November 24, 2024

Radio host believes Yankees should be ’embarrassed’ for losing Yamamoto sweepstakes

Should the Yankees feel ashamed?

Yoshinobu Yamamoto: Los Angeles Dodgers agree to historic deal with  Japanese pitching sensation, per reports | CNN

The New York Yankees were seen as a frontrunner for Yoshinobu Yamamoto until he ultimately decided to sign with the Los Angeles Dodgers on Thursday night, securing a 12-year, $325 million deal shortly after Shohei Ohtani’s $700 million contract. Reports surfaced and the New York Mets matched the Dodgers’ offer, but the Bronx Bombers only put $300 million on the table.

Well, that fired up NY radio host Sal Licata, who said the Bronx Bombers should be “embarrassed” for losing the Yamamoto sweepstakes. Via WFAN:

Baseball: Yamamoto, Dodgers agree to 12-year, $325M deal: report

“This makes the Yankees look awful. The Mets offered the most money like most people thought they would, they still didn’t get him because, clearly, Yamamoto didn’t want to be a Met. Guess what though? Yamamoto did want to be a Yankee, and the Yankees didn’t pony up. Did the Yankees want him or not? This is more indicative of where the Yanks are at than the Mets. The Yankees didn’t offer the most money, didn’t even match the most money, for a player they reportedly wanted to go get. Are you in or are you out? As I predicted, the Yankees were in, but at their price,” Licata exclaimed.

“They thought they were gonna land Yamamoto because of the power of the pinstripes…guess what? They were wrong, and the Yanks haven’t spent a cent in free agency. They’ve been cocky. They’ve been arrogant. They thought they had this guy for weeks…this is the Yankees we’re talking about. And they stopped at $300 million? I would be embarrassed as a Yankee fan.”

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Around the Empire

Where to look next for starting pitching; comparing the Yankees’ offer to the Dodgers;Jonathan Papelbon blasts Alex Verdugo , provides ringing endorsement for Yankees fans

The Athletic | Brendan Kuty and New York Post | Dan Martin: From the front offices to the beat writers to the blogs, the entire Yankees Universe was asking the same question after Yoshinobu Yamamoto agreed to a contract with the Los Angeles Dodgers: “Now what?” With the Yankees still needing pitching, they could turn to Yamamoto’s fellow countryman, the left-handed Shōta Imanaga, who is expected to receive a much smaller contract than Yamamoto and whom the Yankees expressed interest in as a fallback option. Might they pursue a reunion with former Yankee and 2023 postseason star Jordan Montgomery, or Frankie Montas, who spent almost all 2023 on the shelf? Only time will tell.

The Athletic | Ken Rosenthal: (subscription required) Speaking of Yamamoto, Ken Rosenthal compared his deal with the Dodgers (12 years, $325 million with opt outs after 2029 and 2031) to those offered by the Mets (identical to the Dodgers) and the Yankees (ten years, $300 million, with an opt-out after five and frontloaded salaries). From this information, Rosenthal concludes that what ultimately won out for Yamamoto was a desire to join Shohei Ohtani in Los Angeles — and it’s hard to argue with that conclusion.

BNNY's Sal Licata shifts to WFAN's day programming in Carton-Barber shake  up | SNY - YouTube

NBC Sports Boston | Nick Goss: Earlier this week, new Yankees outfielder Alex Verdugo held his introductory press conference via Zoom. In his comments, he took an apparent shot at Red Sox manager Alex Cora as he praised Aaron Boone for “the way he’s had his players’ backs.” Former Red Sox closer Jonathan Papelbon took to Twitter in defense of the manager he never played for, calling Verdugo some names not fit for print and advocating violence: “I’m drilling this [guy], just saying.” This is perfectly in character for the world class jerk, who was suspended three times in less than twelve months for making obscene gestures at fans, throwing at Manny Machado, and attacking teammate Bryce Harper. Given Papelbon’s unpopularity in New York, he just provided a ringing endorsement to Yankee fans uncomfortable with Verdugo.

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