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Try it freeThe Yankees feature one of the better, more balanced benches that they have had entering any postseason under Aaron Boone.
That, of course, will only turn up the spotlight on how Boone chooses to use it in these high-stakes games.
It did not take long for the second-guessing to begin.
Facing Red Sox ace lefty Garrett Crochet in Game 1 of the wild-card series on Tuesday, the Yankees rolled out a lineup that had two of their best bats on the bench in Ben Rice and Jazz Chisholm Jr.
Boone had indicated on Monday that Rice would be on the bench because he wanted Austin Wells to catch Max Fried and have the right-handed hitting Paul Goldschmidt at first base against Crochet (despite Goldschmidt being 2-for-15 in his career against him). But Chisholm joining him there was a bit of a surprise, as the Yankees started Amed Rosario at second base and José Caballero at third base for Ryan McMahon. Rosario could have just played third base, except Fried gets tons of ground balls there, so they valued defense, which is why they had the right-handed hitting Caballero over the lefty McMahon.
All of it set up for an interesting chess match for Boone in deciding when to deploy his bench options.
“I prefer it this way,” Boone said of having strong bench pieces to use. “That’s been a difference with our club the last few months, is we didn’t have this option in the first half. We have real, significant moves you can make that can flip the game a little bit. Our bench has really improved.”
