If you haven’t heard about Devin Williams’ signature pitch, the “Airbender,” a wondrous changeup that seems to mock physics as it flummoxes hitters, you soon will. It’s an awesome weapon for the new Yankees’ closer, one of the best finishing pitches in baseball.
The brand-name pitch adds some sizzle to Williams’ acquisition on Friday in a trade with the Brewers, but the real value for the Yanks goes way beyond marketing. It cuts right to how they are emerging from their post-Juan Soto world. By adding Williams and Max Fried, the elite starter who agreed to an eight-year, $218 million contract last week, run prevention is now king in The Bronx, at least so far this winter.
We’ll find out how that works later and there’s presumably much more to think about as GM Brian Cashman addresses the lineup during the rest of the offseason. But the Williams’ deal is easy to love for this reason: An elite reliever can have an outsized impact on a team’s run through October, thanks to all those built-in off-days.
The Yankees have been pretty adept at making it to October – seven playoff appearances in the last eight years, 59 in their 122-year history (48.4 percent, by far the best in the major leagues). But they haven’t won it all since 2009, doubtless something loudly bemoaned by the Yankee fans in your life.
Maybe Williams can help them navigate the postseason cauldron, perhaps all the way to that elusive parade. That’s the idea, anyway.
Williams, 30, has a career ERA of 1.83 in 241 games over six seasons in Milwaukee. Since 2020, opponents are batting a minuscule .145 against Williams. Over the past two seasons, 171 at-bats have ended on his “Airbender” changeup; opponents have 13 hits, a .111 average. In those 171 at-bats, Williams had 73 strikeouts, a rate of 42.7 percent. Clearly, the pitch is a gorgeous complement to his mid-90s fastball.