The Yankees recently returned home from a successful roadtrip during which they swept the Royals and took two out of three from the A’s. The offense awoke from its mid-May slumber, putting up 51 runs across the six games. One of the unlikely contributors at the heart of that scoring outburst was Paul Goldschmidt. Initially re-signed over the winter as cover at first base but more importantly to retain his veteran leadership, the 38-year-old former MVP has been one of the Yankees’ most productive
bats, bringing much needed stability to a DH role impacted by the injuries to Giancarlo Stanton and Jasson Domínguez.
We join Goldschmidt in the top of the first inning last Friday in West Sacramento. The Yankees are looking to make a first inning statement facing old friend Luis Severino, and have already opened the scoring after Ben Rice reached on a throwing error and scored on an Aaron Judge single. Cody Bellinger followed with a single of his own, he and Judge advancing into scoring position on a Jazz Chisholm Jr. soft grounder. Goldschmidt is a base knock away from making it 3-0, but Severino is also an out away from limiting the damage to one.
Severino starts Goldschmidt with a first pitch sinker at 97 mph, he and catcher Shea Langeliers looking to bust Goldschmidt inside.
Severino executes just the pitch he was intending, the sinker starting over the plate before riding in on Goldschmidt. It requires an impressive take from Goldschmidt given the pitch lands just a few inches from the zone — he starts his swing before recognizing that the movement of the pitch will run it off the plate inside for ball one and stops his swing in time.
Perhaps Severino spots Goldschmidt’s initial temptation to offer at that sinker, because he looks to throw a sweeper down a similar tunnel hoping he can get the batter to chase a pitch that breaks in the opposite direction.
Instead, Severino releases this pitch early, and it sweeps across the inside edge for called strike one. It is clear this is not the location that Severino intended to throw to when you see the target low and away that Langeliers flashes, but he gets the desired result all the same.
Severino next looks to leverage the result of the previous pitch — a sweeper that starts aimed inside and breaks glove-side back into the zone — to try to get Goldschmidt to chase a sinker in off the plate. To Goldschmidt, it should look like a hanging sweeper, and the increased velocity of the sinker means that by the time the hitter realizes what pitch is coming, it should be too late to halt his swing.
Once again, Severino rips of perfect execution of a sinker up and in. He buries this slider in on Goldschmidt’s hands, but Goldschmidt is forced to fight it off given that this one is in the zone. The location and movement of this pitch makes it impossible for Goldschmidt to do anything but fight it off foul.
Now that he has pushed the count to two strikes, Severino goes for the kill with the sweeper, Langeliers again setting a target low and away as the pair attempt to induce a chase and whiff from Goldschmidt over the breaker.
This is such a piece of professional hitting from Goldschmidt. He must have diagnosed the pitch early out of Severino’s hand, because at first glance this sweeper looks like it is aimed at his front hip. He also must have cued in on a subtle deficiency in Severino’s release point with all four pitches sailing up and in. To the eye, it certainly appears that Goldschmidt is hunting a breaking pitch in exactly this location based on what he has seen already from Severino in this encounter as well as the scouting report that reveals Severino’s tendency to throw the sweeper immediately upon reaching two strikes. Look at the way he stays in their despite the pitch exiting Severino’s hand aimed at him before unloading on this hanging sweeper for a three-run homer to give the Yankees a 4-0 lead.
Here’s the full AB:
Goldschmidt’s re-signing was initially derided as representative of the Yankees’ broader run it back approach to the offseason. However, his retention has proven an inspired decision in the wake of the injuries to Stanton and Domínguez. At the time of writing, Goldschmidt boasts seven home runs, 23 RBIs, and a 151 wRC+ in 35 games, which makes him the Yankees’ third-most productive hitter in a limited sample. The fact this home run came off a righty when Goldschmidt was expected to bat exclusively against lefties is also encouraging. Ben Rice has credited him as a mentor in learning the intricacies of playing first base, Goldschmidt giving them a capable defender as a late game substitution or when they want to give Rice half a day off at DH. The Yankees would not be within touching distance of the Rays for first in the division if not for Goldschmidt filling the void at DH, removing a ton of pressure off Stanton and Domínguez as they recover from their injuries.











