While hitting upgrades have dominated the Yankees’ offseason narrative to date, the team is certainly also keeping an eye on the pitching market, including some top-shelf names. MLB Network’s Jon Morosi (via X) writes that the “Yankees are among the most active teams” exploring pitchers thus far, with such names as Aaron Nola and Yoshinobu Yamamoto on their list of targets.
The Yankees’ interest in Yamamoto is well known, and while Nola is a new face linked to the Bronx Bombers, it makes perfect sense why Nola would be of interest. No opponent would relish facing Gerrit Cole and Nola in a short playoff series, and Nola’s durability would be a significant boost to a New York rotation that has some question marks heading into 2024. Carlos Rodon and Nestor Cortes were plagued by injuries last season, Clarke Schmidt has only one full season as a big league starter under his belt, and Michael King (who is being tapped to remain in the rotation) has even less experience as a starter.
If everyone is healthy and if King and Schmidt can pitch as well as they did in 2023, this could be one of baseball’s best rotations on paper. However, signing Nola, Yamamoto, or another stabilizing force to the front end of the staff would both clear up some of the uncertainty, and perhaps allow the Bombers some more flexibility with their other offseason moves. For instance, younger pitchers like Yoendrys Gomez or Randy Vasquez might become trade chips, or perhaps even Schmidt might be shopped to land a bat. While King will be given every opportunity to stick as a starter, the Yankees would be more open to reinstalling him as a bullpen weapon if they were more comfortable with the rest of their rotation.
Of course, it should be noted that signing Rodon last winter was supposed to deepen the rotation, but Rodon was ineffective in the first year of his six-year, $162MM contract. Rodon’s struggles won’t preclude New York from again spending big on a starter, though it might change the general focus of their search. For instance, Nola has averaged just under 199 innings pitched in each of the last five full MLB seasons, so he has a much longer track record of good health and consistent success.
The Yankees’ pitching endeavors also reach to the bullpen, as Gary Phillips of the New York Daily News reports that the club has interest in re-signing Wandy Peralta, though the left-hander hasn’t yet been presented with a formal offer. Peralta has a 2.82 ERA over 153 innings with the Yankees since being acquired in the Mike Tauchman trade with the Giants in April 2021, and he is among baseball’s best at keeping the ball on the ground with a 56.3% grounder rate over the last three seasons. While a .256 BABIP has helped Peralta’s cause, he is also very good at limiting hard contact, making it easier for his fielders to handle any balls in play.
This grounder-heavy arsenal and a relative lack of strikeouts makes Peralta prone to outperforming his peripherals, though he took this to extremes in 2023. Peralta’s 2.83 ERA and .293 xOBA were well below his 4.44 SIERA and .332 xwOBA, and his walk rate (which has usually been below average anyway) spiked to a dismal 13.2%. It could just be a one-year blip that it probably won’t be enough to prevent Peralta from landing a multi-year free agent deal, yet it does serve as a potential red flag for suitors. Since the Yankees know Peralta better than any other club, their continued interest is perhaps a sign that they don’t see the control issue as a long-term problem, or it could be the Yankees are just monitoring Peralta to see if he can be retained at a relative bargain price.
In some Yankees news off the field, Andrew Bailey interviewed with the team on Monday about the bench coach job, according to the New York Post’s Joel Sherman. Bailey is no stranger to the Bronx, as his eight seasons as a big league pitcher included a stint with the Yankees in 2015. Formerly the Giants’ pitching coach for the last four seasons, Bailey is now out of contract and is known to be getting consideration from not just the Yankees as a bench coach, but also from the Orioles and Red Sox as a pitching coach candidate. Sherman adds that the Marlins also have interest in Bailey as a pitching coach, and that Bailey “turned down an opportunity to be considered by the White Sox” for an unspecified role.
mostlytoasty
Too early to tell but the Rodon contract sure feels like it’s shaping up to be a disaster. If the Yanks are handing out big contracts to players this offseason though, they should be investing in guys that have a history of being healthy. Yamamoto and Nola both fit that bill. Pretty sure Nola hasn’t missed time since either 2016 or 2017.
Buzzz Killington
I agree but Nola will go to the Yankees and end up needing Tommy John.
