Here is the official press release the Yankees sent out today regarding the Spring Training invites. It is a mixture of young minor leaguers and veterans trying to hang on or just get a job. There aren't many who I think will actually make the team but Bill Hall, Manny Delcarmen, Hideki Okajima stand out. The minor league deals are good because if they do well and make the team then you want to pay them and it's still not a lot. If they don't you basically lost meal money and it won't kill your franchise.
The New York Yankees today announced that they have signed 13 players to
minor league contracts with an invitation to Major League Spring Training,
including INF Russell Branyan, RHP Manny
Delcarmen, INF Bill Hall, LHP Hideki
Okajima and OF Dewayne Wise. The club has also invited
14 additional players to 2012 Spring Training bringing the total number of
invites to 27 (14 pitchers, five infielders, five catchers and three
outfielders). The total number of players now scheduled to report is 67.
Branyan, 37, has played in 1,059 career games over parts of 14 Major League
seasons with Cleveland (1998-2002, ‘10), Cincinnati (2002-03), Milwaukee
(2004-05, ’08), Tampa Bay (2006), San Diego (2006-07), Philadelphia (2007), St.
Louis (2007), Seattle (2009, ‘10), Arizona (2011) and Los Angeles-AL (2011). He
owns a career .232 (682-for-2,934) batting average with 143 doubles, 194 home
runs and 467 RBI. Entering the 2012 season, his 15.12 at-bat/home run ratio is
the seventh best among active Major League players. Branyan is the only player
in the history of the current Yankee Stadium to hit a home run off of the glass
facing of the center field batter’s eye (7/2/09 with Seattle off Alfredo Aceves)
and the first player to hit a home run into the upper deck (300 level) in the
right-field stands (8/21/10 with Seattle off Javier Vazquez). In 2011, he
combined with Arizona and Los Angeles-AL to hit .197 (25-for-127) with seven
doubles, five home runs and 14 RBI in 68 games. The Franklin, Tennessee native
was originally selected by Cleveland in the seventh round of the 1994 First-Year
Player Draft.
Delcarmen, 29, has appeared in 298 career games – all in relief – over parts
of six seasons with Boston and Colorado, going 11-8 with a 3.97 ERA (292.2IP,
129ER). He is tied for eleventh all-time in Red Sox franchise history with 289
appearances and established a career-high with 73 appearances in 2008. In 2011,
he combined with Triple-A Tacoma of the Seattle organization and Triple-A Round
Rock of the Texas organization to go 3-2 with a 5.59 ERA (38.2IP, 24ER) in 26
relief appearances. Originally drafted by the Red Sox in the second round of the
2000 First-Year Player Draft, Delcarmen has made 11 career postseason
appearances, including six during Boston’s 2007 World Series run. Over his
career, is 4-1 with a 3.65 ERA (125.2IP, 51ER) in 131 relief appearances vs. the
American League East division.
Hall, 32, owns a career .248 (825-for-3,325) batting average with 210
doubles, 124 home runs and 439 RBI in 1,047 games over parts of 10 seasons with
Milwaukee (2002-09), Seattle (2009), Boston (2010), Houston (2011) and San
Francisco (2011). He has made appearances at second base, third base, shortstop
and all three outfield positions during his career. In 2011, he split the season
between the Houston and San Francisco organizations, combining to bat .211
(39-for-185) with nine doubles, two home runs and 14 RBI in 62 games. Hall was
originally selected by Milwaukee in the sixth round of the 1998 First-Year
Player Draft.
Okajima, 36, is 17-8 with six saves and a 3.11 ERA (246.1IP, 85ER) in 261
career games over parts of five seasons with Boston (2007-11). Has registered
the sixth-most innings pitched among all lefthanded American League relievers
since 2007. The 2007 All-Star and World Series champion owns a 2.11 ERA (21.1IP,
5ER) in 17 career postseason appearances. He made seven relief appearances with
the Red Sox in 2011, going 1-0 with a 4.32 ERA (8.1IP, 4ER), but spent the
majority of the season at Triple-A Pawtucket where he was 8-1 with a 2.29 ERA
(51.0IP, 13ER). Over his Major League career, has limited lefthanded batters to
a .218 (87-for-399) batting average with 98 strikeouts and eight home runs.
Prior to his Major League career, played in 11 seasons in the Nippon
Professional League (Japan).
Wise, 33, owns a .219 (180-for-821) career batting average with 32 doubles,
22 home runs and 82 RBI in 445 games over parts of nine seasons with Toronto
(2000-02, ‘10-11), Atlanta (2004), Cincinnati (2006-07), Chicago-AL (2008-09)
and Florida (2011). Overall, he appeared in 69 combined games at the Major
League level in 2011 with the Marlins and Blue Jays. He has appeared in all
three outfield positions during his Major League career, combining for a .988
fielding percentage (509 total chances/six errors). Wise was originally
selected by Cincinnati in the fifth round of the 1997 First-Year Player
Draft.
