The New York Yankees’ spring training began with bold ideas and big possibilities. The search for a new second baseman after Gleyber Torres signed with the Detroit Tigers led to speculation about a blockbuster trade—one that would have sent their top two pitching prospects to the Minnesota Twins in exchange for three-time All-Star Carlos Correa.
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Spring training has been anything but smooth for the Yankees, and now they’re staring down the possibility of playing the entire 2025 season without two of
The Yankees built what looked like one of the strongest starting rotations in baseball heading into the 2025 season. Just a few weeks into spring training,
Chase Hampton found the silver lining of what could have been a crushing diagnosis: It was a diagnosis with no wiggle room.
In 2024, right-handed pitcher Luis Gil put together a magical rookie season, one that started with him having come back from Tommy John surgery that cost him most of his 2022 and 2023 seasons. The hope for Gil entering spring training a year ago was that he would win a bullpen spot.
As Tom Verducci of Sports Illustrated shared, the side-arming righty has some downright nasty movement on his pitches to compensate for the loss of velocity. Effross lost 2.5 mph on his sinker but added 3.4 inches of downward movement. His slider dropped 2.9 mph but gained 3.5 inches of horizontal movement.
Luis Gil, the 2024 American League Rookie of the Year Award winner, has been shut down for at least six weeks with a high-grade lat strain, New York Yankees manager Aaron Boone told reporters late Monday afternoon.
New York Yankees right-hander Scott Effross has a grade two hamstring strain, manager Aaron Boone told reporters Thursday, the latest setback for the injury-plagued reliever. Effross, 31, left his second spring training appearance after just one pitch Tuesday.
New York Yankees relief pitcher Scott Effross just cannot squash the injury bug. The 31-year-old right-hander came on in relief to start the bottom of the