Tag Archives: andrew benintendi

Yankees’ Andrew Benintendi put on IL with wrist injury

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — It’s going from bad to worse for the Yankees’ offense.

Andrew Benintendi was placed on the 10-day injured list Saturday with what manager Aaron Boone called a sprained right wrist, with no guarantee the outfielder will be able to return this season.

Benintendi left the game Friday night after injuring his wrist on a swing. X-rays were negative and further testing proved to be inconclusive on Saturday.

“We’re not sure [the injury] is where we thought,’’ Boone said Saturday before the Yankees lost again to the Rays, 2-1, at Tropicana Field.

Asked if there was a chance Benintendi would be back this year, Boone said: “There could be. We’re not sure what we have yet.”

Benintendi had an air cast on his wrist Saturday.

Before leaving the game Friday during his at-bat in the third, Benintendi had been one of the few players hitting for the Yankees.

Andrew Benintendi
AP

He started slowly after his arrival in a trade from Kansas City in July, but the 28-year-old had fit well into the Yankees’ lineup. He gave them another threat from the left side, in addition to being a contact hitter on a team that strikes out a lot.

He doubled in his first at-bat against the Rays on Friday, making him 14-for-41 (.342) with three doubles, two homers, six runs, seven RBIs and a .925 OPS in his previous 11 games.

Estevan Florial was recalled from Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre prior to the game Saturday, with Aaron Hicks taking Benintendi’s spot in left field, Aaron Judge moving back to center and rookie Oswaldo Cabrera playing right.

Adding to the Yankees’ woes is the fact they were already playing without first baseman Anthony Rizzo, who received an epidural on Thursday after visiting back specialist Dr. Robert Watkins in California.

Boone said Saturday that Rizzo was shut down for the weekend and expected to participate in baseball activities on Monday (and possibly Tuesday) in The Bronx before the team decides whether to put him back in the lineup.

Rizzo missed games in both July and August with a similar injury to his lower back. He underwent an MRI exam recently that Boone said left the Yankees encouraged.

But it’s hard to be optimistic about the 33-year-old’s status, given the consistent problems he has had with his back this season.

In addition, DJ LeMahieu is playing through a toe injury that has robbed him of most of his offense, Giancarlo Stanton entered Saturday just 3-for-26 since returning from left Achilles tendinitis and Josh Donaldson, Gleyber Torres and Hicks are all in the midst of lengthy slumps.

At this point, Judge is just about the only player still hitting in the lineup, which on Saturday also included Cabrera and fellow rookie Oswald Peraza, who was making his first start in the majors, filling in at shortstop for Isiah Kiner-Falefa.

“Hopefully he’s another guy that can give us a spark,’’ Boone said. “We’ve seen that with Cabrera coming up.”

The Yankees entered Saturday having scored three or fewer runs in six of their previous seven games.

“We understand the position we’re in and we’ve got to do better, period,’’ Boone said. “The bottom line is, what we’re putting out there is capable and we’ve got to produce.”

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What Andrew Benintendi did with ex-Royals mates after trade

Andrew Benintendi changed teams, but he didn’t switch hotels. As of Friday, he still was staying with the Royals, and the outfielder hung out with his suddenly former teammates after his new club, the Yankees, beat them Thursday.

The scene was never stranger than in the immediate moments after the baseball world learned Benintendi had been traded to the Yankees on Wednesday night, on the eve of the two clubs beginning a series in The Bronx. He and a few teammates had agreed to meet in one room to play cards, but they retreated first to their individual rooms. Their phones began buzzing.

“Benny told us how everything went down,” Kansas City utility man Hunter Dozier said before the Yankees topped the Royals 11-5 on Friday in The Bronx. “Then we just hung out and played cards like normal.”

According to Benintendi’s former team, the Yankees have struck gold in acquiring an outfielder with excellent contact skills in the midst of one of his best seasons.

Andrew Benintendi hits an RBI single in the eighth inning of the Yankees’ 11-5 comeback win over the Royals.
Jason Szenes

The 28-year-old, who had an RBI on an infield single in the Yankees’ eight-run eighth inning and finished 1-for-3 with a walk Friday, hit .320 and posted a .387 on-base percentage in 93 games with Kansas City.

“We would joke around saying every day, Benny’s going to get two hits and a walk at least,” Dozier said of his teammate of one and a half seasons. “He just has been very consistent this year. Finding hits, getting walks, playing really good defense. It’s been impressive to watch him play.”

