Cody Bellinger has swing built for Yankee Stadium that makes him a perfect Bronx fit

Amid an offseason that has not been ideal, the Yankees found an ideal target. In the aftermath of losing out on Juan Soto, among the Yankees needs were a first baseman and center fielder, hopefully with a strong glove; preferably a lefty bat with a tendency of pulling the ball; probably someone with a history of playing in big markets (maybe even with some Yankees lineage); and, as they always hope, someone who wanted to be in pinstripes. Cody Bellinger checked off every box. The outfielder/first baseman was acquired on Tuesday, when the Yankees sent Cody Poteet to the Cubs and got back a player whose only true downside was a contract that has two years and $52.5 million remaining (with a player opt-out after next season, and with the Cubs responsible for $5 million). The Yankees were happy to land a gifted athlete who is a nearly perfect fit for the roster.The feeling apparently was mutual. “He’s a good baseball player and someone that wants to be here,” GM Brian Cashman said Wednesday at the Stadium, where the club introduced Max Fried.

“Been hearing it for a long time, including his agent, Scott Boras, saying, ‘Can you get him over here? He’s driving me crazy.He wants to be a Yankee.’ ” Bellinger’s desire helped, but his game was a bigger factor to the Yankees. The 29-year-old has authored one of the strangest active careers in the majors.

He arrived as a top prospect who lived up to the hype, NL Rookie of the Year in 2017 and MVP in 2019 with the Dodgers.His rise gave way to a plummet in 2021-22, when he was among the worst hitters in baseball (with a combined .611 OPS) that might have been related to November 2020 shoulder surgery.

The one-time MVP was non-tendered by the Dodgers and signed with the Cubs, where he bounced back in 2023 with a much more contact-oriented approach and then dipped in 2024, when he posted a .751 OPS with 18 home runs in 130 games. If Bellinger — a lefty swinger who has pulled 43 percent of his batted ba...

Read More 
PaprClips
Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by PaprClips.
Publisher: New York Post

Recent Articles