New York Yankees

Yankees provide great injury update for star closer, but he may have lost his job already

Published by
Alexander Wilson

The New York Yankees are finally getting healthier after a few weeks of facing adversity. Having lost Chad Green to Tommy John surgery, manager Aaron Boone has had to rely on a few younger options to supplement the loss.

However, the bullpen was also hit with a few more issues. Jonathan Loáisiga was placed on the injured list with shoulder inflammation, and Aroldis Chapman was also sent to the 10-day IL with Achilles tendinitis.

Chapman is working his way back, according to Boone, who stated his Achilles is nearly asymptomatic, meaning he could make a return in the coming days.

The question is, will Chapman retain his old job as a team’s primary closer?

Aaron Boone stated that Aroldis Chapman would be “a big-time, back-end reliever” upon his return. Randy Miller of NJ.com pointed out that Boone didn’t mention him being their primary closer, which could hint at a big strategy shift.

Prior to being placed on the injured list, Chapman had recorded a 3.86 ERA over 14 innings this season. His strikeouts per nine are down significantly to 9.64 from 15.5 last year. He’s walking 6.43 batters per nine and generating just a 34.1% ground-ball rate, which is 9% less than last year.

Altogether, the Yankees decided they couldn’t rely on Chapman any longer to close games. Chapman earned a combined 9.53 ERA in his last seven outings, giving up six runs, two homers, and four walks over 5.2 innings. What those statistics, Boone had to make a change, and he looked in the direction of Clay Holmes.

Holmes has been elite this season with a 0.34 ERA over 26.2 innings pitched. He’s taking his game to an entirely different level after posting a 3.60 ERA last season with Pittsburgh and New York. His 82.8% ground-ball rate is the best in his career, and he’s leaving 95.2% of runners on base.

These numbers seem too good to be true. All it took was a phenomenal coach to change his approach. Pitching coach Matt Blake has shifted his strategy entirely, throwing his sinker more than ever before at 80.2%. With a 97 mph sinker and mixing in a slider, Holmes has become one of the league’s best bullpen arms.

Given his success, the Yankees should retain Holmes as their closer and utilize Chapman as a back-end reliever who can get them into the ninth inning.

This post was published on 2022-06-08 09:34

Alexander Wilson
Published by
Alexander Wilson