LHP Manuel Banuelos, 20, combined to go 6-7 with a 3.75 ERA
(129.2IP, 54ER) and 125 strikeouts in 27 starts with Double-A Trenton and
Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre in 2011, ranking third among all Yankees
farmhands in strikeouts. He was named to the Eastern League’s midseason All-Star
team, prior to his promotion to Scranton/WB on July 31. Following the season, he
was tabbed by Baseball America as the top pitching prospect in the
Yankees organization, the sixth best prospect in the EL and the 12th-best
prospect on MLB Network’s/MLB.com’s top 50 Prospects list. Banuelos earned the
James P. Dawson Award from the New York Chapter of the BBWAA as the 2011 “Most
Outstanding Rookie in Spring Training,” after going 1-1 with a 2.13 ERA in six
games (two starts). The Monterrey, Mexico native was signed by the Yankees as a
non-drafted free agent in 2008.
INF Doug Bernier, 31, played the entire 2011 season with
Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, hitting .237 (69-for-291) with 13 doubles, four
triples and 29 RBI in 95 games. Originally signed by Colorado as a non-drafted
free agent in 2002, he owns a career .238 (645-for-2,711) minor league batting
average with 114 doubles, 16 triples, 20 home runs and 268 RBI in 904 games in
the Colorado (2002-08), Yankees (2009, ‘11) and Pittsburgh (2010) organizations.
He made his Major League debut in 2008 with Colorado, appearing in two games and
going 0-for-4 in his lone start at second base on June 19, 2008 vs.
Cleveland.
RHP Daniel Burawa, 23, combined with Single-A Charleston and
Single-A Tampa to go 5-4 with a 3.64 ERA (84.0IP, 34ER) in 39 appearances out of
the bullpen in 2011. The St. John’s University product began the season with
Charleston and was 3-2 with a 3.63 ERA (44.2IP, 18ER) in 19 relief appearances
prior to being promoted to Tampa in late June. While with Tampa he went 2-2 with
a 3.66 ERA (39.1IP, 16ER). Burawa was originally selected by the Yankees in the
12th round of the 2010 First-Year Player Draft.
LHP Juan Cedeno, 28, has not pitched during the regular
season in each of the last three seasons, appearing only in the Dominican Winter
League. In 2011, he made 15 relief appearances with the Tigres de Licey and went
1-0 with a 1.04 ERA (8.2IP, 1ER). Originally signed by Boston as a non-drafted
free agent in 2001, he has combined to go 29-48 with a 4.70 ERA (681.2IP, 356ER)
in 216 games (99 starts) in eight minor league seasons in the Boston (2002-04;
’05), Kansas City (2005-2007), Los Angeles-NL (2008) and Detroit (2008)
organizations.
OF Colin Curtis, 27, did not play in 2011 due to a shoulder
injury. He last saw Major League action in 2010, when he made his Major League
debut, hitting .186 (11-for-59) with three doubles, one home run and 8 RBI in 31
games (nine starts in right-field, two in left-field and one at designated
hitter) over two stints with the Yankees. In five minor league seasons in the
Yankees organization, he has combined to hit .267 (494-for-1,850) with 32 home
runs and 209 RBI in 497 games. Curtis was originally selected by the Yankees in
the fourth round of the 2006 First-Year Player Draft.
RHP Matt Daley, 29, is 1-2 with a 4.71 ERA (80.1IP, 42ER) in
92 career Major League games with the Colorado Rockies (2009-11). He has spent
the bulk of his career in the Rockies minor league system, combining to go 20-20
with a 3.80 ERA (378.2IP, 160ER) in 259 games. In 2011, he spent the majority of
the season at Triple-A Colorado Springs, going 0-2 with a 6.28 ERA in 17 outings
before being recalled to the Major League club in May. The New York-native
appeared in seven games with the Rockies prior to undergoing season-ending
arthroscopic surgery in August. Daley was originally signed as a non-drafted
free agent by Colorado in June, 2004 out of Bucknell University.
OF Cole Garner, 27, owns a career .286 (639-for-2,236)
batting average with 157 doubles, 28 triples, 76 home runs and 346 RBI in 601
combined minor league games in the Colorado organization. In 2011, he made his
Major League debut with the Rockies and batted .222 (2-for-9) in four contests.
Colorado’s 26th round pick in the 2003 First-Year Player Draft,
Garner spent the majority of last season with Triple-A Colorado Springs and hit
.330 (61-for-185) with eight home runs and 35 RBI.
