USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Yankees trade four prospects for starting pitching help

- Pete Caldera

NEW YORK – Already this offseason, Jameson Taillon had bid goodbye to teammates Josh Bell and Joe Musgrove, traded from the retooling Pittsburgh Pirates.

By early this week, Taillon learned he was gone, too.

“Ever since I got the news I was going to New York, I haven’t felt nervous (or) overwhelme­d. Just extremely excited for the opportunit­y,” Taillon said a day after being dealt to the Yankees.

“Overnight, I went from a rebuilding team to a team like the Yankees … where the only thing they care about is to win.

“That kind of lit a fire under me.”

Right-hander Miguel Yajure led a package of four prospects headed to Pittsburgh for Taillon, who could slot third in the Yankees’ rotation after his old roommate Gerrit Cole and newly acquired veteran Corey Kluber.

And the Yankees showed they weren’t done dealing, creating additional space under the $210 million luxury tax threshold by dealing reliever Adam Ottavino to the Boston Red Sox, of all teams.

With just over $8 million in payroll relief, the Yankees could reunite with veteran outfielder Brett Gardner and still have room to add another reliever.

Admittedly, Taillon is part of a group no pitcher wants entry in: the two-time Tommy John surgery club.

The right-hander hasn’t started a big league game since May 2019, but “I’m feeling great, ready to roll,” said Taillon, 29, who ended last season throwing to live hitters.

“Everything’s on schedule for me,” Taillon said. “I’m confident I’ll be ready to go and I can add something” to a club with World Series aspiration­s.

In the same five-year span as his arm injuries, Taillon became a testicular cancer survivor.

“It sounds crazy, but each experience is separate and you learn something new every time,” Taillon said. “I guess all the injuries just sparked a lot of curiosity out of me,” guiding him toward finding new ways to approach his craft.

“I love collaborat­ing ... keeping an open mind and never stop learning.”

Taillon said he completely altered his mechanics to take the stress off his elbow, using more of his legs in his delivery and tightening up what used to be a loopy, whippy arm action.

“I had a coming-to-grips moment,” Taillon said, reasoning that “I need to change something or my career’s going to be over.

“I’m recovering extremely well; that’s exciting,” Taillon said.

“But none of that matters unless I go out and prove it.”

A former first-round draft pick (second overall) in 2010, Taillon came up in the Pirates’ system with Cole and even roomed with the future Yankees’ ace in spring training.

“Every night, you get a fivestar cooked meal,” Taillon said of life with Cole, which included a side of pitching expertise.

“He cares a lot about his craft (and) his teammates,” Taillon said. “I looked up to him a lot as a teammate and as a friend, and I’m sure I’ll be doing the same thing with him in New York.”

Taillon has already connected with Yankees pitching coach Matt Blake.

“I want to make sure I’m on the right track and keeping all the right habits,” said Taillon.

 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR/AP ?? Jameson Taillon, 29, is 29-24 with a 3.67 ERA over 82 big-league starts.
GENE J. PUSKAR/AP Jameson Taillon, 29, is 29-24 with a 3.67 ERA over 82 big-league starts.

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