Wednesday, May 13, 2026

THE BLIND LEADING THE CLUELESS


Brian Cashman is out here trying to convince Yankees fans that nothing has changed — that the organization has always operated with urgency and that this current “must-win” energy is just another normal Tuesday in the Bronx. Please. Yankees fans have watched this movie for years, and we already know how it ends.

This front office has spent season after season forcing bad decisions down our throats, defending underperforming players like they’re family heirlooms instead of liabilities. Fans are constantly told to “trust the process” while overpriced veterans and struggling favorites drain the life out of the lineup night after night. Meanwhile, hungry young players with less hype and smaller contracts routinely outperform the “core pieces” everyone keeps protecting.

And this year? The Yankees’ smartest move was the one they didn’t make: handing the shortstop job to Anthony Volpe out of loyalty and marketing hype. Instead, Jose Caballero actually earned it. He brought energy, production, and looked like someone who understood the assignment. He's also just a better shortstop than Volpe... that was obvious last year. Of course, now that Caballero is hurt, Volpe magically reappears in the majors — only for Max Schuemann to step in at shortstop last night and somehow look more reliable too.

But don’t worry. Boone’s favorite "boy toy" Volpe will be back in the lineup soon enough. Count on it. And here at Bleeding Yankee Blue, we’ll be watching every at-bat like it’s game footage from a criminal investigation, because we know he should not be there.

In the meantime, here’s Brian Cashman attempting to explain that the Yankees have always been urgent. This comes from his interview with The Athletic:

“I know there’s this narrative that all of a sudden we woke up and smelled the coffee... and we know it’s a must-win year — that we’re making roster moves that reflect that, and we’ve almost found a different gear. None of that is true…

“We’re not all of a sudden acting more desperate now or with more urgency... The urgency has always been there. In this current window, we have a lot of the younger players really surging. (Caballero) is obviously surging, but we still have guys like Volpe, and obviously, Elmer Rodríguez is emerging. So if Luis Gil falters, we have a legitimate alternative that allows us to say, ‘Hey, do you just want to keep going with this?’ We felt the profile that Elmer was putting forth made it make sense to make the move. It’s kind of simple. When you have the kind of depth (we have), you can play that decision-making game easier than if you didn’t.”

The problem is Cashman sounds completely detached from reality. Yankees fans aren’t blind, and they’re definitely not stupid. We’ve watched too many seasons of the same nonsense: overhyped promises, stale leadership, bad roster construction, and October disappointment dressed up as “a process.”

This team has to win this year. Frankly, they should’ve won several times already. But as long as Aaron Boone is steering the ship like a guy using Apple Maps in a tunnel, the Yankees keep finding new and creative ways to underachieve.

Think about this for a second: Boone has piled up over 700 managerial wins and still can’t deliver a World Series title. That’s not impressive in the Bronx — it’s embarrassing. In Yankee history, banners matter. Parades matter. Rings matter. Nobody hangs a “Pretty Good Regular Season” flag over the Stadium.

And here’s the uncomfortable truth Cashman needs to hear loud and clear:

THE YANKEES USED TO BE THE STANDARD.

Now? They’re just another franchise talking about “windows,” “depth,” and “internal options” while other organizations actually win championships.

Fans are exhausted. Until this organization shows real urgency — not press-conference urgency, but actual baseball urgency — nothing changes. That means cutting ties with dead weight, admitting mistakes, and stopping the endless protection of underperformers like "Mr. .180" Austin Wells and Anthony Volpe. It also means finally acknowledging that Aaron Boone is not the guy to lead this team to a title.

So, Brian, spare us the speeches. Yankees fans don’t need another corporate spin cycle about urgency. They need results.

Because for the better part of the last six years and many more by the way, this front office has delivered a whole lot of excuses and exactly zero championships.

And people in the Bronx are done buying it.

DO BETTER.



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