The Yankees lost the final game of their series against the Rangers with a score of 10-6. This marks their third consecutive series loss, having also fallen in two of three games against the Nationals, Cardinals, and Rangers.
On Tuesday, they had an opportunity to win the series and maintain their lead over the Orioles in the AL East, but Clay Holmes gave up a walk-off grand slam to Wyatt Langford, resulting in a 7-4 loss.
It was the 11th save attempt which Holmes has squandered this year, three more than any other pitcher. The Yankees stopped short of officially stripping the right-hander of the closer role, yet it seems theyโll move to more of a committee approach in the short term.
Before tonightโs game, skipper Aaron Boone told reporters that heโd be โcreativeโ with the ninth inning (X link via Jack Curry of the YES Network). Boone indicated that Holmes remains in the mix for save chances, though it doesnโt appear that heโll get every one by default.
To Holmesโ credit, he hasnโt pitched poorly overall in spite of the ugly blown save mark. He carries a solid 3.27 ERA over 55 innings. His 25.2% strikeout percentage and 8% walk rate are fine.
Opponents have put nearly two-thirds of their batted balls on the ground. Among relievers with 50+ innings, only teammate Tim Hill has gotten grounders at a higher rate. ERA estimators like FIP (2.91) and SIERA (2.82) still suggest Holmes has been an excellent pitcher.
Despite the impressive rate stats, Holmes has found himself walking a tightrope at times throughout the year. He was utterly dominant early in the season.
He didnโt allow an earned run until May 20, a stretch of 20 games and as many innings. Holmes carries a 5.14 earned run average through 35 frames since that point. The plus command he showed early on has become far shakier in recent weeks. Holmes is headed to free agency for the first time in his career at yearโs end.
His ups and downs are magnified by a bullpen that has been underwhelming lately. Yankee relievers rank 22nd in ERA since the All-Star Break. Thatโs partially on Holmes, but their deadline pickups of Mark Leiter Jr. andย Enyel De Los Santos havenโt panned out. De Los Santos was blasted over five appearances and quickly waived. Leiter has been very homer-prone since landing in the Bronx. Home runs have also been a problem forย Luke Weaver andย Jake Cousins.
Aside from Holmes, the Yankees have given their highest-leverage work toย Tommy Kahnle and Leiter in the second half. Kahnle has pitched well and could pick up some save chances. Boone also left the door open to a potential closing look for either of Luis Gil orย Clarke Schmidt (X link via Curry).
Both pitchers are set to return from the injured list this weekend and will take their places in the rotation for the upcoming series against the Cubs. The Yankees will use a six-man rotation next week before determining if anyone should be shifted to the bullpen.
Nestor Cortes appears to be the most probable candidate for a bullpen role, despite lacking the typical velocity of a closer. In contrast, Gil and Schmidt possess more conventional closing capabilities.