River Avenue Blues

  • About
    • Privacy Policy
  • Features
    • Yankees Top 30 Prospects
    • Prospect Profiles
    • Fan Confidence
  • Resources
    • 2019 Draft Order
    • Depth Chart
    • Bullpen Workload
    • Guide to Stats
  • Shop and Tickets
    • RAB Tickets
    • MLB Shop
    • Fanatics
    • Amazon
    • Steiner Sports Memorabilia
River Ave. Blues » Polls » Page 3

Fan Confidence Poll: February 4th, 2019

February 4, 2019 by Mike

2018 Regular Season Record: 100-62 (851 RS, 669 RA, 98-64 expected record), second in ALE
2018 Postseason Record: 2-3 (22 RS, 29 RA), won WC Game, lost ALDS

Top stories from last week:

  • Estevan Florial and Mike King headline this year’s group of non-roster invitees to Spring Training.
  • Luis Cessa, Domingo German, and Jonathan Loaisiga drew trade interest earlier this winter. The Yankees signed David Hale and Jorge Saez to minor league deals.
  • The Yankees had three prospects on Keith Law’s top 110 prospects list.

Please take a second to answer the poll below and give us an idea how confident you are in the Yankees. You can view the interactive Fan Confidence Graph anytime via the Features tab in nav bar above, or by clicking here. Thanks in advance for voting.

Given the team's current roster construction, farm system, management, etc., how confident are you in the Yankees' overall future?
View Results

Filed Under: Polls Tagged With: Fan Confidence

Fan Confidence Poll: January 28th, 2019

January 28, 2019 by Mike

2018 Regular Season Record: 100-62 (851 RS, 669 RA, 98-64 expected record), second in ALE
2018 Postseason Record: 2-3 (22 RS, 29 RA), won WC Game, lost ALDS

Top stories from last week:

  • At long last, the Yankees finally traded Sonny Gray. Gray went to the Reds in a three-team trade with the Mariners that netted the Yankees prospect Josh Stowers and a Competitive Balance Round A draft pick.
  • Injury Updates: Didi Gregorius (Tommy John surgery) has resumed light baseball activities. Clint Frazier (post-concussion migraines) has been cleared to resume full baseball activities.
  • Rumor has it the Yankees are passing on Manny Machado now because they want to sign Nolan Arenado next offseason. The Yankees finalized their contract with Adam Ottavino and signed Danny Farquhar to a minor league deal.
  • Estevan Florial and Jonathan Loaisiga both appeared on Baseball Prospectus’ top 101 prospects list. The Yankees did not have anyone on Baseball America’s top 100 list.
  • Last, but certainly not least, Mariano Rivera became the first ever unanimous Hall of Famer. Pretty cool. Former Yankee Mike Mussina was voted into Cooperstown as well.

Please take a second to answer the poll below and give us an idea how confident you are in the Yankees. You can view the interactive Fan Confidence Graph anytime via the Features tab in nav bar above, or by clicking here. Thanks in advance for voting.

Given the team's current roster construction, farm system, management, etc., how confident are you in the Yankees' overall future?
View Results

Filed Under: Polls Tagged With: Fan Confidence

Poll: After Derek Jeter, who will be the next Yankee voted into the Hall of Fame?

January 24, 2019 by Mike

(Jim McIsaac/Getty)

Mariano Rivera made history throughout his 19-year career and he made history again earlier this week, when he became the first ever unanimous selection to the National Baseball Hall of Fame. All 425 voters named him on their ballot. I didn’t think it would happen but it did, and it’s pretty awesome. Couldn’t pick a better player to be the first unanimous Hall of Famer.

Mike Mussina, Rivera’s teammate with the Yankees for eight years, was also voted into the Hall of Fame earlier this week. Mussina has not yet decided whether he’ll wear a Yankees hat or an Orioles hat on his Hall of Fame plaque, though he did have more wins (147 to 123), more innings (2,009.2 to 1,553), more All-Star appearances (five to zero), and more WAR (+47.8 to +35.2) with the O’s. Going in as an Oriole seems appropriate.

