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Girardi calls out sloppy Gary Sanchez as Yankees drop 4th straight

August 5, 2017 by  
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CLEVELAND — Joe Girardi’s message to Gary Sanchez couldn’t have been any clearer if he were standing next to the struggling catcher.

“He needs to improve, bottom line he needs to improve,’’ Girardi said of Sanchez’s defense following a 7-2 loss Friday night to the Indians in front of a sold-out Progressive Field crowd of 34,466.

Sanchez was charged with his 12th passed ball of the season in the Indians’ two-run second inning and leads all MLB catchers in that ugly department. Those dozen passed balls (three since Sunday) sit next to Sanchez’s 10 errors. He also hasn’t been good at blocking pitches in the dirt, and Girardi sees a reason for that.

“He is late getting down. That’s what I see sometimes,’’ said Girardi, who watched the Indians score a run in the fifth on a wild pitch by Chad Green that glanced off Sanchez’s right wrist. “It is something that we are working on and continue to work on.’’

Girardi, a former catcher known for his defense, was asked what leads to a catcher getting down to block balls late.

“A lot of times it is their stance. Sometimes their rear end sags and sometimes you misread a ball,’’ Girardi said. “And sometimes not anticipating.’’

Asked if Sanchez has regressed defensively from last year, when he hit 20 homers in the final two months and grabbed all the attention for his bat, Girardi said he wasn’t sure, but is looking for improvement.

“I don’t know,” Girardi said. “Sometimes when you get a chance to see someone for a full season it’s a little different but it is something he is capable of doing a better job.”

Behind the plate wasn’t the only area in which Sanchez struggled during the Yankees’ fourth straight loss. He went 0-for-4 and struck out with the bases loaded on a Trevor Bauer curveball to end the fifth inning.

Coupled with a win by the AL East-leading Red Sox, the loss dropped the second-place Yankees to three games back. As recently as Monday, they were a half-game up on the Red Sox.

Jaime Garcia’s first start with the Yankees wasn’t good. The veteran lefty gave up six runs (five earned), five hits and walked four in 4 ²/₃ innings.

“He looked rusty, he was up in the zone,’’ Girardi said of Garcia, who has pitched for the Braves, Twins and Yankees this season.


Jamie GarciaAP

Garcia, whose last start was July 28, didn’t accept the rustiness as the reason for the poor outing.

“I was falling behind in the count and the walks hurt me,’’ Garcia said. “I have to do a better job than that.’’

Sanchez, who had an ice pack and pressure wrap on his right wrist after the game, was asked about Girardi saying improvement was needed.

“As a professional baseball player, every day you got to improve,’’ said Sanchez, who lost the ball that went for a passed ball when Roberto Perez faked a bunt. “As a baseball player it’s not just defense, but also defensively. Every day you have to get better.’’

Is Girardi thinking about using Sanchez as the designated hitter over the frigid Matt Holliday while having Austin Romine catch?

“Up to this point I have not,’’ Girardi said. “We are trying to think of everything, so we will talk about everything.’’

Girardi said Sanchez’s work sessions have been good and they surely will continue. So much of the optimism surrounding the Yankees in spring training was tied to Sanchez’s bat and powerful right arm. The bat hasn’t been great, while the defense has been below average.

And with fewer than two months remaining in the season, it’s not likely to get better.

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In return to Boston, White Sox rookie Yoan Moncada says trade was ‘best for my career’

August 4, 2017 by  
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Yoan Moncada returned to face the team that traded him away for the first time Thursday night, and if the White Sox second baseman had any wistfulness about leaving the Red Sox in the blockbuster Chris Sale trade in December, he wasn’t letting on.

Before a 9-5 White Sox loss to the Red Sox, Moncada said he was happy to catch up with former teammates and executives at Fenway Park, but he added he hadn’t paid much attention to the American League East leaders this season.

He is too wrapped up in his first few weeks with the rebuilding White Sox, where he faces a very different set of circumstances than he did in Boston.

“I wasn’t expecting to be traded,” Moncada, 22, said through a team interpreter. “It was a good opportunity for me. Now I’m with this team, and I feel that was the best for me, that was the best for my career. I’m just glad it happened.”

Rick Porcello. But White Sox right-hander Miguel Gonzalez gave up seven earned runs over 1 2/3 innings, including two-run homers to Mookie Betts and Rafael Devers, Moncada’s former minor-league teammate.

The White Sox lost for the 20th time in 24 games, a stretch in part driven by the trades of seven veterans last month for a stockpile of prospects the Sox hope eventually will complement Moncada.

When Moncada last played in Boston in September, the Red Sox were in search of a spark for a playoff push, and they had him play at third base, a position he had manned for just 10 games in the minors.

Rick Renteria said. “We know as a young player he still has so much more in the tank.”

Moncada is 4-for-40 with a double, a triple, a homer, six RBIs, eight walks and 17 strikeouts over 13 games. But Renteria said he has been happy with his at-bats, stressing his need for continued development.

“He’s very calm in the box,” Renteria said. “He’s a confident young man. When he comes away from a particular at-bat, if he has been frustrated by a sequencing they might have done with him, the look he brings into the dugout is — ‘I can’t wait to get back out there the next time.’”

ckane@chicagotribune.com

Twitter @ChiTribKane

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