
| May 8th, 2008 | So Much For The Big 3 (For Now) |
Hughes, Chamberlain, Kennedy. The three guys that are supposed to lead the Yankees back to the promised land, the the three guys who all have ace potential, and the three guys who are supposed to form the best rotation in baseball. Naturally, with the whole being highly touted Yankee prospects thing, a lot of hype and pressure was placed onto their shoulders. With Joba’s dominance in the ‘pen last year, Hughes’ solid (but short) big league stint, and Kennedy’s dominant minor league numbers, these three were expected to begin that reign in 2008, and all fans in the Bronx expected immediate success. Unfortunately for them, things haven’t quite turned out the way everyone had hoped. Joba’s still in the bullpen, and they’re idiots for doing such a thing (Copyright Hank Steinbrenner, 2008). Hughes is sporting a 9.00 ERA and a 1:1 K/BB ratio. Kennedy ’s ERA is just a shade below Hughes’ (8.37), and he was demoted to AAA Scranton/Wilkes-Barre recently. The Big Three has turned into one struggling pitcher and a 22 year-old setup man (for now). Lets look at all three individually: Hughes dominated in the minors before he was called up in late April 2007. In his second start, he carried a no-hitter into the 7th inning against Texas before he was forced to leave due to injury. This start gave Yankee fans and coaches a lot of hope for the future. He returned and was able to do a decent job, finishing with 5 wins and a 4.46 ERA. He was set up to have a great 2008, but everything has gone wrong for him. He has no control and gives up way more hits than he has innings pitched. I’m actually surprised that he’s still in New York and not in Scranton. As for Kennedy, he dominated A, AA, and AAA last year, posting a 1.29 ERA in Tampa, a 2.59 ERA in Trenton, and a 2.09 ERA in Scranton. He was promoted to New York late in the year and had a 1.89 ERA in 3 starts. Nobody would have expected his 2008 to start so poorly. Any control that he previously had disappeared, and was performing so bad that he was demoted to Scranton recently. He excelled in his first start there though, going 7.1 shutout innings, allowing a single hit, striking out 8 and walking none. Posted in Uncategorized |
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