The Yankees Got Their Difference-Maker Back
You could feel the difference watching Gerrit Cole on Tuesday night.
Not the fake āhis velocity is up 0.4 mphā kind of difference people try to talk themselves into after an injury comeback. This looked like the real thing. The uncomfortable-at-bats version. The quick innings. The constant 0-2 counts. The version of Gerrit Cole where the other team spends most of the night looking annoyed.
Cole carved up the Royals for 6 2/3 scoreless innings, struck out 10, walked nobody, and somehow only needed 79 pitches to do it. Seventy-nine. In his second start back from Tommy John surgery. At 35 years old.
That is not just encouraging. That's the kind of performance that changes the mood around an entire team. And honestly, the Yankees needed that feeling.
Not because one dominant start suddenly fixes every issue they have. We already saw in his first outing back that Cole can throw six scoreless innings, and the Yankees can still find a way to lose anyway. The bullpen questions still exist. The lineup is still going to have frustrating nights. None of that magically disappears because the ace came back.
But there's a huge difference between āGerrit Cole's active againā and āGerrit Cole looks like Gerrit Cole again.ā
Tuesday night looked like the second one.
The Arm Was Back. Now The Pitcher Looks Back.
Coleās first start back already gave the Yankees the first bit of reassurance they needed. After 569 days between major-league appearances, he threw six scoreless innings against Tampa Bay, allowed just two hits, and looked like a guy whose stuff hadn't disappeared during the layoff.
The fastball still had life. The body language looked normal. Nothing about it felt like a pitcher trying to grind through it with a watered-down version of himself.
The problem was, the Yankees still lost anyway.
Cole handed over a lead, the bullpen and defense let things unravel late, and it became the perfect reminder that one ace isn't going to magically fix every problem this team has.
That's why the second start felt bigger.
The first outing showed the arm was back. The Royals start showed the pitcher was back.
Cole completely controlled the game. He threw strikes, missed bats, avoided walks, and barely wasted pitches all night. There was no grinding through traffic or trying to escape jams every inning. He looked comfortable. He looked sharp. He looked like the version of Gerrit Cole the Yankees have been waiting to get back.
Tuesday night looked like Gerrit Cole.
The Scariest Part Might Be How Easy It Looked
The ten strikeouts were always going to grab the attention. But honestly, the pitch count mightāve been the most impressive part.
Cole got 20 outs on just 79 pitches with 10 strikeouts and no walks. Thatās not just overpowering stuff. Thatās command. Thatās feel.
And that matters because command is usually one of the last things to actually come back after Tommy John. A pitcher can have velocity before he really has feel again. Cole already looks like he has both.
Now, that doesnāt mean every start from here is going to look this easy. The Yankees are still going to manage him carefully, and they should. Thereās no reason to chase one extra inning in May and make the rest of the season harder.
But if this is what Cole looks like while still ramping back up, what does that mean for the postseason?
Age Makes This More Than A Nice Comeback
Tommy John surgery has become so common that people almost talk about it like a long timeout. A pitcher disappears for a year, rehabs for a while, then everybody expects him to show back up like nothing really changed.
Thatās not how this works, especially for Cole.
Heās 35. Heās been carrying ace-level innings for more than a decade. The Yankees werenāt just waiting to see if he could still throw hard. They were waiting to see what version of Gerrit Cole was coming back.
Can he still finish hitters? Can he still command the baseball? Can he still look like a true ace instead of just a big name?
Through two starts, the answerās been about as good as the Yankees couldāve hoped for.
The Yankees Finally Have Their Anchor Back
Cole doesnāt have to turn the Yankees into some flawless machine. Thatās not the job. The job is to give them a little more margin for error, and thatās exactly what a real ace does.
When Coleās right, everything feels a little less stressful. The Yankees donāt need the offense to score eight runs every fifth day. They donāt need the bullpen covering half the game.
Thatās the value of having a pitcher who can make a 2-0 lead feel way bigger than it actually is. It changes the rotation too. Everybody settles into more natural roles when Coleās sitting at the top of it. Without him, everybody gets pushed up a spot. With him, the whole thing feels steadier.
It probably changes the trade deadline conversation for them quite a bit too. The Yankees may still need help, but thereās a huge difference between looking for pitching out of desperation and looking for pitching to support an ace who actually looks like himself again.
Thatās a pretty big deal.
All stats courtesy of NBA.com.
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