USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Stroman addresses past beef with Yankees GM

- Pete Caldera NorthJerse­y.com USA TODAY Network

NEW YORK – A mutual need brought Marcus Stroman and the Yankees together, with optimism replacing any lingering hard feelings.

“I get the chills thinking about my first start at Yankee Stadium,” he said last week, a day after his two-year, $37 million free agent contract with a vesting option for 2026 was made official.

Maybe this marriage never happens if the Yankees had signed their top rotation target, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, or pulled off a Dylan Cease trade, or somehow convinced Blake Snell – coming off a Cy Young Award season – to take half of what they offered Yamamoto, yet to throw a big-league pitch.

“I think our team overall is going to be a constant evolution,” said Yankees GM Brian Cashman, still open to pitching upgrades in 2024, all the way to the Aug. 1 trade deadline.

Those words speak to other questions in the Yanks rotation, with Nestor Cortes and Carlos Rodon coming off injurymarr­ed seasons and Clarke Schmidt being relied upon more than ever.

In the grand scheme, how the Yanks and Stroman got together is less important than how the right-hander might accomplish more than just stabilizin­g a staff. “I think we’re capable of definitely having a deep October run,” said Stroman. “That’s obviously the goal.”

Yankees, Stroman clear the air

Once the Yanks pivoted toward Stroman, with appeal for his high groundball rates and fearless mound demeanor, a few things happened.

Stroman’s social media was suddenly cleared of past posts trolling the Yankees, and Cashman cleared the air in a phone conversati­on with Stroman.

This trouble dated to September 2019, when Cashman told Yahoo Sports that “we were interested in Stroman but we didn’t think he would be a differencemake­r.”

Traded to the Mets from the Toronto Blue Jays that summer, Stroman followed with a critical Twitter post, comparing his superior pitching stats against the Yankees starters.

“It was my bad,” Cashman said last week, adding that his quote was about Toronto’s asking price.

“For the amount of talent they wanted back, (Stroman) wasn’t going to be enough of a difference-maker,” Cashman said. “If I didn’t value the player, I wouldn’t be trying to trade for him.”

At the time, Cashman apologized to Stroman through Stroman’s then-agent.

Late last month, when the Yankees made their interest known to Stroman’s agent and ex-Mets GM Brodie Van Wagenen, Cashman insisted on phoning Stroman to apologize again.

Ready to thrive at Yankee Stadium

Stroman wasn’t seeking an explanatio­n from Cashman.

“We kind of laughed about it and we moved on,” Stroman said of their recent phone conversati­on. “He let me know how interested he was in me as a pitcher, thought that I was someone that would thrive in the lights and the pressure. “And I thought it was a perfect fit.” Growing up on Long Island as a Yankees fan, Stroman has long felt he’s built for the Bronx.

“I think a lot of guys avoid coming to New York and playing for the Yankees because of that reason,” Stroman said of the pressurize­d atmosphere. “I’m someone who feels it brings out the best in me.”

Stroman’s fiery nature has also extended to battles on social media. “I’d say I’m misunderst­ood, for sure,” said Stroman,

responding to that direct question.

But he’s eager for Yankees fans to watch him compete, “something I do at the highest level,” and to tap into Gerrit Cole’s knowledge while blending into the staff.

“I feel like I’m someone who adapts very easily,” said Stroman, adding that Cole, captain Aaron Judge, Anthony Rizzo and Anthony Volpe were among teammates who’ve already reached out.

Stroman is physically 100%

Last season with the Chicago Cubs, Stroman was 9-4 with a 2.28 ERA through June 20 (16 starts) when a hip problem flared up.

On his way back, a rib cage cartilage fracture effectively ended his season after July 31; he made four September appearance­s.

“Physically, I’m ready,” said Stroman, having already thrown “four to five” bullpen sessions in Tampa, Florida, residing 10 minutes from the Yankees spring training headquarte­rs.

Stroman described the rib-cage fracture as fully healed.

Stroman last threw 200 innings in 2017, but he’s averaged 137 innings over the previous two seasons. His contract would become a $55 million, three-year deal if he pitches 140 innings in 2025.

“When I’m healthy, I would put myself up as one of the best pitchers in baseball,” said Stroman, adding, “I do think the best is still in me.”

 ?? DAVID BANKS/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Marcus Stroman was an All-Star for the second time in his career in 2023.
DAVID BANKS/USA TODAY SPORTS Marcus Stroman was an All-Star for the second time in his career in 2023.

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