One downside for the Yankees is Benintendi’s unvaccinated status, which kept him from playing a series in Toronto earlier this season. The lefty hitter, who essentially is replacing Joey Gallo, said Thursday he is staying “open-minded” about the vaccine. The Yankees travel to Toronto for a series in September, and a postseason series against the Blue Jays is a possibility.

Another downside is Benintendi’s lack of power. He hit three home runs this season before the trade a year after he slugged 17.

According to Statcast, his home run total would be doubled to six if he had played all his games in The Bronx this year.

“He’s a guy that can do everything,” said Royals second baseman and right fielder Whit Merrifield. “I know that his power numbers aren’t there, but he [was] playing in the biggest and hardest park to hit a home run in, in baseball.

“He can sprint, he can steal bases [four with the Royals], he can hit for average, he can hit for power. They got a complete, well-rounded hitter, defender and just a great teammate. It’s a slam dunk for any team that went out and got him.”

Benintendi spent his first five major league seasons with the Red Sox, with whom he won the World Series in 2018. During the postseason that year, he excelled against the Yankees in the ALDS, posting a .444 on-base percentage in a series Boston won in four games.

In 21 career playoff games, Benintendi has a .729 OPS.

“The experience of having been in that situation helps,” said Royals outfielder Michael A. Taylor, who won the World Series with the Nationals in 2019. “He knows what to expect on and off the field because there’s a lot of media and things like that in the playoffs and the World Series.”

The consensus from several who know Benintendi best was that he is both a relaxed and easy-going person away from the field and a hard-nosed competitor on it.

“He’s a guy that is going to fit in in any clubhouse because he works hard. He’s quiet. He’s a great guy.”

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Andrew Benintendi joins New York Yankees, ready to compete for former rival

NEW YORK — Hours after flying cross-country on the Kansas City Royals’ charter and checking into their hotel Wednesday night, outfielder Andrew Benintendi was summoned by his now-former manager, Mike Matheny.

Benintendi was being traded. But, Matheny told him, he wouldn’t have to leave his hotel room. New York was about to be his home.

A day after being swapped out of Kansas City for a trio of New York Yankees prospects, Benintendi spoke to reporters at Yankee Stadium on Thursday. After walking into the ballpark’s home clubhouse for the first time, Benintendi took part in a 10-minute news conference. The former Royals and Boston Red Sox standout reiterated his excitement for putting on pinstripes and playing for a team he once considered a rival.

“Playing in Boston has prepared me for this atmosphere and obviously I’ve played a lot of games here,” Benintendi said. “So I’m looking forward to getting back out there and playing on the other side.”

Benintendi was already in the Yankees’ lineup Thursday and led off against the team that traded him.

“Definitely it’s a weird situation,” Benintendi said. “I’m obviously going to stay in contact with those guys still, as I did with my Red Sox teammates from the past.”

Rumors regarding a potential trade-deadline move for Benintendi had swirled around the major leagues for weeks. At one point, the Yankees were thought to be a non-contender in the sweepstakes for the 28-year-old because of his stance on the COVID-19 vaccine.

Benintendi had previously said he was against receiving the vaccine, and he remains unvaccinated.

Each season, the Yankees have regular trips to division-rival Toronto, where a vaccine mandate remains in place. Canada requires all people traveling into the country to be fully vaccinated against the virus.

On Thursday, Benintendi said he was “open-minded” about receiving the vaccine. The Yankees have one more trip to Toronto this season, Sept. 26-28.

“I’m not against it, but time will tell as we get closer,” Benintendi said. “But for now I’m just focused on getting comfortable with the other guys and winning baseball.”

Yankees manager Aaron Boone said the front office has not yet had a conversation with Benintendi about getting vaccinated, adding that the team will “cross that bridge if and when we have to.”

During his five seasons in Boston, Benintendi reached the postseason three times. In 2018, the Red Sox won the World Series, beating the Los Angeles Dodgers. He hit .333 (6-for-18) in that series and was a catalyst for Boston’s offense.

“I think it matters,” Boone said. “He’s been there and done that. He’s now kind of a veteran player so I’m looking forward to him being part of that room. He’s really into the game, really into baseball, and looking forward to him being able to get in the mix and share his experiences.

“The guy that we can look to and have a lot of confidence in whatever kind of situation we’re in. We feel like he’ll be equipped to handle that.”

Boone believes Benintendi’s presence can make the entire team more versatile. The speedy lefty can hit at the top of the order, or appear deeper in the lineup. He also gives the Yankees an additional option in the outfield, where injuries and inconsistent play have forced the team to shuffle its depth chart recently.

