“He is pretty close to game speed. I think it was 95 to 99 [mph], so we are in a game-ready velocity,’’ first-year pitching coach Matt Blake said on Zoom "Now it is kind of fine-tuning it and sustaining over longer pitch counts. I think he feels good about where he is, and obviously, he is always a critic of himself, kind of tightening things up whether it is a certain pitch to a certain location."
Cole has been working since COVID-19 shut the MLB down in March so he could be ready for whenever he was called back to play. Judging by the work he put in yesterday, Cole is jumping right into things.
Being in good shape is important if Cole is able to start against the Nationals on July 23. The Yankees know that their ace has been the talk of all social media since he has been signed, and teased his performance on social media.
Since the normal spring training is six weeks long, the concern about the health of the players is definitely heightened during this shortened period.
Blake has also mentioned that the Yankees plan to hold their pitchers to a 50-60 pitch limit during the hiatus as to not push their arms. By the season start, he plans to have the starters ready to throw four-six innings.
It's happening people... baseball is coming back!
--Missy O'Rourke
BYB Contributor
Twitter: @missy_orourke
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