Derek Jeter joins the Hall of Fame ballot next year and, like Rivera, he is a slam dunk first ballot Hall of Famer. He might even be unanimous! That would be fun, Rivera and Jeter being the first two unanimous Hall of Famers. Either way, Jeter is getting into the Hall of Fame next year. There’s no doubt about it. After that though, it might be a while until another Yankee gets voted into Cooperstown.

Bernie Williams and Jorge Posada have already dropped off the Hall of Fame ballot, having received less than the 5% needed to remain on the ballot another year. (Williams did spend two years on the ballot. Posada dropped off in year one.) Don Mattingly exhausted his 15 years on the ballot without being voted into the Hall of Fame. I suppose one of the eras committees could vote him in a la Harold Baines. We’ll see.

We know Jeter will be the next Yankee voted into the Hall of Fame by the Baseball Writers Association of America. We don’t know who will be the next after that. Let’s go through the upcoming candidates, shall we? Here are the Yankees due to appear on the Hall of Fame ballot in the coming years.

2020 ballot

Jeter is the big name here. He’s the only slam dunk Hall of Famer joining the ball next year. Also joining the ballot are former Yankees Jason Giambi, Bobby Abreu, and Alfonso Soriano. Abreu has a stathead case for Cooperstown but, if he gets in, he’ll have a Phillies cap on his plaque. He played more games with the Phillies (1,353) than all other teams combined (1,072).

Giambi played more games with the Athletics (1,036) than the Yankees (897), plus he won an MVP and finished second in the MVP voting while with the A’s. Also, there’s the performance-enhancing drug thing. Giambi gave that vague apology for letting people down without ever saying what he did, but we all know what he was talking about. So many Hall of Fame voters are dug in against PEDs that, even if Giambi’s case were stronger than it actually is, I still don’t think he’d get in.

Soriano played more games with the Cubs (889) than the Yankees (626) but he had some of his best seasons in pinstripes. He led the league in hits (209) and homers (41) in 2002 and finished third in the Rookie of the Year voting and third in the MVP voting while with the Yankees. Soriano’s best season, his 40/40 season (46 homers and 41 steals) came with the Nationals in 2006.

I don’t think Giambi has a chance at the Hall of Fame because of the PED stuff. Abreu and Soriano strike me as Hall of Very Good players rather than Hall of Famers, and hey, there’s nothing wrong with that. They had great careers and made tons of dough. Also, we’re looking for the next Yankee Hall of Famer here, and I don’t think Giambi, Abreu, or Soriano would have a Yankees hat on his Hall of Fame plaque even if they get in. They did more with other teams.

The best player with a chance to go into the Hall of Fame as a Yankee next year other than Jeter is Andy Pettitte. Pettitte was on the ballot for the first time this year and he received only 9.9% of the vote. He’s much, much closer to falling off the ballot than he is getting the 75% needed for induction into Cooperstown. It took Mussina six years on the ballot to get into the Hall of Fame. I have to think it’ll take Pettitte at least that long, if not longer to gain induction.

2021 ballot

There are no slam dunk Hall of Famers set to join the ballot in 2021, Yankees or otherwise. The best players joining the ballot are probably Tim Hudson and Mark Buehrle. The best former Yankees set to join the ballot are A.J. Burnett and Nick Swisher. Next.

2022 ballot

(Presswire)

Now we’re talking. Alex Rodriguez joins the ballot in three years and his career was very obviously worthy of the Hall of Fame. There’s no arguing with the raw numbers. A-Rod is one of the 10-15 best players in the game’s history and, if you take his career at face value, he should be a unanimous selection. You can’t take his career at face value though. Rodriguez admitted to using PEDs and served a year-long suspension for a separate PED transgression.

