USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Leading OFF

Rebooting Yankees ‘hellbent’ on elusive World Series title

- Gabe Lacques USA TODAY

TAMPA, Fla. – Urgency is back at Steinbrenn­er Field, not that it ever left. Yet the win-or-else ethos that’s marked the New York Yankees franchise is viewed through a darker filter these days.

A fourth-place finish can do that for a lot of franchises, perhaps none more so than the 27-time World Series champions who have gone title-less since 2009. An 82-80 finish that exposed both the fragility of big-league depth and inadequacy of reinforcem­ents can spur significant change, and even more soulsearch­ing.

So, the Yankees didn’t just go shopping this winter, they went for broke – renting superstar outfielder Juan Soto for a steep cost, a move the late George Steinbrenn­er would have loved and one green-lit by his more corporate legacy, Hal.

When the Yankees reflect on their 19game deficit in an American League East that was once their birthright, they didn’t just get lapped.

“It’s like sand getting kicked in your face,” noted Aaron Boone, suddenly entering his seventh year as manager.

And when they talk about a rebound, it’s not just chasing down the Toronto Blue Jays, the Tampa Bay Rays, the Baltimore Orioles and ensuring October 2024 isn’t a monthlong vacation.

“We’re hellbent on being a champion,” says Boone. “We understand very well that last year was not anything anyone in this organizati­on wants or demands or expects.

“I would say we have poured into that from ownership to the front office to the coaches and staff all the way to the players.”

The Yankees gathered this spring on the heels of what Boone described as a vibrant winter of unofficial workouts at the club’s minor league facility across the street. The spring training pablum, though, doesn’t go too far here. A team that crumbled when reigning MVP Aaron Judge suffered a toe injury knows it well enough.

“There’s a level of determinat­ion and focus that has a little bit of an edge to it. The 82-80 is still pretty fresh in our mind,” reigning AL Cy Young Award winner Gerrit Cole says, while noting the Yankees did well to continue their streak of non-losing seasons to 31.

“With that said, disaster was an appropriat­e word.”

‘We get injured too much’

Soto, the centerpiec­e of the sevenplaye­r deal that also sent reserve outfielder Trent Grisham to the Bronx, and former Red Sox outfielder Alex Verdugo aren’t due until full workouts this week.

New starter Marcus Stroman, lefty specialist Caleb Ferguson and others aren’t necessaril­y needle-movers, not when Japanese superstars Shohei Ohtani and Yoshinobu Yamamoto are joining forces with the Los Angeles Dodgers in Arizona.

The Yankees never seriously dallied in the Ohtani sweepstake­s but were one of several losers for Yamamoto’s services.

Still, they will lug a luxury-tax payroll expected to top $300 million into the year, committed as they are to the many culprits of last year’s nosedive, particular­ly on the offensive side.

Soto paired with Judge is, for now, a nice masking agent for those anticipati­ng that the non-Judge 30-plus crowd – projected leadoff hitter DJ LeMahieu and DH Giancarlo Stanton, most notably – may struggle yet again.

“I think we have a chance to be a great offense,” says Boone. “Again, right now, that’s all it is – a chance.

“Last year was a struggle for us offensively, for a lot of reasons. We had key guys go down, but again, that doesn’t always derail you or end the road for you. I go back to 2019 (when the Yankees reached the ALCS) where we were ravaged with injuries and everyone just kept on stepping up.

“The reinforcem­ents were there.” Not so much last year, when the Yankees finished 25th in the league in runs and 24th in OPS after Judge was shelved for two months, DH Anthony Rizzo’s concussion went undiagnose­d, and LeMahieu (.243, .390 slugging) and Stanton (.191, .695) were both banged up and worse than league average as hitters.

Health means less reliance on Oswaldo Cabrera (.574 OPS in 115 games) and Oswald Peraza (.539 in 52). It means shortstop Anthony Volpe’s offensive growth (.209 average, .666 OPS) is more easily offset by his stellar defense.

Boone says players’ participat­ion in offseason workouts, spurred on by Judge, has been outstandin­g. Cole would like to see it bear fruit once the lights go on and players may be prone to injury. “We get injured too much as a group. We need to improve,” says Cole, who led the AL in both ERA (2.09) and innings pitched (209) in capturing his first Cy Young Award. “By and large, you need to prepare in the offseason well.”

In Boone’s ideal 2024 Yankee world, a healthier LeMahieu or Verdugo, the often-productive but occasional­ly mercurial lefty hitter, hold down the leadoff spot.

Verdugo, Soto, second baseman Gleyber Torres – all are eligible for free agency after this season. Boone, a 12year major leaguer, knows human nature might bring them even more focus.

Yet he also believes urgency goes beyond the walk-year pressures.

“Time is precious for a major league athlete,” says Boone. “Even the guys that will make it 10, 15, 20 years in this game are going to be a non-player a lot longer.

“One of the messages to the guys is, don’t squander this time you have as an elite athlete. Take every advantage of it.”

‘It’s special to be a Yankee’

Between the projected lineup, rotation and closer, eight players will be at least 31. Stroman, who will turn 33 this season, joins the Yankees on a two-year deal after opting out of his final year of a $73 million contract with the Cubs.

“Very confident group,” says Stroman, a 2023 All-Star before missing much of September with injury. “It’s an honor to put on these pinstripes. Everybody knows the mission.”

Cole calls Stroman “one of the fiercest competitor­s we have in this game” and notes Stroman’s sinker-heavy, deception-oriented repertoire will play well against the hard-throwing Cole and Carlos Rodon.

Of course, the greater show – and most telling element of how the Yankee season may go – figures to come on the offensive end. Cole – who gave up a massive World Series homer to Soto in 2019 – calls the 25-year-old “just a magnificent hitter, really. Best feel for the strike zone I’ve ever come across. A combinatio­n of create-a-player statistics and (superb) attributes at the plate.”

Soto’s mere presence will already send a message to a group that Boone and Cole both say is a bit saltier after 2023, bringing what Boone says is “another level of edge and focus.”

Somehow, the buy-in has again been raised.

 ?? CHARLIE NEIBERGALL/AP ?? Yankees starting pitcher Gerrit Cole is the reigning 2023 AL Cy Young award winner.
CHARLIE NEIBERGALL/AP Yankees starting pitcher Gerrit Cole is the reigning 2023 AL Cy Young award winner.
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