[Kirschner] How Yankees’ Juan Soto helped inspire a change in Oswaldo Cabrera


[Kirschner] How Yankees’ Juan Soto helped inspire a change in Oswaldo Cabrera

14 comments
  1. Soto, like Cole, is one of those guys that is not just worth the money we’ll (hopefully) pay him in what he himself brings to your team, but what he inspires in the rest of your roster directly or indirectly

    oh, and he’s younger than our starting catcher last night 🤯🤯🤯

  2. I don’t need to read this to know it’s true based on how he carries himself in the games

  3. I’m going to be realistic, and take this as them saying we have two Juan Sotos now.

  4. If the Yankees wiff on signing soto. Then we will know for sure that ownership isn’t serious about the team as much as the fans are. I’m sure I’ll get downvotes for saying this.

  5. Soto’s biggest impact is going to be Dominguez. Looking forward to seeing the Martian when he’s healthy

  6. This is such a huge indictment of our organizational hitting philosophy. Why is Oswaldo Cabrera, of all people, openly admitting that he was trying to hit a home run with every swing?

    I get the idea that putting the ball in the air results in more expected run valuation, but that hinges on being able to consistently elevate the ball which most players just can’t do. That’s why sluggers are rare, and highly sought after. And usually aren’t utility infielders!

    It’s like the juiced ball completely broke all models or something.

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