If Barry Bonds and Rogers Clemens do not get into the Hall of Fame, A-Rod has little hope of getting in. The voting body is skewing younger and thus more forgiving of PEDs, but so many voters are dug in on this subject and will not change their minds. Jeff Passan recently spoke to voters who do not vote for Bonds or Clemens and it’s clear where they stand. Bonds and Clemens have seen their support plateau in recent years. It would take a sea change in the Hall of Fame voting for them to get in before their eligibility expires in three years.

In the unlikely event he does get voted into Cooperstown, it’s safe to assume A-Rod would go in as a Yankee. He played more games as a Yankee (1,509) than he did as a Mariner and Ranger combined (1,275), plus he won two MVPs in pinstripes and his World Series ring. More games, more homers (351 to 345), more hardware, more rings as a Yankee than everywhere else combined. Should he get in — assuming Rodriguez stays on the ballot all ten years, his final year of eligibility will be 2031, which is a looong ways away — A-Rod would go in as a Yankee.

The other notable former Yankee joining the ballot in three years is Mark Teixeira. My hunch is that, if Fred McGriff was unable to get into the Hall of Fame, Teixeira won’t get in either. Teixeira did hit 409 homers and he led the league in homers and total bases once (39 and 344 in 2009, respectively), but that’s pretty much it. Teixeira did play more games as a Yankee (958) than as a Ranger, Brave, and Angel combined (904), so if he gets into the Hall of Fame, I think he’d go in as a Yankee. I’m just not sure he’s getting in.

2023 ballot

The only serious Hall of Fame candidate joining the ballot in four years is Carlos Beltran. I think he’ll get into Cooperstown. If not on the first ballot, than eventually. Beltran is an unlikely candidate to be the next Yankee in the Hall of Fame simply because he played the bulk of his career elsewhere. Only 341 of his 2,586 career games came in pinstripes, or 13.2%. I guess Beltran would go into the Hall of Fame as a Royal or Met? Either way, it won’t be as a Yankee, so Beltran’s not the answer to our question.

2024 ballot

Players who retired following last season will be eligible for Hall of Fame induction in 2024. That means Adrian Beltre, Joe Mauer, Chase Utley, and David Wright. They combined for zero (0) games as a Yankee. Matt Holliday and Curtis Granderson could also join the Hall of Fame ballot in five years if they fail to find work this winter. Holliday spent one kinda crummy year with the Yankees. He’d go in as a Rockie or Cardinal. Granderson had some of his best seasons in pinstripes but played more games with the Tigers (674) and Mets (573) than the Yankees (513). Love the Grandyman but I don’t see him as a serious Hall of Fame candidate.

Active players

(Jeff Zelevansky/Getty)

Ichiro Suzuki is a clear cut Hall of Famer and he’s going in as a Mariner, as he should. That leaves two active players who spend the bulk of their careers with the Yankees and deserve serious Hall of Fame consideration: Robinson Cano and CC Sabathia. This offseason’s trade ensures Cano would go into Cooperstown as a Yankee. He’ll split the second half of his career between (at least) two teams, meaning he won’t be able to accomplish enough with the Mariners to change his legacy from Yankees great to Mariners great.

Cano of course served a PED suspension last year, which likely ruins his chances at the Hall of Fame. Manny Ramirez has no-doubt Hall of Fame credentials, but, because he served two PED suspensions, he hasn’t topped 24% of the vote in his three years on the Hall of Fame ballot. Cano is closing in on 3,000 hits and Jeff Kent’s home run record for second basemen. Robbie’s the best second baseman of his generation. The suspension means he has a tough hill to climb.

Assuming Cano finishes out the final five years on his contract, that means he’s ten years away from appearing on the Hall of Fame ballot and 20 years away from exhausting his ten years on the ballot. We could still be talking about Robbie being on the ballot as a potential Hall of Famer in 2038! That’s an awfully long way away, man. The voting body can and will change between now and then, and a PED suspension may not be as much of a dealbreaker then as it is now. We’ll see.

