Let’s Make Things Official
The 2020 60-game Major League Baseball schedule will be announced tonight, July 6, on “MLB Tonight: Schedule Release” presented by Camping World live at 6:00 p.m. EDT on MLB Network. Your hosts for the official announcement will be Matt Vasgersian with analysis from Harold Reynolds and Tom Verducci. The hour long special will unveil key matchups and dates of the 60-game schedule, which will begin on Thursday, July 23 and Friday, July 24.
To that, I say, “Let’s Play Ball!!”
As previously announced, each team will play a regionally based schedule featuring 40 divisional games and 20 Interleague games against the corresponding geographical division. From my understanding, following “MLB Tonight: Schedule Release,” MLB Network will air a new “MLB Tonight” with Fran Charles, Jon Heyman and Dan Plesac live at 7:00 p.m. EDT. It will be covering the latest news of Summer Camp presented by Camping World and continuing analysis of the 2020 60-game MLB schedule.
So now that baseball is in route for the 2020 summer, what are some key points to watch for with the Yankees? Well I will give you some of what I will be looking for:
1. Gardy Bring the Party
Brett Gardner is our longest tenured Yankees, so he has accumulated many milestones throughout his career, but he will be eying another special point in his career. Gardy will be taking his place among some remarkable names in Yankee history. Bryan Hoch said it best in the following statement: “The 36-year-old’s next regular-season jog from the dugout will confirm his place as the sixth outfielder in franchise history to appear in 1,500 games — one game shy of joining Mickey Mantle (2,401), Babe Ruth (2,084), Bernie Williams (2,076), Roy White (1,881) and Joe DiMaggio (1,736) among those to surpass that plateau.”
I have many favorite Yankee and baseball players, but as I said time and time again, “Gardy is my current favorite baseball player.” I have said that statement over and over, because he has stuck by one team and ONE team only. In doing so, he managed to put together a strong career with his grit. I have so much respect for the way he carries himself as an athlete and as an individual.
The milestone that will put Brett “The Jet” Gardner’s name in baseball’s history book should’ve been reached months ago, but we all know what caused its delay. GARDY fans have respect for him so much because he puts the team’s goals above his own. As far as he is concerned, the Yankees have a great opportunity to be the last team standing in October and he is focused on helping the team do the same every year. I can’t wait to see him in 2020.
2. Aroldis Chapman Is Looking To Dominate
If you read my blog post on Chapman, then you know what he has been up to while in quarantine. If you have not read that post yet, here is the look to it: https://thepinstripedballclub.travel.blog/2020/05/30/the-pinstriped-cuban-missile-the-yankees-body-builder/
Like I said in the above blog post, “….with all due respect to every Yankee player, I will be paying extra attention to how the Yankee closer performs whenever the season gets underway… ” He has a pretty impressive resume to me because we seen him do several impressive feats. Just to name a few of them:
-We saw him carry the Chicago Cubs to a World Series.
-We have seen him close out the 2019 All-Star game where he guaranteed the American League their seven straight win against the National League
-We have seen The Cuban Missile shut down bats in close-scoring regular season games.
Mariano Rivera has gone down in the history book as baseball’s greatest closer and with him retired, Aroldis Chapman has taken over the closer position in the Bronx. Chapman reported to Yankee Stadium for summer camp on Sunday, Marly Rivera of ESPN reports. The fireball hurler was not present at the stadium for the team’s first official workout Saturday, though manager Aaron Boone clarified that his absence was simply a matter of not finishing intake protocol. With him arriving Sunday, it would seem that he is healthy and ready to resume preparation for the 2020 campaign. I definitely can’t wait to see him at the tail end of the bullpen this season.
3. The Backstop In The Bronx
One of the biggest knocks on New York Yankees catcher Gary Sanchez is his defensive efficiency, specifically when it comes to blocking balls and framing pitches. Sanchez has struggled at times with his weight distribution and ability to play consistent defense behind the plate, which has hurt his confidence. As Yankee fans, we all know that Gary has the potential of being a great catcher. That was very evident because when he first joined the major league club, he was just so consistent at gunning down runners from the backstop position. We also can’t forgot about tremendous contact rate that he had every time he stepped into the batter’s box.
Sanchez was not present at the stadium for the team’s first official day of workouts Saturday, though manager Aaron Boone also indicated that it was a matter of the catcher not completing intake protocol. Every player has to cleared for on field action and now that Gary has been cleared, I definitely can’t wait to see him on the receiving end of a Gerrit Cole pitch.
