
This is the Yankees rotation everyone feared
NY Post
When the Yankees lost Gerrit Cole this spring to Tommy John surgery that will force him to miss the 2025 season (and likely most of 2026), as well as Luis Gil to a lat injury that figures to sideline him until at least June, general manager Brian Cashman said he would “rely on what we have.”
The asking prices for quality starting pitchers were deemed too high, especially with the Yankees trying not to increase payroll too much.
It was an understandable decision, but a potentially risky one.
When the Yankees and their torpedo bats took the league by storm during their opening homestand, they were fine.

Suddenly, someone had hit a rewind button and everyone had been transported back seven months. It was early spring instead of late fall, it was broiling hot outside the arena walls and not freezing cold. Everyone was back at TD Garden. There were 19,156 frenzied fans on their feet begging for blood, poised for the kill.