Sabathia has more wins (129 to 117) and more starts (284 to 254) as a Yankee than he did as an Indian and Brewer combined, though he has slightly less WAR (+29.7 to +32.5). Also, Sabathia won his Cy Young in Cleveland and split 2008, his best individual season, between the Indians and Brewers. He won his World Series ring (and ALCS MVP) as a Yankee and has three top four finishes in the Cy Young voting in pinstripes. At some point this year he’ll record his 250th win and 3,000th strikeout, which is pretty cool.

I believe Sabathia would have a Yankees hat on his Hall of Fame plaque. The real question is whether he gets into Cooperstown. Mussina was an objectively better pitcher and he had to wait six years on the ballot to get in. Pettitte was a notch below Sabathia but he has the whole legacy Yankee thing going for him, and he didn’t come close to induction this year. (Pettitte is an admitted human growth hormone user though.) Sabathia will retire after this season and that means he’ll hit the Hall of Fame ballot in 2025. If he gets into the Hall of Fame, it’ll probably take several years on the ballot a la Mussina (and Pettitte).

Looking more long-term, Giancarlo Stanton is on a potential Hall of Fame track seeing how he’s at 300 homers and +40 WAR through his age 28 season. Five-hundred homers and +65 WAR is well within reach. Aroldis Chapman is like 60% of the way to Billy Wagner’s career at this point and Wagner hasn’t come close to induction yet, so Chapman has an uphill climb. Aaron Judge was a bit of a late-bloomer (he played his first MLB season at age 25), which puts him behind the Hall of Fame eight-ball. Gary Sanchez? Gleyber Torres? Miguel Andujar? Luis Severino? Great talents who are a long, long way from the Cooperstown combination.

What about Dellin Betances? He is the best setup man of his generation (yup) and it’s possible that, by time he’s eligible to appear on the Hall of Fame ballot, the voters may have very different standards for relief pitchers. As long as Wagner stays so far away from induction — this was Wagner’s fourth year on the ballot and he’s yet to receive even 17% of the vote — I can’t see Betances as a serious Hall of Fame candidate. Gosh, it would be fun though, wouldn’t it?

* * *

We know Jeter will be voted into the Hall of Fame next year. That is a certainty. The next Yankee to go into the Hall of Fame after Jeter is up in the air, largely because A-Rod and Cano have served PED suspensions, which significantly lowers their chances of winding up in Cooperstown. Since we’re here, we might as well turn this into a poll, so let’s get to it.

Who will be the next Yankee voted into the Hall of Fame after Jeter?
View Results

Filed Under: Days of Yore, Polls Tagged With: A.J. Burnett, Aaron Judge, Alex Rodriguez, Alfonso Soriano, Andy Pettitte, Aroldis Chapman, Bobby Abreu, Carlos Beltran, CC Sabathia, Dellin Betances, Gary Sanchez, Giancarlo Stanton, Gleyber Torres, Ichiro Suzuki, Jason Giambi, Luis Severino, Mark Teixeira, Miguel Andujar, Nick Swisher, Robinson Cano

Fan Confidence Poll: January 21st, 2019

January 21, 2019 by Mike

2018 Regular Season Record: 100-62 (851 RS, 669 RA, 98-64 expected record), second in ALE
2018 Postseason Record: 2-3 (22 RS, 29 RA), won WC Game, lost ALDS

Top stories from last week:

  • Native New Yorker Adam Ottavino is coming home. The Yankees have agreed to a three-year, $27M contract with Ottavino to round out their bullpen. They came into the offseason wanting two relievers and have since re-signing Zach Britton and added Ottavino.
  • The Yankees and Reds have reportedly agreed to the framework of a Sonny Gray trade. Gray would go to Cincinnati for two prospects and a draft pick. The Reds want to sign Gray to an extension though, which is holding things up. The Yankees want another starter to replace Gray.
  • Tommy Kahnle and Jonathan Holder are both drawing trade interest. The Yankees will attend a showcase for free agents Rookie Davis and Adam Liberatore later this month. They sent Tim Locastro to the Diamondbacks for a low level pitching prospect.
  • Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson will again be in Spring Training with the Yankees this year.

