
Blake Snell best possible solution on Gerrit Cole fill-in list
NY Post
One of these days I’ll stop writing about starting pitchers the Yankees need to get. But now is not the time to cease! (Hat tip to reader Bill Bittay for the pun.)
Dylan Cease was actually the perfect solution to the Yankees’ obvious rotation issue: a dependable starter with big stuff — the most swings-and-misses since the start of 2021 with 1,437, 11 more than second-place Gerrit Cole, via Sarah Langs — plus a reasonable $8 million salary. But word is the Yankees remained in the background late, once it became understood top outfield prospect Spencer Jones had to be in any package.
With some irony, the White Sox sent Cease to the Padres for four players — including pitching prospect Drew Thorpe, who actually came in the deal with the Yankees for Juan Soto. So who’s left for the Yankees to pursue to enhance a rotation that will be without Cole at least one to two months and looked thin even before the ace’s elbow ligament issue arose. Here’s the seeming list of possibilities.
1. Blake Snell: The first two-time Cy Young winner whose free agency lasted into mid-March, Snell represents the best hope to replicate Cole. He was easily the best starter the final five months of 2023, posting a 1.20 ERA from May 25 on (exactly twice as good as Kyle Bradish’s 2.40 mark).
Some former teammates suggest Snell would prefer the West Coast, but the real issue is that the Yankees are over the fourth-tier Steve Cohen tax threshold and would need to pay 110 percent tax, meaning a $30M salary would bring a $33M tax bill.
2. Jordan Montgomery: The Yankees like their former pitcher, but they prefer Snell. The suspicion, too, is he’d prefer the Rangers, who also went for Cease and could use another pitcher.

Cade Cunningham, almost inarguably the best player in the East this season, is likely out for the remainder of the regular season. That’s the word out of Detroit following the depressing news that Cunningham punctured a lung when he took a knee to his side Tuesday from Washington’s Tre Johnson while chasing a loose ball.

Wednesday was another positive day at Yankees camp. For the first time since March 6, 2025 — an outing in which he knew “something wasn’t right,” which began a weeks-long saga that ended on the operating table for Tommy John surgery — Gerrit Cole was back on a mound and facing hitters in game action.