C Jose Gil, 25, has appeared in 506 career minor league
games, all in the Yankees organization, hitting .240 (405-for-1,691) with 98
doubles, 34 home runs and 224 RBI over 8 seasons. In 2011, he combined to bat
.253 (67-for-265) with six home runs and 35 RBI in 79 games with Double-A
Trenton and Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. Following the season, he played in
32 games with the Caribes de Anzoategui of the Venezuelan Winter League and
batted .272 (22-for-81) with eight doubles, one home run and 10 RBI. The
Barcelona, Venezuela native was originally signed by the Yankees as a
non-drafted free agent in 2003.
C Kyle Higashioka, 21, spent the first half of the 2011
season with Single-A Tampa, batting .238 (39-for-164) with 10 doubles, four home
runs and 16 RBI, appearing in all but two games at catcher (two at designated
hitter) and throwing out 21-of-60 (35.0%) potential base stealers. He was
transferred to Single-A Charleston in June where he remained for the rest of the
season, batting .223 (29-for-130) with six doubles, four home runs and 13 RBI in
36 games. Higashioka was the Yankees’ seventh round pick in the 2008 First-Year
Player Draft.
RHP Brett Marshall, 21, played the entire 2011 season with
Single-A Tampa and went 9-7 with a 3.78 ERA (1401.IP, 59ER) in 27 games (26
starts). He made his third career relief appearance on July 21 at Bradenton and
struck out eight batters in 5.0 scoreless innings. The Yankees’ sixth-round
selection in the 2008 First-Year Player Draft, Marshall has played in four
combined minor league seasons, going 16-15 with a 3.88 ERA (317.2IP, 137ER).
RHP Adam Miller, 27, has spent his entire professional
career in the Cleveland minor league system, combining to go 33-30 with a 3.71
ERA (533.2IP, 220ER) in 135 games (94 starts). In 2011, he combined to make 31
relief appearances with Single-A Kinston and Double-A Akron, going 1-5 with a
5.93 ERA (44.0IP, 29ER) in his first action since May of 2008. Miller was
originally selected by the Indians in Compensation Round A of the 2003
First-Year Player Draft.
C Gustavo Molina, 29, made the Yankees’ Opening Day Roster
in 2011 and made three starts at catcher, batting .167 (1-for-6) with one
double. He spent the majority of the season at Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre,
where he hit .253 (41-for-162) with six doubles, four home runs and 21 RBI in 47
games. Following the season, he appeared in 42 games with the Caribes de
Anzoategui of the Venezuelan Winter League and batted .256 (31-for-121) with
seven doubles and 5 RBI. In 17 postseason games (16 starts at catcher) with the
Caribes, he hit .295 (18-for-61) with six home runs and 17 RBI, ranking second
in the league in slugging percentage (.639), tying for second in home runs and
tying for third in RBI. Molina has played in 26 career Major League games with
Chicago-AL (2007), Baltimore (2007), New York-NL (2008), Boston (2010) and the
Yankees (2011), making 11 starts at catcher. The Venezuela native was
originally signed by Chicago-AL as a non-drafted free agent on January 3,
2000.
C J.R. Murphy, 20, owns a career .274 (193-for-704) batting
average with 46 doubles, 15 home runs and 107 RBI in 182 minor league games in
the Yankees’ organization since 2009. In 2011, he combined at Single-A
Charleston and Single-A Tampa to hit .287 (98-for-341) with 29 doubles, seven
home runs and 46 RBI in 86 games. He threw out a combined 23-of-72 (31.9%)
potential base stealers. Murphy was the Yankees’ second round selection in the
2009 First-Year Player Draft.
INF Jayson Nix, 29, owns a career .207 (161-for-778) batting
average with 33 doubles, 30 home runs and 84 RBI in 264 games over parts of four
seasons with Colorado (2008), Chicago-AL (2009-10), Cleveland (2010) and Toronto
(2011). In 2011, he made the Blue Jays’ Opening Day roster and appeared in 46
games with the club, batting .169 (23-for-136) with four home runs and 16 RBI.
In 41 games with Triple-A Las Vegas, he batted .270 (44-for-163) with eight home
runs and 29 RBI. Nix was a member of the bronze-medal winning 2008 U.S. Olympic
Baseball Team in Beijing, China and was originally selected by Colorado in
Compensation Round A of the 2003 First-Year Player Draft.
LHP Mike O’Connor, 31, owns a 4-10 career record with a 5.30
ERA (120.2IP, 71ER) in 35 games (21 starts) at the Major League level over parts
of three seasons with Washington (2006, ’08) and New York-NL (2011). He has
spent the bulk of his career in the Nationals, Padres, Royals and Mets minor
league systems, combining to go 50-52 with a 4.00 ERA (808.0IP, 359ER). In 2011,
he spent the majority of the season with Triple-A Buffalo and went 5-5 with a
5.22 ERA (60.1IP, 35ER) in 39 relief appearances. In nine outings out of the
bullpen with the Mets, he went 0-1 with a 2.70 ERA (6.2IP, 2ER, 8K), holding
righthanded hitters to a .083 (1-for-12) batting average. O’Connor was
originally selected by the Montreal Expos in the seventh round of the 2002
First-Year Player Draft.
