Mancuso: Michael Pineda Was Sharp And What Yankees Need

Michael Pineda was sharp  Monday afternoon and there was no other word to describe the New York Yankees righthander on Opening Day in the Bronx  It was almost perfection and for the moment erased a question as to when he will finally step up?

 He was perfect through 6.2 innings before a two-out double that the Ray’s Evan Longoria hit sharply to left field. You could see the determination and the focus, and that has always seemed to rattle the 28-year old who is supposed to be so much a part of the Yankees future. 

Pineda is one of those untouchable guys and if he has more outings on the mound , as he showed on Opening Day, the Yankees will keep him as one of their untouchables.  They wanted this more and this second start of the young season certainly does dwell for optimism for the Yankees and for Michael Pineda. 

But there was a moment, and at Yankee Stadium where this looked like to be another special day in the Bronx. And it also was the Michael Pineda the Yankees hope to get every fourth or fifth day on the mound.  The fastball hit all cylinders, the slider had momentum and the changeup was effective against the left hand hitters.

When asked to describe what was going on in the Yankees dugout before Longoria became the first base runner for Tampa Bay, manager Joe Girardi said, “Thinking it’s going to be another special day at the stadium.”

And with 46,955 Opening Day fans riding every pitch, Pineda made them believers because the Yankees need this youngster to step up with a starting rotation that had a lot of questions coming into the season. They can depend on Masahiro Tanaka, if the elbow does not fall apart and what to expect from the veteran lefthander CC Sabathia is always cause for some Yankees drama.

To have a consistent and effective Michael Pineda, well that makes this Yankees team a lot better and more optimistic in a season that is not supposed to go towards a championship route.  You can say Pineda has the skeptics, and his reputation for losing focus on the mound does give him that bad rap, but Monday afternoon on a day perfect for baseball, Michael Pineda got the skeptics going in another direction.

“It’s satisfying because he did pitch well,” Girardi said.  The manager was pleased with the focus and mentality, More so it was the Michael Pineda  the Yankees have come to expect and on this day it was more. At a point, there was talk that this was going to be a historic Opening Day in the Bronx.

And because Michael Pineda threw strikes, 67 of them on 93 pitches, he was special in the Yankees 8-1 home opening win over the Rays.

From the fourth inning on, Pineda had to notice something special was happening. The crowd was with him, his teammates in the dugout as all ballplayers do when a special moment may be closing in, they ignored Pineda and he went back to work.

After the Longoria hit that spoiled the possible and historic moment, Pineda went back on the hill. He said about the moment, “Don’t lose focus ….be aggressive.” And that he was, attacking and continuing to throw strikes in becoming the first Yankees pitcher to be perfect through at least 6.2 innings since Andy Pettitte in August of 2009.

Girardi did not want to remove his starter, and this early in the season there was no need to keep Pineda in the game as his team with home runs from Aaron Judge, Chase Headley and Starlin Castro built a lead.

Yes, the 28 -year old native of Yaguate Dominican Republic, who also had 11 strikeouts for the second time in his career, may have finally arrived for manager Joe Girardi and the Yankees. And on Opening Day, and as they say, You can’t beat that.”

But will Pineda be consistent and come back strong in his next start? That is the question, but who cares because this was an Opening Day that was memorable and could prove to be beneficial for the Yankees in the long run.

Comment Rich Mancuso: [email protected]  Twitter@Ring786  Facebook.com/Rich Mancuso   

About the Author

Rich Mancuso

Rich Mancuso is a regular contributor at NY Sports Day, covering countless New York Mets, Yankees, and MLB teams along with some of the greatest boxing matches over the years. He is an award winning sports journalist and previously worked for The Associated Press, New York Daily News, Gannett, and BoxingInsider.com, in a career that spans almost 40 years.

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