At some point, the Yankees’ entire Anthony Volpe evaluation stops feeling like development and starts feeling like institutional stubbornness wrapped in optimism.
Anthony Volpe was supposed to be the clean answer at shortstop—the polished, high-IQ, “we got our guy” prospect the organization could point to as proof its scouting machine still worked. Instead, what they’ve gotten is a player who looks less like a cornerstone in progress and more like a long, uncomfortable recalibration of expectations that never should’ve been this high in the first place.
And yes, that’s where the criticism has to start—not just with Volpe, but with the Yankees’ scouting and development staff that stamped him as the future face of the infield. Because if this is the result, then the original projection wasn’t just aggressive—it was wrong. Not slightly off. Not “needs time.” Wrong in the way that forces everyone else to keep adjusting the story around it.
Volpe’s bat simply hasn’t matched the billing. The glove keeps him in conversations, but the offensive production has never stabilized into anything resembling the impact bat the Yankees publicly sold. At a certain point, “he’s still developing” stops sounding like a phase and starts sounding like a delay tactic.
And yet, the organization continues to operate as if the original scouting report must eventually be vindicated through sheer repetition. Volpe gets reset after reset, runway after runway, as if opportunity itself is the missing tool. Meanwhile, the rest of the roster—and the system—gets contorted to preserve the belief.
That ripple effect is where things get even more revealing.
George Lombard Jr., a natural shortstop with legitimate defensive polish and rising offensive projection, is being pushed around the infield at Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, logging time at second base and third base despite being a true shortstop by trade.
The justification is flexibility, versatility, readiness. The reality feels more like accommodation—shaping the next wave of talent around the uncertainty of the current one.
And that’s where the uncomfortable truth starts to form: the Yankees are effectively asking their best shortstop prospect to become something else, not because he lacks the ability to stick at the position, but because the guy ahead of him hasn’t justified being displaced.
Which leads to the inevitable, increasingly unavoidable thought: maybe Volpe’s long-term home was never shortstop to begin with.
If the Volpe bat doesn’t take the leap, and if the defensive value is no longer enough to carry everyday expectations at premium position standards, then the conversation naturally shifts. Not as a demotion, but as a correction. I believe that Volpe needs to move to 2nd base. A move to second base isn’t a punishment—it might be the most honest version of his skill set. Less pressure on range-based heroics, more emphasis on stability, contact, and role clarity.
In fact, if you zoom out far enough, the most realistic version of this entire infield puzzle might already be forming: Volpe as a second baseman, not a franchise shortstop, fitting into a roster that eventually changes around him anyway. Especially in a world where pieces like Jazz Chisholm Jr. rarely stay static and positional reshuffling is more rule than exception.
But none of that changes the core issue: the Yankees didn’t just draft Volpe. They declared him before he ever proved it. And now they’re living inside the consequences of trying to make the projection true instead of letting the performance define the player.
That’s why Lombard is moving around the infield and not playing his spot. That’s why Volpe keeps getting opportunities. And that’s why the entire infield feels like it’s being built around a dumb Volpe decision the organization made years ago—and is still trying, stubbornly, to justify today.
At some point, development stops being about what a player becomes… and starts being about what an organization refuses to admit.



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