TrillionaireTeamOperator
I get the same feeling- Nola will immediately fall apart if he signs with the Yankees. It seems to happen a lot with Yankee signings… guys fall off a cliff once they sign that Yankees mega deal…
Captain-Judge99
Pass on Nola for me. Yamamoto to the Yankees or the Mets, and according to @Fever Guy- Ohtani’ to the Dodgers or the Rangers. Bellinger to the Yankees, Cubs or Giants.
Tigers3232
Yamamoto is only 25 yrs old and they play shorter seasons in NPB. Not saying he’s a health risk but comparing players from their to here for health risks and work loads doesn’t necessarily correlate.
In his defense tho in his 7 seasons there he did top 190 IP twice.
mostlytoasty
certainly valid points. Yamamoto was averaging well over 7+ IPs per start in Japan as well, something I doubt he will replicate in the MLB. He also was a RP for a year or two when he first debuted I believe
TrillionaireTeamOperator
I am wary about Nola, but he’d still represent an upgrade.
I still wouldn’t give Nola more than $20M AAV over more than 3-4 years, and he’ll be looking for BIG money and years: like 5 years/$125M to 6 years/$165M… I don’t like him for more than 3-4 years and more than $20M AAV… and more like $18-19M AAV preferably… 3 years/$57M to 4 years/$72M at most.
I like Wandy Peralta in the capacity he’s served on the Yankees, but the question is at what price?
3 years/$21M? Too steep.
3 years/$16.05M? Sure, why not?
harrycarey
You always get paid on what you did versus the future of what you hope to do. Silly me that is just in real life not sports and entertainment
Pedro Martinez’s Mango Tree
You sound like a delightful fellow
Jake Biggar
Yanks need multiple bats. I don’t see how this makes sense unless they’re dealing for controllable bats. That would certainly cost a fair deal of prospect capital with free agency being light on bats.
ChiSoxPain
Turned down the Sox… what’s he thinking?
NewYorkSoxFan
He’s thinking he’s better off staying away from that dumpster fire.
kingbum
Yamamoto is not going to the Yankees. Cashman publicly called out Stanton saying he will be hurt again next year. Stanton’s agent clapped back and said, “You have to be made of Teflon both physically and mentally to play in New York”. I bring this up because this agent is also the agent of Yamamoto and I think he’s going to steer him away from Cashman.
Gambit1193
Well damn it then! I guess Scott boras stopped Gerrit Cole from signing with the Yankees because his other client, Jacoby Ellsbury filed a grievance against the Yankees. HUH
briar-patch thatcher
Call the dogs off, Gambit. He’s cooked.
kingbum
Scott Boras always been about the money, so that would speak to the people he represents. Yamamoto is coming from a different culture, while money certainly speaks what speaks louder in Japanese culture is respect. You don’t blast players in public like that, believe me both Yamamoto and Ohtani aren’t going to like that. Why do you think Ohtani doesn’t want to come to the East Coast? I will tell ya, it’s because we (I was raised in the tri-state area so it is we) are America’s biggest a**holes.
SFBay314
Bailey is going to be a manager soon, don’t get him confused with the Kapler non-sense this guy knows how to run bullpen.
ericl
Nola gives up a ton of home runs. I feel like he needs to go to a more friendly pitchers park than Yankee Stadium.
BLIN7Y
YANKEE MOVES
As I believe history has shown us, when you may have trouble getting Bats, it makes good sense to Stock Up on Pitching and improve your Defense. Some may remember a team in the ’60s that was pretty Great even though they had Mediocre Hitting. Koufax and Drysdale anyone?
I believe the Yankees will acquire 2 Bats and 2 SP’s. With the Sad passing of the Padres Owner, I believe Soto will be traded.
Seaver rules
Yankees are not signing Yamamoto. They should concentrate on Nola, Snell and Hader. They get 2 of those 3 plus Bellinger and the EVIL EMPIRE will be back in business. Bellinger has to be dreaming about that RF porch.
mlbnyyfan
Randolph should be Yankees next bench coach
ih8tepaperstraws
I don’t think teams like the Yankees who are several pieces away are going to spend big on starting pitching this off season. Unless they believe Yamamoto is a can’t miss ace. They’ll definitely kick the tires and probably make offers but bow out if the asking price escalates to high. The 2024 off season is loaded with front of the rotation starts. Teams in the same boat as the Yankees would be better off saving the money and waiting a year when supply of top tier pitchers is crazy high. Which includes an old Garret Cole. Nola and Snell will go to teams that just missed it this year like the Braves, Phillies, Astros, Cubs, Padres or Orioles.