Thank goodness the World Cup is in full swing, because the Yankees are trying their hardest to make this a miserable summer for sports fans of a pinstriped persuasion. Even after winning on Monday, they have lost 12 of their last 16, subjecting us to one of their worst summer swoons in an era defined by their summer swoons. If it was just one problem area that would be palatable, but at the moment it’s all parts of the roster that are deficient. As such, we have just one game from which to select
our At-Bat of the Week – Trent Grisham’s leadoff home run in a rare Yankees win – the 5-2 victory over the Twins last Friday.
We join Grisham to lead off the bottom of the first, the Yankees already facing a 1-0 deficit after Gerrit Cole gave up a solo home run to Kody Clemens with two outs in the top-half. Grisham is taking his first AB since being activated off the IL earlier that day, a right hamstring strain sidelining the center fielder since June 12th. He’s facing rookie righty Mike Paredes, making just his seventh major league start.
Through his first handful of big league starts, Paredes has typically attacked lefties with four-seamers up and changeups down and away. He starts this encounter with an elevated four-seamer at 95 mph.
This pitch doesn’t land too far away from the zone, but Grisham’s plate discipline is so advanced that he doesn’t even think about offering at this pitch, almost immediately recognizing it as a ball out of Paredes’ hand.
Paredes sticks with the express after missing the zone by a slim margin, again targeting the top of the zone with a 95 mph heater.
This time, he nails his spot, dotting the corner up and in with this four-seamer. Grisham recognizes it as a strike, but the combination of the perfect location with the elite amount of induced vertical break Paredes achieves with the pitch makes it pretty much impossible to put into play. The heater stays on plane above the barrel of Grisham’s bat and he can only manage to foul it back over the screen.
After two straight elevated fastballs, the second eliciting a swing from Grisham, it’s a good time for Paredes to change speeds and eye level with a low changeup.
Oh man, Grisham misses a good pitch to hit here. Paredes isn’t able to command it to his spot on the corner down and away, and it hangs pretty much down the middle. The change of speeds gets Grisham out in front, however, and he hits it just off the end of the bat foul to the left. You’d love to be able to punish a mistake like that, and now he has to hope he can do damage if Paredes makes a similar mistake.
The count is now 1-2 but there is no panic in Grisham’s approach facing another changeup.
Paredes executes this one much better than the last, making it look like a strike out of the hand and allowing the sinking and fading movement to carry it below the zone. However, Grisham’s pitch recognition and strike zone knowledge kicks in again, and he manages an excellent take against this pitcher’s pitch.
Despite failing to get Grisham to chase that changeup, Paredes opts to throw a third straight one. This tends to be a risky strategy with off-speed pitches as each one needs to be a little better than the one that preceded it.
That is not the case with this changeup, Paredes throwing this one closer to the zone and with less downward break than the last one. It’s clear Grisham is getting a good sense of the velocity and movement profile of the pitch as he’s able to pull this pitch with some power just foul on the wrong side of the right field foul line.
Perhaps Paredes senses that Grisham is growing wise to the low changeup, because he looks to speed things up and reset the eye level again going back to the elevated heater.
This pitch is not close enough to the zone to achieve the goal Paredes wants, sailing up and in and causing Grisham to recoil out of the way. Just your classic waste pitch that doesn’t do much to set up future offerings.
Grisham has fought back to work the count full, and after watching the poor execution of the four-seamer Paredes just threw, I wonder if he allows himself to sit on the changeup here.
Whatever the case, Grisham is absolutely ready to hit the off-speed. Even though he is a little out in front of this pitch, he is able to sink to one knee to dig out this ball and lift it into the second deck in right for the game-tying home run. After missing the first mistake changeup earlier in the count, the worry is that that might’ve been the one good pitch to hit this AB. However, Grisham made sure not to miss when he got a second meatball to hit.
Here’s the full AB:
Grisham was in the midst of a searing hot streak at the time of his injury, his loss from the top of the lineup a huge blow with the team already missing Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton. It was incredibly encouraging to see that he did not miss a single beat in his three weeks on the shelf, making an immediate impact in his first AB back from injury. The Yankees offense needs its regular starters back to turn this summer around, and Grisham’s return to the leadoff spot is a huge step in that direction.