Please take a second to answer the poll below and give us an idea how confident you are in the Yankees. You can view the interactive Fan Confidence Graph anytime via the Features tab in nav bar above, or by clicking here. Thanks in advance for voting.

Given the team's current roster construction, farm system, management, etc., how confident are you in the Yankees' overall future?
View Results

Filed Under: Polls Tagged With: Fan Confidence

Fan Confidence Poll: January 14th, 2019

January 14, 2019 by Mike

2018 Regular Season Record: 100-62 (851 RS, 669 RA, 98-64 expected record), second in ALE
2018 Postseason Record: 2-3 (22 RS, 29 RA), won WC Game, lost ALDS

Top stories from last week:

  • In a surprise move, the Yankees agreed to a two-year deal worth $24M with DJ LeMahieu. He’s expected to move all around the infield a la Neil Walker.
  • The Yankees agreed to 2019 contracts with all their arbitration-eligible players prior to Friday’s salary filing deadline with one exception: Luis Severino. They’re apparently headed to a hearing.
  • Injury Update: CC Sabathia (heart) was cleared to resume baseball activities. He’s on track to be ready for Spring Training.
  • The Yankees lost A.J. Cole and Hanser Alberto on waivers and also signed outfielders Billy Burns and Matt Lipka, and Drew Hutchison to minor league contracts.
  • Brian Cashman confirmed Domingo German has a minor league option, which is convenient.

Please take a second to answer the poll below and give us an idea how confident you are in the Yankees. You can view the interactive Fan Confidence Graph anytime via the Features tab in nav bar above, or by clicking here. Thanks in advance for voting.

Given the team's current roster construction, farm system, management, etc., how confident are you in the Yankees' overall future?
View Results

Filed Under: Polls Tagged With: Fan Confidence

Poll: The 2019 Leadoff Hitter

January 10, 2019 by Mike

Gardy & Hicksie. (Al Bello/Getty)

Barring a surprise Manny Machado or Bryce Harper signing — either would qualify as a big surprise to me at this point — the 2019 Yankees are pretty much set on the position player side. They do have to figure out their bench, and the DH spot will be something of a revolving door, but the nine starters are in place. The Troy Tulowitzki signing addressed the middle infield opening and that was the last remaining position player question.

Here, for the sake of laying it all out, are the starting nine position players the Yankees will use on most days this coming season:

  • Catcher: Gary Sanchez
  • First Base: Luke Voit
  • Second Base: Gleyber Torres
  • Shortstop: Troy Tulowitzki
  • Third Base: Miguel Andujar
  • Left Field: Brett Gardner
  • Center Field: Aaron Hicks
  • Right Field: Aaron Judge
  • Designated Hitter: Giancarlo Stanton

That’s it, right? Right. I suspect Stanton will see more time in left field next year as Gardner’s playing time is scaled back — at the very least, Gardner should sit against lefties going forward — but that’s the starting nine most days. Pretty good squad, I’d say. FanGraphs projects that crew to average 5.03 runs per game in 2019, second most in baseball.

What we don’t know is how Aaron Boone will fill out his lineup card. Judge will probably hit second and Stanton will probably hit third or fourth. That’s about all we know for sure. And, frankly, I’m not sure there’s a wrong answer for the rest of the lineup because the Yankees have so many good hitters. Gardner and Tulowitzki are the clear weak links. Everyone else is pretty dangerous in the batter’s box.

