Tarik Skubal’s market may be heating up, but the New York Yankees don’t sound like a team preparing to win that sweepstakes.
Detroit’s ace is widely expected to be moved before the Aug. 3 trade deadline at 6 p.m. ET, with the Tigers holding a one-year, $32 million contract on a pitcher who could bring back a massive return. The Yankees would love to add him to a rotation that already ranks among the best in baseball, but there’s growing belief inside the organization that Skubal will end up somewhere else.
Jon Heyman of the New York Post reported that New York is interested in Skubal, though a person within the organization “doubts” the Yankees will actually land him. The thinking appears to be simple: Detroit’s asking price may be too steep.
Money could be part of the problem, too. Spotrac projects Skubal’s market value at an eight-year deal worth $39.7 million annually, which would rank second among starting pitchers. That kind of commitment would force any team to think hard about what comes next.
For the Yankees, the payroll math gets tight fast. Spotrac projects New York at $232.57 million next season, the fourth-highest payroll in baseball. The estimated tax threshold is $247 million, and going over that line would bring fines.
That leaves the Atlanta Braves in a much cleaner position. Their projected payroll sits at $163.53 million, and that financial flexibility has made them a team many around the league view as a leading contender for Skubal. USA Today’s Bob Nightengale went a step further, predicting Atlanta would acquire the left-hander after hearing from rival executives.
If that happens, the Braves would become even more dangerous in a National League race that already includes the Milwaukee Brewers and Los Angeles Dodgers. Atlanta is 49-34, while Milwaukee is 52-31 and Los Angeles sits at 56-30.
Skubal himself looks like he’s getting back into rhythm after missing time with a left elbow issue. He’s 4-4 with a 3.15 ERA, and he turned in a strong outing against the Yankees on Tuesday night. In Detroit’s 9-3 win, he worked six innings, gave up one earned run and one hit, and struck out nine.
The Yankees are 48-37 and don’t need Skubal to stay in the World Series hunt. But adding him would raise their ceiling. For now, though, that doesn’t seem to be the direction this one is heading.
In Other News...
Tigers Lineup Turned A Tough Yankees Matchup Into A Statement
Cam Schlittlers roughest night in the majors came at a bad time for the Yankees, who needed something to stop a slide and instead watched Detroit keep pouring it on. The rookie right-hander was tagged for four homers over four innings in a 9-3 loss, a game that fit neatly into a six-game losing streak and turned a promising start to his season into a much tougher line on the ledger.
The outing also nudged Schlittlers ERA from 1.62 to 2.08, a reminder of how quickly one ugly turn can change the shape of a young pitchers early numbers. For New York, the larger concern was how completely the Tigers lineup seized the moment, turning a difficult matchup into a statement while the Yankees kept searching for a response. [Read more 🡒]
Max Fried Just Gave Yankees Fans The Update They Needed
Max Fried took another meaningful step back toward the Yankees rotation on Friday, returning to live batting practice at Yankee Stadium as he continues his recovery from a left elbow bone bruise. The left-hander has been working through a throwing program since being sidelined by elbow soreness on May 13, and the latest session offered a better sign that his ramp-up is moving in the right direction.
The Yankees still want to see more before putting a firm return date on the calendar, and the next checkpoint is already lined up in his progression. Fried is scheduled to build up to two simulated innings and about 30 pitches next, a stretch that should give the club a clearer read on where he stands as the All-Star break approaches. [Read more 🡒]
Yankees Just Hit Another Embarrassing Low In This AL East Spiral
A night that started with A.J. Hinch reaching his 1,000th managerial win ended with the Yankees on the wrong side of another discouraging result, this one in Detroit as the slide kept growing. New York has now dropped five in a row and is trying to steady itself after a stretch that has left the offense searching for answers and the club desperate to stop the bleeding before the AL East picture gets any uglier.
The Yankees were held to just one hit off Casey Mize and finished with three hits overall, the kind of outing that has become too familiar during the skid. Up next is another stiff test, with Cam Schlittler lined up to face Tarik Skubal as New York looks for any sign that the bats can wake up before the losing streak turns into something harder to shake. [Read more 🡒]
