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ONE PIECE SEASON 17 EPISODE 17 HOW TO
As both Peter and Josh discussed over the past two months, relievers are quite fungible, and if a team knows what it’s doing, it can rebuild a bullpen pretty much on the fly via minor league arms, the waiver wire, and seemingly-inconsequential trades.įurther, if there’s one thing that the Yankees front office knows, it’s how to build a bullpen after all, they acquired Peralta for Mike Tauchman (an outfielder who was designated for assignment before the trade deadline), Holmes for minor league infielders Hoy Park and Diego Castillo, Rodríguez as a throw-in in the Joey Gallo trade, and Luetge as a minor league free agent prior to the 2021 season. This depth presents an interesting conundrum. Even assuming that Aroldis Chapman continues to break down in the final year of his deal, there’s already an immense amount of relief depth. Despite losing Luis Cessa in a Justin Wilson-induced salary dump and both Darren O’Day and Zack Britton to injuries, the Yankees had an elite bullpen, ranking fWAR (7.5) and K-BB% (17.7 percent), fourth in ERA (3.56), and fifth in FIP (3.76). Additionally, Clay Holmes, Lucas Luetge, Joely Rodríguez, and Wandy Peralta put together strong performances in pinstripes, while Michael King, Albert Abreu, and Stephen Ridings flashed the potential to be the next Loáisiga or Green. Jonathan Loáisiga and Chad Green were two of the most valuable relievers by fWAR in 2021, with the former accruing 2.4 (tied for third-most) and the latter 1.6 (tied for 14th-most). As such, I thought it prudent to circle back to the topic of potential trade chips, and in particular discuss the pros and cons of drawing from the team’s bullpen depth.Īt time of writing, the Yankees have a number of quality relievers. Unsurprisingly, several comments highlighted the lack of pitchers as notable, considering the Yankees’ depth at the position, particularly in the bullpen, and the fact that Cashman himself has noted that teams have called to inquire about the Yankees’ relievers. And while it’s likely that most of these trades will primarily involve prospects, especially those who are Rule 5-eligible, earlier this week I broke down a few players on the Major League roster who the Yankees might dangle in trade talks.Īll four of those players were position players, those who were at one point or another penciled into the Yankees lineup as important contributors but who have - through some combination of injuries, regression, or price tag - become expendable to varying degrees. With the deadline to protect players in the Rule 5 Draft coming up and the team’s 40-man roster currently filled, the Yankees have been the center of a number of trade rumors over the last few days, with everyone from Oakland first baseman Matt Olson to Reds ace Luis Castillo to Pittsburgh center fielder Bryan Reynolds linked in some capacity to the Bronx.