The leadoff spot is a bigger question now than it has been at any point in the last four or five years because Gardner has declined. From 2013-18, it was plug Gardner into the leadoff spot and watch him grind away. Now, after a .236/.322/.368 (90 wRC+) line last season, and a .209/.288/.316 (66 wRC+) line in the second half, Gardner in the leadoff spot is no sure thing. Even against righties (95 wRC+).

Andrew McCutchen took over the leadoff spot late last year and he did the job very well. McCutchen’s gone now though. The Yankees have to again figure out the leadoff spot and there’s a chance they won’t get it right the first time, and will have to adjust on the fly. It happens. Lineups are ever-changing. I see four leadoff candidates on the roster.

The Safe Pick: Brett Gardner

Yup. Just put Gardner back in the leadoff spot and see what happens. Perhaps he’ll rebound following an offseason of rest and put up a solid season, or even just a solid first half. If nothing else, you know Gardner will grind out at-bats and see a lot of pitches. He saw 4.24 pitches per plate appearances last season, tied with McCutchen for the ninth most in baseball. Gardner still runs the bases really well too. He went 16-for-18 stealing bases with a 54% extra-base taken rate, far better than the 40% league average. Given the current roster, giving Gardner one last crack at the leadoff spot is an option.

The Obvious Pick: Aaron Hicks

Yeah, Hicks is probably most qualified to be the leadoff hitter this coming season. He gets on base (.366 OBP in 2018), he sees a ton of pitches (4.28 per plate appearances), he can run (11-for-13 in steals and 54% extra-base taken rate), he switch-hits, and he has power. Teams are all about power hitters atop the lineup these days. Francisco Lindor (38 homers), Matt Carpenter (36 homers), and Mookie Betts (32 homers) were all primary leadoff hitters last year. Charlie Blackmon set a new MLB record with 37 homers as a leadoff hitter in 2017.

The downside here is Hicks is the team’s best (only) left-handed threat at the plate and you know the Yankees want to split Judge and Stanton up. I wish they’d just bat them back-to-back but, clearly, the Yankees want to split them up with a lefty whenever possible. With Didi Gregorius sidelined, Hicks is the obvious candidate to hit third between Judge and Stanton. That’s where he hit in the postseason, remember. Are the Yankees willing to bat Judge and Stanton back-to-back, or squeeze another righty between them? If no, Hicks probably gets the nod as the third place hitter.

The Sexy Pick: Gleyber Torres

Now we’re talking. Torres put up a .271/.340/.480 (120 wRC+) batting line last season that is impressive for any player. It is especially impressive for a 21-year-old middle infielder thrust into a postseason race in New York. Torres had a lot of hype to live up to last season and he certainly did it. In year two as a big leaguer, Gleyber could take another step forward and become a legitimate top of the order threat. Would be cool.

This much we know: Torres got on base at a good rate last season (.340 OBP), he saw lots of pitches (4.03 per plate appearance), and he has some of that new school leadoff power. The one traditional leadoff skill Torres lacks is baserunning. He’s a crummy baserunner. If he gets on base and creates enough havoc from the leadoff spot though, you can overlook some bad baserunning. Gleyber’s skills suggest last year’s on-base ability and power is no fluke. He can do it again, and even improve on it with experience.

The YOLO Pick: Aaron Judge

Why the hell not? Boone flirted with batting Judge leadoff against lefties last season. He never went through with it but he did talk about it. At this time last season we didn’t know Torres and Andujar would do what they did and give the Yankees that extra lineup length. Judge’s power in the leadoff spot didn’t make much sense at the time. He was needed in a more traditional run-producing spot.

