Showing posts with label nestor cortes jr. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nestor cortes jr. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 30, 2022

Yankees Hope to Have Nestor Cortes Back During Upcoming Homestand

 
Cortes is expected to throw a bullpen on Wednesday.

Nestor Cortes could rejoin the Yankees’ rotation in a matter of no time.

The southpaw, who went on the 15-day injured list with a left groin strain on Aug. 25, is on-track to throw a bullpen on Wednesday, according to Aaron Boone. If that goes off without a hitch, Cortes could then throw to live hitters Saturday at the Yankees’ complex in Tampa. And if that goes well, Cortes would be positioned to return during New York’s next homestand, which begins this Friday and lasts through Sept. 11.

The Yankees, who also activated Clay Holmes on Monday, would love to have Cortes back in the rotation right away, but this time off could benefit him and the team down the road.

The 27-year-old has already thrown a career-high 131 innings this season, a fact the Yankees are well-aware of. Cortes’s trip to the I.L. is causing him to skip a few turns through the rotation, which may prove beneficial in September and the postseason. 

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 Nasty Nestor Cortes Jr Grunge Distress Design Sticker

“Hopefully it’s something that turns into a little bit of a blessing and keeps him a little fresher down the stretch and what we hope is through October,” Boone said. “Hopefully, that’s the case, but we’ll see. You never like to have somebody have an injury that knocks them down, especially in the midst of the season he’s having. But hopefully it is something that serves the rest of his body well.”

Cortes has enjoyed a career year, as Boone alluded to. A 36th-round draft pick turned first-time All-Star, he owns a 2.68 ERA over 23 starts. A deceptive contortionist rather than a power pitcher, Cortes has struck out 25.9 percent of the batters he’s faced while walking 5.8 percent. 


 

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Funny Nasty Nestor Cortes Jr New York Baseball Lover Gift Hoodie

 

 

 

 

 

 


 
 

Friday, August 19, 2022

Time, and a chance, all Nestor needed


 

There are a lot of starting pitchers having really fine seasons so far. It doesn’t change the fact that there is no better pitcher anywhere than a 27-year-old, Cuban-born and Hialeah, Fla.-raised left-hander named Nestor Cortes, who was once designated for assignment by an Orioles team on its way to losing 115 games.

The kid gave up a grand slam to Josh Reddick on April 3, 2018, and then on April 9, he gave up another grand slam to Josh Donaldson, now Cortes’ teammate with the Yankees. Cortes was designated for assignment the next day. Four years and a couple of months later, he has a 5-1 record for the team with the best record in baseball, has a 1.50 ERA and has been simply dazzling every time Aaron Boone has given him the ball.

He gave the Angels one earned run, going up against Shohei Ohtani, on Thursday afternoon. He has gone 19 straight starts for the Yankees giving up three earned runs or fewer, something no Yankees pitcher has done in more than 100 years. Justin Verlander has been something to see, and so has Sandy Alcantara, so has Alek Manoah. Of course, there are other starters who belong in the conversation about who really is the best guy after a third of the season.

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But when you add it all up, the best guy barely tops out over 90 mph, isn’t in the top 100 in fastball velocity, but he's a master of spin and arm angle and magic and even mystery, at least party because of a delivery that occasionally has a start-stop to it that reminds you of Charles Barkley’s golf swing. In a world where velocity so often rules, Nestor Cortes pitches like an artist. The late and great Whitey Ford would have appreciated someone who practices the craft of pitching the way Cortes does.

A week ago, at the start of a big four-game series for the Yankees against the Rays, Cortes pitched eight innings, struck out five, walked one and allowed one earned run. It has now reached the point where you think stats like that should be on some kind of continuous loop with him. Here is what Cortes said afterward:

“I’ve still got a lot to prove, I think. It’s still early. I want to prove that I can have 30 starts and 150-plus innings, hopefully. I just want to keep my head down and keep going.”

It is not just the way Cortes pitches, a lefty who occasionally makes you remember another Cuban-born pitcher named Luis Tiant, El Tiante himself, once an artist himself on the mound, and a show. It is more than that, because of the journey that has brought Cortes to this moment. He was never a phenom as a kid, originally drafted by the Yankees in the 36th round of the 2013 Draft.

But he’s a phenom now.

