Yankees Division Title Pursuit: Where Things Stand
New York’s Remaining Schedule
The Pirates sit far from contention and are also on a losing streak.
When it’s all said and done, the Yankees need to continue to win and control their own destiny for a division title. A series win in each matchup should get the job done.
Up-to-the-minute chart of Yankees scenarios after their loss.
5 wins to go for the AL East. pic.twitter.com/aT9Vupu1dQ
— Yankees Focus (@YankeesFocus) September 19, 2024
Baltimore’s Remaining Schedule
Yankees Pitching Staff Prepares for October
For the most part, the Yankees rotation is established for October. Gerrit Cole is the clear go-to arm, running with the Game 1 starter role. Next up would probably be lefty Carlos Rodón, who’s also established his stuff and had a better second half. Luis Gil has done well for himself and will be a crucial go-to arm in any elimination scenario. His stuff will set the tone for any game he starts in.
The toss up will be between Marcus Stroman and Nestor Cortes. Both guys have held a starter role, and both guys have had bullpen time. Deciding between the two could be a case-by-case basis.
Clarke Schmidt seems to be back on track and will definitely hold a starter spot to round off the rotation.
The Stroman/Cortes Dilemma
It is known that both of these guys have plenty of experience in the starter role. It is also known that Nestor Cortes prefers coming in as later relief rather than an opener. Stroman still sees himself as a big-game arm, but his September numbers show the opposite.
The month of September has him at a 6.75 ERA in 12 innings of work. He holds a .382 average against with 21 hits given up. He’s at a 5.24 ERA since the All-Star break with a .333 average against.
What’s causing this? Possibly, it’s a lack of ability to stay off the zone and locate his fastball and off-speed stuff efficiently. This year he’s totaled a 35.8% launch-angle sweet spot rate; this number is the highest in his career. Hitters are finding more barrels.
Cortes’ September has been the opposite, where he’s worked 19 1/3 innings with a 2.79 ERA. His launch angle percentage isn’t too far off, at 35%. However his outings are quality with a decent distribution of off-speed. Five of six of his pitches surpass 20% on put-away percentage.
At this point, based on the evidence and pitch selection, Cortes would be the guy to give the ball to. Stroman would fit well in long relief and/or a set-up role.
Still, these two options could be flipped based on scenarios and matchups. A heavy lefty or righty dominant lineup could determine which guy starts, especially when it comes to the three, four, and five guys in an opposing lineup.
Stroman’s repertoire can assist across the pitching charts, especially when hitters will be exposed to his pitch arsenal for less than six to seven innings. This pitching plan may be the best for winning the division and moving forward into the postseason.
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