
With an unprecedentedly large Spring Training roster, the Yankees have assigned 13 numbers to two different players, in each case, one pitcher and one position player. No. 96 at third base, Addison Maruszak, had an up-and-down day, but No. 96 on the mound, Vidal Nuno, is the gold star prospect so far.
Well, he did re-sign, but maybe that time of hesitation had something to do with how his 2012 season in Pinstripes got started. In at least three of his first four starts, one of his teammates made early miscues from which he was unable to recover. Thus, he pitched to a great era on the team that blasted home runs by the bushel and led the American League in wins, but despite effective starts, he lost three of his first four, and was 2-4 in early May. He could be forgiven if he thought back to that time today.
After surrendering a leadoff walk and single in the first, he got two grounders and a strike out, then two more grounders and another K to start the second. Yet due to shaky defense Toronto scored two runs in each inning, and Kuroda was down 4-0 almost immediately. Thus Hiroki became the first of two Yankee hurlers on the day to surrender four runs with three of them unearned (although to my point of view none of the four against Kuroda was earned).

After looking listless early this week, Juan Rivera has been on fire. Only a leaping Jimmy Rollins catch on his fifth-inning liner prevented the left fielder/DH from stroking five straight hits.
The Yankees threatened to compete in this game from the outset, stretching Roy Halladay to 24 pitches and loading the bases against him in the first. And in the third, doubles by Francisco Cervelli and Juan Rivera around a Robinson Cano base hit plated the first Yankee run. But young outfielder Melky Mesa, who homered in a losing cause in Kissimmee Thursday and would go yard yet again later in this game, struck out to end both the first and the third, stranding five base runners, three of them in scoring position.

With an oblique tweak, it was good to see Kevin Youkilis, who walked and took a third strike in two plate appearances, in the lineup. He mishandled a tough play, but made a diving stop to his right as well.
But the game was convincingly lost in the top of the seventh, another ugly four-run affair. Although Francisco Cervelli had another stellar day (2-for-2 with a walk and two runs scored; he threw out another runner trying to steal as well), he had been replaced by young catching prospect Gary Sanchez, who made a nice play pegging Kevin Frandsen out on a bunt to start the frame. Cody Eppley struggled, however, loading the bases on two singles and a walk, and a run scored on Maruszak’s second error. Eppley walked in a run, a third scored on a sac fly, and Preston Claiborne came on and allowed a fourth on a single. It was 10-4, as it had been in the error-plagued contest against Baltimore two days ago, and Mesa’s singleton jack closed it to a 10-5 final score.
Worthy of mention is Juan Rivera’s continued brilliance at the bat. He had four straight hits (two this game) when Jimmy Rollins speared his hard liner in the critical bottom of the fifth. Cisco is running away with the starting catcher competition so far, Nuno continues to look major-league-ready – he should start in AA or AAA – and righty Tom Kahnle turned in another impressive inning after doing the same Wednesday.

Every Spring produces some surprise bright spots. Through two one-inning outings this week, righty Tom Kahnle is opening some eyes.
“So this is your Spring Training Spring Training?” I asked. The Yanks are playing these games in the same way, perhaps because it got off to such an early start: like they’ve never played games this early before. The calendar will advance; hopefully the quality of play will as well.
YANKEE BASEBALL!!!