New York fans shouldn’t take Yankees’ success for granted

Jackie Robinson's 75th anniversary may be only hope to save season

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It is April in New York so … 

The Knicks’ scintillating one-year playoff run is over and somehow they are as disappointing as ever. 

The Giants and Jets will familiarly pick in the top 10 — and this year’s draft is like their Super Bowl (or as close as they get) with each New York team holding two top-10 selections. 

The Mets’ offseason was the dream of Jacob deGrom and Max Scherzer, yet on Opening Night it is Tylor Megill as the first step for a rotation showing its fragility before Pitch 1 — an omen perhaps that you can take the Wilpons out of Flushing, but you might not be able to take the Mets out of the Mets. 

And then there are the Yankees. Yep, if recent October tradition holds, there will be large pitchfork and torch assemblage coming for the jobs of Brian Cashman and Aaron Boone, and lambasting Hal Steinbrenner for not being his father and calls to trade half the roster for Juan Soto. 

But that is for October. 

In April the Yankees promise annually what no other team around here does — at minimum, relevance, and quite often excellence. Every projection system is forecasting at least the high 80s in wins, which would mean a 30th straight year over .500. In the history of North America’s four major sports leagues, only the 39 straight seasons by the 1926-64 Yankees and 32 straight of the 1952-83 Canadiens have had more consecutive winning seasons. 

The Yanks, of course, are measured by championships, not just doing better than 81-81. And they have won only one division title in the last nine years and one World Series this century. 

Aaron Boone
Aaron Boone speaks to the media Thursday ahead of Opening Day.
Robert Sabo

Still, let’s not jump to October so quickly. Let’s appreciate that in the disappointing realm that has become New York sports, the Yankees again will begin a season with a legitimate shot at being the last team standing. As Red Sox manager Alex Cora said, “They are a good baseball team, as always.” 

Boone has labeled this year’s club already better in his view than last year’s at any point. He used the term “more complete.” Gerrit Cole, who will start Friday’s opener against Boston, defined a versatility “to win different type of ballgames.” Caked into that response is the reality that the Yankees had become Sonny Liston in recent years — they could knock you out, but not win a matchup in any other way. Remove their power and the Yanks were featherweights. 

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