Andy Phillips - Infielder
Age: 28 (Turns 29 in April).

Three-Year History & splits:

SEASON Level G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB AVG OBP SLG OPS
2003 AAA 17 67 7 14 4 0 2 5 5 17 0 .209 .264 .358 622
2004 AA 10 42 8 15 2 1 4 16 3 1 3 .357 .383 .738 1121
2004 AAA 115 434 83 138 19 6 26 85 51 60 2 .318 .388 .569 957
2004 MLB 5 8 1 2 0 0 1 2 0 1 0 .250 .250 .625 875
2005 AAA 75 300 60 90 14 1 22 54 36 61 2 .300 .379 .573 952
2005 MLB 27 40 7 6 4 0 1 4 1 13 0 .150 .171 .325 496

Outlook: Andy Phillips probably should have been in the majors in 2004. Who knows, he could have been a difference-maker in the ALCS and couldn't possibly have been worse than John Olerud and Tony Clark (.167/.231/.417 (14 ABs) and .143/.143/.190 (21 ABs) respectively in the series). That being said, after the "shot" the Yankees gave him last year, it looks like Andy will get some decent playing time this year. Well, it's about time. He's no longer a prospect, has nothing more to prove at AAA and can play three infield positions and outfield in a pinch so this should have been a no-brainer a while ago. Now, all he has to do is hit and looking at minor league numbers, that shouldn't be a huge problem. Of course, all the minor league success in the world cannot guarantee major league success so this will be interesting to watch. The only real question is if he can make enough contact because when he does, he seems to always hit the ball hard (which seems to be a theme - 39% of his minor league hits and of his 6 out of his 8 MLB hits were of the extra base variety). Hopefully, Andy can come through and hit enough to not only be used as a backup for Giambi and A-Rod but also to take as many ABs from Bernie as possible.

Bernie Williams - Outfielder
Age: 36 (Turns 37 in September).

Three-Year History and splits:

SEASON G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB AVG OBP SLG OPS
2003 119 445 77 117 19 1 15 64 71 61 5 .263 .367 .411 .778
2004 148 561 105 147 29 1 22 70 85 96 1 .262 .360 .435 .795
2005 141 485 53 121 19 1 12 64 53 75 1 .249 .321 .367 .688

Outlook: What can be said about Bernie? He's one of the all-time Yankee greats. However, time and injury have robbed him of his baseball gifts and while signing him to be a backup was a good karma move, it's a bad baseball one. He barely qualifies for the role of backup outfielder on a contender, let alone a full-time DH. Looking at his splits for 2005, there are very few good things to be found. Before the break, he was bad; after the break, he was even worse. Home, away, early in the game or late in the game, there's just not much to get excited about. He did put up decent stats as a DH (.286/.360/.427/.787 in 85 ABs) but that's probably just small sample size. Still, because you can't help but root for the guy, I pray that Bernie shows enough spark this season so that he can end his career on a high note.

Please post your predictions for the following stat line in the comments section:

AB R HR RBI SB AVG OBP SLG