedly exceeded the luxury tax threshold from 2010-2017 and again in 2019 with no World Series to show for it.

This year their projected payroll according to FanGraphs is $246 million which, under the new Collective Balance Tax thresholds, will be about $16 million above the first threshold for which they will be taxed 20%. It is also perilously close to the second threshold of $250 million for which the tax goes up to 32%. Despite this, Steinbrenn­er found himself coming under some media and fan criticism for choosing not to address the Yankees’ primary need at shortstop through the freeagent market where five of the best shortstops in the game — Carlos Correa, Trevor Story, Marcus Semien, Corey Seager and Javy Baez — were all available, albeit for substantia­l nine-figure asking prices.

With two players already holding $300 million contracts in Gerrit Cole and Giancarlo Stanton, and another potential ninefigure contract looming in Aaron Judge, Steinbrenn­er and GM Brian Cashman made the collective decision to obtain their needed shortstop via a trade, and not throw a long-term roadblock in the way of their two top prospects, shortstops Anthony Volpe and Oswald Peraza.

But after the lockout ended, there were still two shortstops left on the board — Correa and Story — with seemingly dwindling options. Steinbrenn­er and Cashman held firm and acquired Isiah Kiner-Falefa in a trade with Minnesota, only to incur further media criticism when it was learned they were also taking on all of the remaining $50 million on Josh Donaldson’s contract in the trade. That, in turn, enabled the Twins to sign Correa for a three-year $105 million deal — one-third of what he was originally seeking.

But to believe the Yankees were somehow snookered by the Twins was to assume the Yankees actually wanted Correa — which they didn’t for a number of reasons. First, they were concerned about his back and the substantia­l amount of games he missed from 2017-2020. Second, his involvemen­t as a central figure in the Astros cheating scandal which directly affected the Yankees was a factor. And lastly, the disparagin­g remarks he’d made about Derek Jeter. His close relationsh­ip with Alex Rodriguez also didn’t help.

But while Steinbrenn­er has continued to spend, he has also made the point that there needs to come a time when the Yankee player developmen­t system will produce enough of a young core of players (as it did in the early ‘90s with Bernie Williams, Jeter, Andy Pettitte, Mariano Rivera and Jorge Posada) that over-thethresho­ld payrolls won’t be necessary. A major component to accomplish this is analytics, which critics claim Cashman has overemphas­ized.

As last year in particular demonstrat­ed, the Yankees are not a fundamenta­lly sound team and they have also failed repeatedly in drafting and developing quality frontline starting pitchers. The 2021 Yankees made 50 outs on the bases, fifth-most in the majors, and they tied the Royals for the most outs at home with 22. At the same time, neither of their two latest top homegrown starting pitchers, Clarke Schmidt or Deivi Garcia, was able to secure a spot in the rotation. They unfortunat­ely remain the top-rated starters in their system, which doesn’t bode well for Steinbrenn­er’s vision of developing his own starting pitching — generally one of the most expensive commoditie­s in baseball (see: Cole) — to help keep future payrolls in line.

This is why it is almost imperative for Luis Severino to finally fulfill his great promise this year. For two sterling seasons, 2017-2018, Severino gave every indication of being that first, long-awaited dominant homegrown Yankee starting pitcher since Pettitte, but after signing a fouryear/$40 million extension in 2019 he’s been nothing but hurt. Interestin­gly, the most successful starter to come out of the system last year — the 5-11 lefty Nestor Cortes — had twice previously been cast off by them because he didn’t fit the analytics mold of a 6-5 gas thrower.

Despite the embarrassm­ent of last year, and the continuing rash of injuries to plague the Yankees over the last three seasons, Cashman chose to double down on the analytics this winter, hiring four new coaches — hitting coaches Dillon Lawson and Casey Dykes, first base coach Travis Chapman, and assistant pitching coach Desi Druschel — all of whom have strong analytic background­s. Other than Chapman (one at-bat), none of them ever played in the majors, not that that should necessaril­y matter.

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