Jon_Vilma
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<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE </div><div class='quotemain'>TAMPA, Fla. ? Phil Hughes is throwing his slider again, a favored pitch from high school (Foothill High in Santa Ana, Calif.) that the New York Yankees forbid him from throwing in his first two seasons with the organization.The post-2004 draft plan was to take away Hughes' pet breaking ball, requiring him to develop a curveball. In little more than a season, his curve was big-league ready (like his mid-90s fastball) and only then was it time to reintroduce the slider.So, he threw in the bullpen Saturday morning at Legends Field, Jorge Posada his catcher and pitching coach Ron Guidry hanging over his left shoulder, threading sliders with two fastball variations (two- and four-seam), a changeup and, of course, a curveball."Last year they gave me permission to throw it," Hughes said, "but I pretty much stuck with the curveball."Posada, who in last year's camp announced Hughes was very close, said it again Saturday."He's legit," Posada said. "He's going to be in the big leagues soon. Hopefully, this year. He's a no-doubt."Hughes won't be 21 until June and the Yankees would prefer he start the season in Triple-A, both for his development and what it might otherwise mean for the health of their rotation. They've got Chien-Ming Wang, Andy Pettitte, Mike Mussina, Kei Igawa and Carl Pavano, assuming Igawa can pitch here and Pavano wants to pitch here. Even then, Yankees heads for the short-term have Hughes somewhere behind the likes of Jeff Karstens, Darrell Rasner and Humberto Sanchez, too, even if they see a better pitcher in Hughes right now."He wants to make the club," Guidry said. "So does everyone else. He might be a step above a lot of guys with his ability. Just because you have ability, you still have to know what to do with it. He had tremendous success in the minors and he never struggled. That's how good he was. Here, it will be different. We'll finally see him react to big-league hitters."A year later, Posada said, he sees the same "outstanding" curveball, but now flicking the edge of the strike zone, back-dooring it, rather than boring through the middle of it. He liked the two-seamers. He liked the changeups.And now the slider, which, for Hughes, is like a bottle of wine stashed in the closet for a special occasion. The grip and the action still feel familiar, he said, "Not bad to have in my back pocket.""I don't know if I necessarily need it," he said, "but I've had experience with it. It's kind of like riding a bike."</div>