With Benintendi expected to spend the bulk of his time in left field, New York can shuffle Aaron Hicks — who has been mostly playing the position in recent weeks — back to center field on occasion, and move Aaron Judge back into a more regular right-field role.

“Honestly, it’ll be a fun game to play once we get everyone back, hopefully,” Boone said of crafting his lineup.

The power-hitting Giancarlo Stanton is currently on the 10-day injured list with left Achilles tendinitis.

After Benintendi learned from Matheny late Wednesday that he was being traded, the outfielder stayed in his Royals hotel room and played cards with some of his teammates from the past one and a half seasons.

He has yet to clear out of the hotel, but is working through his future lodging arrangements. When his old Kansas City teammates boarded buses to head to Yankee Stadium on Thursday afternoon, Benintendi had to find alternate transportation to the Bronx.

“It’s definitely a weird situation but it is what it is,” Benintendi said. “In the end you’ve got a job to do and I’m excited to get started.”

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Yankees Acquire Andrew Benintendi From Royals

10:10pm: The Yankees have announced the trade.

9:52pm: In return, Kansas City is acquiring pitching prospects T.J. SikkemaChandler Champlain and Beck Way, reports Joel Sherman of the New York Post (Twitter link).

9:45pm: The Royals will acquire three minor league players in return, reports Jeff Passan of ESPN (on Twitter).

9:38pm: The Yankees are set to acquire outfielder Andrew Benintendi from the Royals, reports Jack Curry of the YES Network (Twitter link). New York has sought an outfield upgrade in recent weeks, and they’ll fill the gap by landing one of the top rental bats on the market.

Benintendi has been one of the game’s most obvious trade candidates for the past few months. The Royals entered 2022 with designs on competing, but they stumbled to a 16-32 through the end of May. That made Kansas City an obvious likely deadline seller, and an impending free agent like Benintendi a strong candidate to change uniforms.

New York adds a contact-oriented bat to their outfield mix. Benintendi owns a .321/.389/.399 on the year, walking at a strong 10.1% clip while only punching out in 13.5% of his trips to the plate. He’s only connected on three home runs, but Benintendi leads the majors with 91 singles and has picked up 14 doubles. He hasn’t looked like the 15-20 homer bat he was during his early seasons with the Red Sox, but he’s made contact on a strong 82.6% of his swings.

Benintendi’s production has been propped up by a career-high .368 batting average on balls in play. As a line drive hitter who uses the entire field, he typically generates solid results on batted balls, although it’s unlikely the Yankees are anticipating his 2022 mark remaining quite so high. Even if his BABIP regresses closer to his .325 career mark, his plate discipline and bat control should support a solid on-base percentage.

Those plus bat-to-ball skills contrast Benintendi sharply with the player whom he’s likely to displace from the lineup, Joey Gallo. New York’s biggest deadline pickup last summer, Gallo has struggled mightily since landing in the Bronx. He’s a .160/.293/.371 hitter in 498 plate appearances as a Yankee, striking out at a massive 38.4% clip over that stretch. Among hitters with 200+ plate appearances this season, Gallo has the third-highest strikeout rate (38.1%) and third-lowest rate of contact on swings (62.2%).

The Yankees are now set to roll out an outfield of Benintendi, MVP candidate Aaron Judge and Aaron Hicks — owner of a massive .333/.471/.593 line this month after a slow start to the season — on most days. Giancarlo Stanton is the primary designated hitter, although he landed on the injured list yesterday. New York has already begun to cut back Gallo’s playing time while working the scorching hot Matt Carpenter into the corner outfield mix, and tonight’s acquisition is the firmest signal yet the Yankees are prepared to squeeze Gallo out of the mix entirely. It stands to reason they’ll try to find a taker for him in trade before next Tuesday’s deadline.

Judge has adequately handled a move from right to center field this year, leaving Hicks and Benintendi to handle the corners. The latter has played exclusively left field since landing in Kansas City’s spacious home ballpark, rating well in the eyes of both Defensive Runs Saved and Ultimate Zone Rating. Statcast’s Outs Above Average has pegged him as exactly a scratch defender in each of the past two years. He should add an adequate to above-average glove in the outfield while offering a notable improvement over Gallo’s recent work at the plate. It’ll be a notable boost to a lineup that already led the majors with 523 runs scored.