2020 could be a huge stepping stone for the 27-year-old, especially if Sanchez performs the way he did in 2016. That was the year Sanchez received that call that he was getting promoted from Triple-A to MLB, and New York was buzzing. The hype was high because Sanchez came up as a replacement for Jorge Posada and everyone following him knew about that pop in his bat and that gun for a catcher’s arm. In 53 games that year, he hit .299, compiled 60 hits, accumulated 20 home runs, and notched in 42 RBI. As a result of his stellar performance during those 53 games, the Yankees were once sellers rebuilding to the following season, but Sanchez carried them into playoff contention. Yankee fans know all too well the pain of watching their team get turned away from a playoff run. On the bright side of that season, they knew they had one brick set in a solid foundation for the future of the team.
Hopefully in the shortened 2020 season, he will have that solid foundation to help him assist his team to win big.
4. The Gleyber Days Will Back Soon
With Torres back at his natural position of being a shortstop, I am really excited to see him do his thing at the position. To be honest, it is pretty easy to get lost in the shuffle of stars that the Yankees have at each position, but I would definitely say that Torres is a safe bet for the American League MVP. It is obvious being apart of a team that consist of stars like Chapman; Gary Sanchez; Aaron Judge; Giancarlo Stanton; Gerrit Cole and others, Gleyber is not much of a universal name.
By now, fans know his name, but he is not recognized as much as the names I mentioned above. Although that may be true when we just look at the Yankees, the excellence of Torres’ work can’t be glanced over when the AL voting is be discussed. NJ.com gave five reasons detailing the explanation for that:
- The Baltimore Orioles: The following numbers are 100 percent real and in no way doctored: .394/.467/1.045, 13 HR, 69 total bases. That’s what Torres did to the Baltimore Orioles in just 18 games last season. The good news for the Yankees: Baltimore will now represent one sixth of the season schedule this year. If Torres feasts on Orioles pitching again, the base to a ridiculous season is there.
Some names to keep an eye on when the schedule emerges, including Torres’ stats vs. each Orioles pitcher:
Mychal Givens: .400, 1 HR
David Hess: .375, 3 HR
Alex Cobb: .500, 2 HR
Hector Velazquez: .600, 2 doubles
2. Position switch: Torres is moving over to shortstop this season to replace the departed Didi Gregorius. If he can man the position well (a likely outcome) it’ll be a boon for MVP chances. Shortstops that can hit at Torres’ level pop. Shortstops that do it on a winning team pop even more. Think Jimmy Rollins winning it for the Phillies in 2007 or Miguel Tejada (a decent comp for Torres) winning it for the Oakland Athletics in 2002.
3. Mike Trout’s uneasiness, anti-Astros sentiment: Don’t discount these factors. In the AL, the yearly MVP award is Trout’s to lose. But based on recent comments from the N.J. native, Trout could opt out of playing this season or choose not to return after the birth of his child in August. As for the Astros? Well, let’s just say that it’s going to take a slam-dunk, no-doubt-about-it MVP campaign to see a name like Jose Altuve, George Springer or Alex Bregman atop the majority of ballots.
4. Youth: In a (very) strange season, Torres has this on his side. No one knows how many players will stay fully healthy and if COVID-19 can be kept out of clubhouses. Assuming protocols work and players take care of themselves away from the park, this reality exists: 60 games in 66 days. That means only a few days off per month. It means having to bounce back and play the next day. It favors young players, not aging vets. When making a MVP wager in 2020, choose upside over the veteran.
5. Natural improvement: Torres hit 14 more home runs in 2019 than he had in 2018. His strikeout rate dropped by nearly four percent. It’s easy to forget, but we’re talking about a star heading into his age-23 season. We may not be close to Torres’ prime, but a jump toward it could happen this summer.
Prior to the truncated 2020 season, Fangraphs’ ZiPS projections had Torres down for 4.9 WAR, 41 home runs. That would be about a 15-homer pace in this 60-game sprint. Let’s guess something closer to 18, with big-time defense and a better-than-you-would expect batting average for the Yankees shortstop.
I like all these reasons and I hope all of them actually ring true in 2020.
5. Matt Blake- The New York Yankees’ Pitching Staff Will Be Under New Management In 2020
With the 2020 baseball season about to kick off later this season, the Yankees have decided to seek a new pitching coach to guide their pitching staff. Letting go of Larry Rothschild, the Yankees are trying to go the analytical route with the acquisition of Matt Blake. I can’t wait to see how that route pans out, especially because ace Cole and Blake have the analytic mindset.