Four years after that ’13 Draft, the Orioles grabbed him away from the Yankees in the Rule 5 Draft. That spring he gave up the two grand slams and was gone. In April 2018, the Orioles sent Cortes back to the Yankees, and in June 2019, he managed to get his first big league win before being optioned to Triple-A after his ERA was nearly up to six runs a game over 33 games.

By November 2019, Cortes was traded to the Mariners in exchange for international bonus pool money. In two years, he’d gone from being a Rule 5 Draft guy to that. But Cortes kept his head down. Along the way, he went to the Dominican League and learned to throw a cut fastball.

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Finally, in January 2021, Cortes made his way back to the Yankees. By last season, he had pitched his way into becoming a valuable member of Boone’s rotation, starting 14 games and finishing with a 2.90 ERA. And look at him now.

Gerrit Cole, the $324 million man -- and someone who is touting Cortes as the best early candidate for the AL Cy Young -- is the nominal ace of the Yankees' rotation. But the true ace has been the short lefty who came to this country from Cuba when he was less than a year old and who is pitching like this.

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There was an immaculate inning against his old team, the Orioles, earlier this season. There was a no-hitter into the eighth inning against the Rangers a few weeks ago. Finally, on Thursday afternoon, the first game of a doubleheader with Ohtani as his mound opponent, it was Nestor Cortes who was the pitcher to watch -- dropping his arm sometimes and throwing an occasional curve ball that floated toward the batter like a frisbee and even varying the step-timing on his delivery as another way of throwing hitters off, all while still being one of the fastest workers around.

He never blows anybody away, except this one big important way: with the results he has been getting, all the way back to last season.

“He’s been great every step of the way,” Boone said a couple of weeks ago.

Great pitching, the best anywhere this season. Such a great baseball story. Sometimes the best stories take time. Like one of Nestor’s breaking balls.

 

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Thursday, August 18, 2022

Can Nasty Nestor Turn Around the Yankees?

Can Nasty Nestor Turn Around the Yankees?


The pitcher has become an unlikely star for the Yankees. He’s just happy to be here.

On a muggy afternoon at the ragged end of July, Nestor Cortés Jr., the mustachioed, heavily tattooed left-hander for the New York Yankees, was pouncing off the mound to field ground balls and fire them to first base. The night before, the Yankees had won on a walk-off home run from Aaron Judge, their six-foot-seven, 282-pound juggernaut and the front-runner for the American League’s Most Valuable Player Award. Not since Derek Jeter have the Yankees enjoyed such a captivating superstar. But the 27-year-old Cortés, built at the human scale of five-foot-11, has emerged as a star in his own right, quietly capturing the hearts of the Yankee faithful as the team tries to win its first World Series title in 13 years.

 
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For most professional athletes, there’s a time, usually in late childhood or adolescence, when they realize they are superior. The other kids can’t hurl a ball as far or tackle as hard, and high-school competition melts away. Scouts arrive in droves to herald a bright, limitless future. For Cortés, such a moment never came. “I was a 36th-rounder out of high school, throwing 87, 88,” he told me in the Yankee dugout, fresh off his rigorous stretching-and-throwing routine. “I didn’t know how long my career was going to be. I would’ve been happy with a two-, three-, four-year minor-league career.”

 
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Nicknamed “Nasty Nestor,” Cortés contorts his torso and right leg into quasi-yogic poses on the mound, deceiving hitters who are sure this will be the time they crush a fastball that clocks, at best, in the low 90s. They rarely do. In an era of behemoths—the putative pitching ace of the Yankees, the $300 million, six-four Gerrit Cole, casually throws a baseball 100 mph—Cortés is an anomaly, succeeding at the highest level of the sport with guts and guile. “I think there’s been a change for scouts to look at guys like me,” he said, “who aren’t very tall or throw very hard but have a big heart, who have that edge.”

 
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 In the next few months, Cortés, now a crucial part of the pitching rotation, will be far more than a feel-good story. Cole has struggled at times, and the Yankees’ other pitchers appear to be regressing. Meanwhile, since Cortés has never pitched this much before, the Yankees are seeking to limit his innings in August and September to make sure he doesn’t burn out. But come October, when the postseason begins, Nasty Nestor will be summoned for the biggest games of his life.

 He already pitches as if each game were his last. Having gone through the “bad stuff,” as he calls his struggles in the minors, he knows he can’t afford to make mistakes. “Every day I’m out there pitching, I’m nervous until I actually get there,” he said. “Once I step on the mound, it’s like, Okay, I’ve been here before.

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