That the Yankees pulled the trigger on a Benintendi deal is sure to raise a few eyebrows for an off-field reason. He was placed on the restricted list before the Royals recent series in Toronto, indicating he’d not been vaccinated against COVID-19 at the time. That renders him unavailable for series in Toronto barring a change in his vaccination status or the removal of the ongoing prohibition of unvaccinated athletes crossing the border. Reports shortly thereafter emerged the Yankees could be dissuaded from pursuing him due to concerns about his availability for games in Toronto.

That obviously proved not to be the case in the end. Jon Heyman of the New York Post and Andy Martino of SNY each suggest (Twitter links) that some close to Benintendi believe he’s now willing to be vaccinated. Ken Rosenthal and Jayson Stark of the Athletic indicate that Benintendi’s vaccination status didn’t come up in talks between the Yankees and Royals front offices (Twitter link). Whether that’s because they anticipate he’ll eventually be eligible to play in Toronto or whether they’ve just decided to accept his possible absence for a few games isn’t clear.

The Yankees, who ironically open a four-game series against the Royals tomorrow, only have three regular season games remaining in Toronto. With an 11 1/2 game cushion over the Jays in the AL East, a three-game absence — if it comes to that — seem unlikely to have much of an effect on the regular season standings, although it could be relevant in the event the Yankees and Jays meet again in the playoffs.

More to come.



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Andrew Benintendi, Whit Merrifield among 10 unvaccinated Kansas City Royals players out for Toronto Blue Jays series

Ten Kansas City Royals players, including four of their top hitters and their best two starting pitchers this season, will not travel to Toronto this week for the four-game series with the Blue Jays because they have not received the COVID-19 vaccination.

The vaccine requirement for border crossing into Canada will affect outfielder Andrew Benintendi, super-utilityman Whit Merrifield, catcher MJ Melendez, first baseman/outfielder Hunter Dozier, right-hander Brad Keller, right-hander Brady Singer, center fielder Michael A. Taylor, outfielder Kyle Isbel, reliever Dylan Coleman and catcher Cam Gallagher.

Players who are unvaccinated and don’t make the trip to Toronto are placed on the restricted list and forfeit service time and salary for the four games missed. Prior to Kansas City, the most players a team had missed in Toronto was four, and 25 total players had hit the restricted list due to being unvaccinated.

Benintendi is the only 2022 All-Star in the group. The Royals, with a 35-53 record after beating Detroit on Wednesday afternoon, have explored trading the 28-year-old, who is batting .317 and due to hit free agency this winter.

Melendez, a rookie, batted leadoff the past two days as Merrifield, whose 553-game iron man streak came to an end because of a toe injury, sat out. Dozier has regularly served as the Royals’ cleanup hitter. The only vaccinated outfielder on the Royals’ active roster is Edward Olivares.

Kansas City will summon reinforcements from its AAA and AA affiliates to fill out the big league roster. The Royals’ series at Toronto begins Thursday.

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Mets acquire Khalil Lee in Royals-Red Sox Benintendi trade

The Mets are fighting battles on multiple fronts this winter, in an attempt to win in 2021 while replenishing the farm system.

On the latter front, the organization added a piece Wednesday night, acquiring outfielder Khalil Lee from the Royals in a three-way trade that also included the Red Sox.

In the deal, the Mets surrendered (to Boston) pitcher Josh Winckowski, who arrived in the recent trade that sent Steven Matz to Toronto. The Mets will also surrender a player to be named later to complete the deal. Kansas City acquired Andrew Benintendi from Boston in the trade. Franchy Cordero went from Kansas City to Boston.

Lee, 22, was rated as the Royals’ No. 8 prospect by MLB pipeline. In 2019 he stole 53 bases at Double-A Northwest Arkansas, where he slashed .264/.363/.372 and played center field. He was selected by the Royals in the third round of the 2016 draft from Flint Hill School in Oakton, Va.

The trade fills a need for the Mets, who are thin on outfield prospects at the upper levels of the minor leagues. Outfielder Jarred Kelenic, whom the Mets selected in the first round of the 2018 draft, was dealt to the Mariners in the trade that brought Edwin Diaz and Robinson Cano to New York. Last summer, the Mets used their first-round pick on high school outfielder Pete Crow-Armstrong.

In the trade for Matz last month, the Mets acquired minor league pitchers Sean Reid-Foley and Yennsy Diaz from Toronto, in addition to Winckowski.


The Mets officially announced the signing of Albert Almora Jr. to a one-year contract. To create space on the 40-man roster, Corey Oswalt was designated for assignment. Once Jonathan Villar’s signing becomes official, the Mets will need to open another roster space.

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