The Yankees had more wins than any other team in the American League and made it all the way to the World Series for the first time since 2009. Pretty good year, eh?
But they also endured long stretches of poor play, including fundamentally unsound moments, and one of the worst innings in Fall Classic history. The fifth frame of Game 5 was something out of a horror movie for Yankee fans.
Nightmare on 161st Street, anyone? (There was someone named Freddie involved.)
Anyway, we’ll try to put the AL champs into perspective with our annual report card of the major players. Remember, this team did make the World Series, the 41st in club history. Their marks reflect players’ roles and expectations.
Here are the grades:
Brian Cashman
The GM traded for Juan Soto and is the face of a front office that put together a World Series team. Not bad. His deadline was mixed – Jazz Chisholm Jr. added lineup sizzle, but Mark Leiter Jr. didn’t impact the bullpen as hoped, though he provided solid postseason work. Yanks still excel at creating strong bullpens. Now, of course, Cashman must re-sign Soto, especially with cornerstones Aaron Judge and Gerrit Cole not getting any younger.
Grade: B+
Aaron Boone
The seventh-year manager, who has made the postseason six times in his career, seems unpopular with some Yankee fans, but he gets respect around the game. Dave Roberts, who beat Boone in the World Series, said he thinks Boone does “a fantastic job” and knows that “Aaron is the only one in baseball that can really relate to my job in the sense of either win a World Series championship or you failed.” Still, Yankee lapses were a season theme that bled into October. Boone must fix that going forward.
Grade: B
Juan Soto
They traded for him so he could help them to the World Series. After a tremendous regular season, Soto hit the 10th-inning homer that sent them there. Soto had 41 homers, 109 RBI and a .419 on-base percentage and enjoyed career-bests in runs, hits, homers, total bases and extra-base hits. He was a postseason force, too, with a 1.102 OPS and four homers. He was everything anyone could’ve expected.
Grade: A+
Aaron Judge
He’ll win AL MVP, and deservedly so, after leading the world in fWAR (11.2) and homers (58), as well as on-base percentage, slugging, OPS and RBI. He appeared in 158 games, a key stat for him, and played center field, as needed. If not for the postseason, he’d get the same grade as Soto. Judge struggled in October, batting .184 with 20 strikeouts in 49 at-bats. We’ll probably be hearing for years about that fly ball he dropped in Game 5 of the World Series, the entryway to a ruinous inning.
Grade: A
Giancarlo Stanton
In 114 games during the regular season, Stanton had 27 homers, 72 RBI and a .773 OPS. Good season for the DH. Then he exploded (again) in the postseason, blasting seven homers – the most in a single postseason in Yankee history – and notching 16 RBI and a 1.048 OPS. If every month were October, what would his numbers look like?