RHP Ryan Pope, 25, combined to go 2-3 with a 5.12 ERA
(45.2IP, 26ER) in 40 combined relief appearances with Single-A Tampa, Double-A
Trenton and Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre in 2011. Pope was selected by the
Yankees in the third round of the 2007 First-Year Player Draft, becoming the
first player ever drafted out of the Savannah College of Art and Design.
C Gary Sanchez, 19, batted .256 (77-for-301) with 49 runs,
16 doubles, 17 home runs and 52 RBI with Single-A Charleston in 2011. He led the
RiverDogs in home runs, and ranked fourth overall among all Yankees farmhands.
Following the season, he played with Escogido in the Dominican Winter League and
hit .300 (6-for-20) in eight games. At the conclusion of the season,
Baseball America listed him as the fourth-best prospect in the Yankees
organization. Sanchez was originally signed by the Yankees as a non-drafted free
agent in July of 2009.
RHP Graham Stoneburner, 24, owns a career 10-13 record with
a 3.03 ERA (234.1IP, 79ER) in 45 combined minor league games in the Yankees
organization since 2009. In 2011, he combined at three different levels (GCL,
Single-A Tampa and Double-A Trenton) to go 1-5 with a 4.04 ERA (91.1IP, 41ER) in
18 games (16 starts). While with the Thunder, he limited opposing batters to
just 20 hits in 78 at-bats (.256 batting average). Stoneburner was originally
selected by the Yankees in the 14th round of the 2009 First-Year
Player Draft.
INF Jorge Vazquez, 29, played in 118 games with Triple-A
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre in 2011, batting .262 (119-for-455) with 32 home runs and
93 RBI. He ranked first in the International League in home runs, second in RBI
and fourth in total bases (235), leading all Yankees farmhands in home runs and
RBI. A member of the IL’s midseason and postseason All-Star teams, he became the
first Yankee minor leaguer to be named to a postseason All-Star squad as a
designated hitter since Shelley Duncan accomplished the feat in 2007. Following
the season, he played in 56 games with the Tomateros de Culiacan of the Mexican
Pacific League and hit .330 (70-for-212) with 18 home runs and 60 RBI. He led
the league in RBI, ranked second in home runs, third in slugging percentage
(.618) and fourth in batting average and total bases (131). Vazquez played for
Team Mexico in the 2009 World Baseball Classic, batting .294 (5-for-17) with one
home run and five RBI in five games and was a 10-year veteran of the Mexican
League prior to signing with the Yankees in December 2008.
RHP Adam Warren, 24, spent the entire 2011 campaign at
Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, going 6-8 with a 3.60 ERA (152.1IP, 61ER) in 27
starts. He recorded a career-high in innings pitched and ranked tenth in the
International League in ERA. Prior to the halfway point of the year, he went 6-3
with a 3.20 ERA (104.1IP, 37ER) in 17 starts, earning a spot on the IL’s
midseason All-Star team. Warren recorded victories in five of six decisions from
May 12-June 20, going 5-1 with a 2.50 ERA (54.0IP, 15ER) in eight starts over
the stretch, throwing 7.0IP or more and allowing 2ER or less in five of those
appearances. The University of North Carolina graduate was originally selected
by the Yankees in the fourth round of the 2009 First-Year Player Draft.
RHP Kevin Whelan, 28, spent the majority of the season at
Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre in 2011, going 2-3 with 23 saves and a 2.75 ERA
(52.1IP, 16ER) in 45 relief appearances. He was named to the International
League’s midseason All-Star team and converted 18 of 21 save opportunities with
a 1.61 ERA (28.0IP, 5ER) prior to the halfway point of the year. He finished the
season tied for second in the league in saves, holding opposing batters hitless
in 21 of his 45 outings. Whelan was acquired by the Yankees with RHPs Humberto
Sanchez and Anthony Claggett from Detroit in exchange for OF Gary Sheffield in
November 2006. He was originally drafted by the Tigers in the fourth round of
the 2005 First-Year Player Draft.
RHP Chase Whitley, 22, has appeared in 72 combined career
minor league games (one start) with the Yankees since 2010, going 7-7 with a
2.17 ERA (128.1IP, 31ER). In 2011, he went 3-5 with seven saves and a 2.47 ERA
(91.0IP, 25ER) in 42 combined games at Single-A Tampa and Double-A Trenton. He
made his first career start on August 24 at New Hampshire and recorded the loss,
allowed 3ER in 2.0IP. Whitley was originally selected by the Yankees in the
15th round of the 2010 First-Year Player Draft.
See the Ball, Hit the Ball
6 years ago