Now though? Now we know Torres and Andujar are threats with the bat, and that Hicks is for real. We know the Yankees have a deep offense with power up and down the lineup. True, they only had one 30-homer guy last season. They also had four 27-homer guys. Do you know how many teams in baseball history have had five players hit at least 27 homers in a season? The complete list:

  • 2018 Yankees
  • 1956 Redlegs (the Reds went by Redlegs from 1954-58)

That’s it. Two teams in baseball history have done it. And — and! — all five guys who hit 27 homers for the Yankees could do it again. Hicks and Stanton were the oldest 27-homer guys at 28. Maybe they don’t all hit 27+ homers again. Point is, the Yankees have a lot of power in their lineup, so much so that moving Judge to leadoff is a more viable option. Going into last year, they needed his power in the middle of the lineup. Not so much now.

We have two years of evidence telling us Judge is an elite on-base player. He did lose 30 OBP points from 2017-18, but we’re talking about going from a .422 OBP to a still excellent .392 OBP. Judge draws a ton of walks (career 16.7%) and every time you look up he’s in a 3-2 count. Those are the type of at-bats you want from a leadoff hitter. Add in the power and a league average extra-base taken rate, and you’ve got a guy who is an instant threat at the plate to begin every game.

* * *

I suppose that, if he shows some life with the bat, Tulowitzki could become a leadoff option at some point. I can’t imagine going into the season with him atop the lineup though. The Yankees will want to see some leadoff worthy production before moving Tulowitzki up high in the lineup, and not just in Spring Training either. Spring Training lies, man. Tulowitzki will have to produce in the regular season before getting a chance at leadoff.

Signing Machado or Harper would change the leadoff equation considerably. Both would slot into the No. 3 lineup spot nicely between Judge and Stanton, freeing up Hicks for leadoff duty. Or, on the other hand, adding another middle of the order bat makes Judge at leadoff an even greater possibility. Anyway, this is begging for a poll, so let’s get to it.

Who should hit leadoff in 2019?
View Results

Filed Under: Offense, Polls Tagged With: Aaron Hicks, Aaron Judge, Brett Gardner, Gleyber Torres

Fan Confidence Poll: January 7th, 2019

January 7, 2019 by Mike

2018 Regular Season Record: 100-62 (851 RS, 669 RA, 98-64 expected record), second in ALE
2018 Postseason Record: 2-3 (22 RS, 29 RA), won WC Game, lost ALDS

Top stories from last week:

  • Welcome back, Zach Britton. The Yankees agreed to re-sign Britton to a two-year contract with a two-year club option and a one-year player option. The deal can max out at north of $50M.
  • The Yankees signed Troy Tulowitzki to a one-year contract and Brian Cashman said they’re expecting him to be their starting shortstop while Didi Gregorius is sidelined. A.J. Cole was designated for assignment to clear a 40-man roster spot.
  • Injury Update: Clint Frazier (post-concussion migraines) is expected to be cleared for on-field activity by Spring Training.
  • Two potential free agent targets came off the board as David Robertson signed with the Phillies and Yusei Kikuchi signed with the Mariners. Kikuchi received a unique contract and we’ll see more deals like it, including Britton’s.
  • The Yankees have been connected to Josh Harrison and they continue to discuss Sonny Gray with interested teams.

Please take a second to answer the poll below and give us an idea how confident you are in the Yankees. You can view the interactive Fan Confidence Graph anytime via the Features tab in nav bar above, or by clicking here. Thanks in advance for voting.

Given the team's current roster construction, farm system, management, etc., how confident are you in the Yankees' overall future?
View Results

Filed Under: Polls Tagged With: Fan Confidence

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • …
  • 93
  • Next Page »

RAB Thoughts on Patreon

Mike is running weekly thoughts-style posts at our "RAB Thoughts" Patreon. $3 per month gets you weekly Yankees analysis. Become a Patron!

Got A Question For The Mailbag?

Email us at RABmailbag (at) gmail (dot) com. The mailbag is posted Friday mornings.

RAB Features

  • 2019 Season Preview series
  • 2019 Top 30 Prospects
  • 'What If' series with OOTP
  • Yankees depth chart

Search RAB

Copyright © 2022 · River Avenue Blues