MLB

Gerrit Cole chase is just one of many Yankees offseason questions

After two straight years of having their season end in the playoffs at the hands of the eventual World Series winner, the Yankees watched the Nationals end that streak by beating the Astros in Game 7 on Wednesday night.

The Yankees’ focus is now on 2020 and after they held their organizational meetings this week, they can begin to move ahead with their offseason.

They no doubt took notice of Gerrit Cole, who did his postgame press conference following Houston’s loss wearing a hat from his agent Scott Boras’ company.

Cole will be the top free agent on the market and the Yankees, Dodgers and Angels figure to be the frontrunners to land the right-hander.

Thursday opened the five-day window in which free agents can only talk with the team they finished the season with and a long shot reunion with Houston now seems out of the question for Cole.

The Yankees’ ties with Cole have been well-chronicled, from drafting him out of high school to attempting to trade for him two years ago. However, just last offseason, signs seemed to point to Patrick Corbin landing in The Bronx because he grew up a Yankees fan and few saw the Nationals blowing away all other offers to sign the left-hander.

While Cole will be a focus of the Yankees’ offseason, they have plenty of other decisions to make.

Aroldis Chapman has three days to opt out of the final two years of his contract. He declined to comment on the situation last week, but many believe the closer will opt out coming off an excellent season — despite having allowed the season-ending home run in Houston to Jose Altuve in Game 6 of the ALCS.

Chapman would likely get at least an extra year tacked on to the two years and $30 million he’s owed.

On Thursday, the Yankees declined Edwin Encarnacion’s $20 million option. He was due a $5 million buyout

Beginning on Monday, teams can make qualifying offers. The only potential candidate the Yankees have is Didi Gregorius, and it’s no sure thing he gets one. Gregorius will turn 30 in February and is coming off a disappointing season in which he put up his worst numbers since 2015.

Gregorius would have until Nov. 14 to accept or decline the qualifying offer and could hit the open market just over a year removed from Tommy John surgery and might still end up back with the Yankees, whose only other option at shortstop — barring a trade or free-agent signing — would be Gleyber Torres.

Brett Gardner, Dellin Betances and Austin Romine — all longtime Yankees —  are also due to hit free agency.

Didi Gregorius
Didi GregoriusGetty Images

Gardner could come back, especially in the wake of Aaron Hicks being lost for at least part of next season following his Tommy John surgery on Wednesday.

Betances is coming off a nightmarish, injury-plagued season. He was sidelined for almost the entire year by a shoulder impingement, followed by a strained lat. And when he finally did return in September, he suffered an Achilles injury on the mound following his lone appearance of the season.

Romine has been a valuable backup to Gary Sanchez, but could get a better deal elsewhere. The Yankees could decide to go with Kyle Higashioka as their second catcher.

The Yankees won’t just be looking at Cole in free agency, if they want to upgrade their rotation. Hyun-Jin Ryu, Zack Wheeler and Madison Bumgarner are other free-agent possibilities. Washington’s World Series MVP, Stephen Strasburg, would join them if he opts out of his contract.

General manager Brian Cashman said during his season-ending press conference he didn’t believe pitching cost the Yankees in the postseason —  before firing longtime pitching coach Larry Rothschild. So could Anthony Rendon be worth a look at third base as a replacement for either Miguel Andujar or Gio Urshela?

It could depend on how much they want to spend this winter. Corbin helped Washington to a World Series, while the other two main free agents from last offseason, Manny Machado and Bryce Harper, didn’t sniff the playoffs.