Yankees Acquire Scott Evros from CAPS, Much Needed Land

The New York Yankees acquired Scott Evros of the Chicago Cubs for the top 10 odds. Americans got the help they needed.

The New York Yankees have had more problems than most other teams in the league this year. While Clay Holmes emerged as a relief man, Aroldis Chapman struggled hard and Zack Britton, Chad Green, and Michael King knocked out this year.

Earlier on Monday, the club announced that it had acquired side player Scott Evros of the Chicago Cubs in exchange for No. 7 candidate Hayden Wisinski.

While dealing with one of the top 10 potential clients is never perfect, the Yankees received a 28-year-old with a great deal of control over the contract. This is hard to come by in today’s match.

MLB Trading Deadline: Yankees Acquire Scott Effross from Cubs

In Evros, the Yankees bring in a 28-year-old submarine pitcher in the middle of the junior season in the major leagues. He has 47 games under his belt with the Cubs this year, scoring a 2.66 ERA with a more impressive 2.19 FIP. Evros has only allowed two home runs in 44 runs, hitting 50 hitters and only issuing 11 walks.

Aside from his side slate that has largely gone the Dodo’s way, there’s not much shine around Effross but he’s been quietly dominant this year. His set contains a sweeping slider and two sweep pitches in a heavyweight and highly dependent change. The slider has allowed an average hit of just 0.17 this season and a change of only 0.94.

One of the most important notes in the Yankees’ latest dump is the fact that he’s still under team control for five more seasons, and won’t hit free agency until 2028. If he’s able to continue that success early in his career, he’ll be one of the game’s most valuable relief throwers in the Shortly.

The inclusion of Wesneski in this trade is certainly surprising. Wesneski was the number 7 prospect in the Yankees system at the time of the trade announcement.

This season, Wisinski spent his time knocking out the starting course for the Scranton/Wilkes-Bar Rail Raiders, affiliated with the Yankees Triple A. In his 19 season starts, he is 6-7 with a 3.51 ERA, hit 83 and runs 28 in 89+ innings. His repertoire consists of a mid-to-high 90 speed ball, ’80s variation, and slider/bending ball that routinely cuts around 80 mph.

Wesneski’s addition to the Cubs’ system is important to them, and he could go straight to the active roster once the deal is official, but is likely to head to Triple-A Iowa with his big league debut next season.

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