Jon Heyman

Jon Heyman

MLB

Yankees suddenly don’t look like juggernaut facing first real 2022 test

Through recent events, we finally learned that the Yankees of 2022 aren’t perfect, either professionally or personally.

There are finally a few L’s on the board, and one big E by a well-known professional agitator who went over the line, mocked a respected rival and earned the one-game ban he drew from Major League Baseball.

Even worse in terms of the standings, the injured list is finally coming into play, and ominously, that roster is starting to populate. High-priced closer Aroldis Chapman, who with some irony has an Achilles heel as well as being their Achilles heel, has started the trend, and it did not stop there.

Star slugger Giancarlo Stanton and key reliever Jonathan Loasiga (right shoulder) joined Chapman on the shelf Wednesday. If key table setter DJ LeMahieu (left wrist) has to join them all, exactly half the new “big four” (different than the Core Four) of their prodigious lineup would be out. LeMahieu, who will play through almost anything and did so last season, has left wrist pain, and Stanton, similarly tough, has a right calf strain.

There’s suddenly a line at the MRI machine.

Let’s face it, a year like 1998 comes only once every 100 years, and while there was some early hope, knowing that the calendar has turned to the 21st century, the reality is that a 162-game slate is littered with pitfalls. Alas, some real issues are starting to show.

“Adversity is coming for you. You’ve got to be able to weather the storm … the season doesn’t stop for anyone,” manager Aaron Boone said.

Yankees
Giancarlo Stanton could be headered to injured list. Corey Sipkin

Josh Donaldson’s memorably idiotic and obviously offensive trash talk that woke up the somnambulant White Sox and his victim, the beloved Tim Anderson, seemed to have the opposite effect on the Yankees, who quite noticeably stayed mostly silent regarding the issue involving their mouthy infielder. Boone, who is famed for rarely saying a discouraging word, and star Aaron Judge, who’s becoming something of a spokesman around here, spoke for all when they suggested Donaldson’s decision to call Anderson “Jackie” multiple times on the field was nothing short of regrettable.

MLB agreed, calling Donaldson’s unwanted agitation “disrespectful.” They stopped short of saying it was racist, as it is not possible to read someone’s mind or tell someone’s heart, as Boone mentioned here again. White Sox people to a man didn’t buy Donaldson’s story. There was no inside joke, as Donaldson claimed, just judgment poor enough everyone on both sides agreed.

Why Donaldson is appealing is one-game ban remains beyond comprehension, even to Yankees people who have advised him to take his medicine.

Of greater interest to Yankees fans, some of whom didn’t distinguish themselves by continuing the “Jackie” taunt the next day, is how unsightly the play has been lately, at least by the standards of the champions we had already crowned by mid May.

No question, unmistakable cracks are starting to show.

If it’s ironic that Chapman has an Achilles heel injury, it doesn’t help, especially now that Michael King is proving occasionally fallible, and folks had been crushing Loasiga’s seemingly unhittable pitches.

The impenetrable bullpen suffered another loss when Chad Green, one of the multi-year stalwarts, became the latest to suffer from the UCL tear epidemic, necessitating Tommy John surgery that will take him out until sometime in the 2023 season. That’s a sad one for particularly for him personally, as this was his walk year.

Yankees
Michael King Robert Sabo

King, who seemed on top of the world, on Tuesday allowed a go-ahead three-run homer to old friend Rougie Odor before the Yankees rallied to beat the perennially patsy Orioles, by a single run, 7-6, in extras.

Worse though are the potential offensive absences, as LeMahieu, an MVP contender for two straight years before being slowed last year by a core injury that required surgery (no surprise The Machine played through it), and Stanton, half of their dynamic two towers, may miss time at the wrong time.

“Every team deals with issues and injuries,” Judge said. “It comes down to, when you get punched, can you get back up.”

This may be their first real test of the 162-game slate. They still held baseball’s best record at 30-13 entering Wednesday. But for now it doesn’t feel like it. They had lost four of six games, and haven’t looked particularly good doing it.

It may feel at the moment like they have 99 problems. But as long as No. 99 isn’t one of them — and Judge remains healthy and on his 65-homer pace — eventually, they should be OK. That is the hope, anyway.