It started ugly. Through his first eight games of the season, Wells was 4-for-24 — a .167 AVG with zero extra-base hits and zero RBIs. Not a single double. Not a single home run. Just four lonely singles rattling around in a stat line that looked like something an intern invented as a placeholder. For a catcher who slugged 21 home runs and drove in 71 runs just last season, this was not a slow start. This was a full organizational crisis dressed up in pinstripes. All the fans saw it. The front office pretends it's not happening.
Things have not improved. By the time Wells had logged 21 games, he was sitting at a .164 batting average and a .536 OPS — numbers that, to be clear, are not acceptable from your starting shortstop in Triple-A, let alone your everyday catcher in the Bronx. Among Yankees hitters with at least 40 at-bats, only the equally beleaguered Ryan McMahon posted a worse line. That's the company Wells was keeping: the guy who looks like he's never seen a major-league slider before.
As of this writing, he's "rallied" to a season batting average of .183. Wow. Remember when batting .240 was lousy? Opposing hurlers have discovered that breaking balls are essentially kryptonite — Wells is hitting .125 against them this season, a dramatic drop from his .221 mark in 2025. Left-handed pitchers have been particularly ruthless: he's batting .125 against their four-seamers and whiffing at a 40% clip against their sliders. Last year he hit .310 against left-handed four-seamers. This year, .125. You could watch that number drop-in real time and still not fully believe it. You know I hate nerdy stats, but this is horrendous, folks.
The logic is simple, if brutal: if you know a hitter can destroy a fastball, you don't throw him fastballs. You throw him junk. And in 2026, "junk" has been doing to Wells what the 1927 Yankees did to opposing rotations.
The calls for a catcher shake-up are growing louder. Backup J.C. Escarra has been floated as a viable alternative — and perhaps most damning, it's becoming increasingly difficult to argue against giving him the job. Minnesota's Ryan Jeffers, batting .299 with a .899 OPS, has been mentioned as a potential trade target. Wells has three more years of team control on his contract, which means the Yankees own this problem for the foreseeable future unless they do something about it.
And try to make an argument that he's a good defensive catcher, and I don't really know how you can. Once known as a great defensive framer, does that really matter anymore now that the MLB uses ABS. It's kind of like AI taking over the graphics department at your company... you're no longer relevant. Being a catcher for the Dominican Republic and hitting a homer for them in the World Baseball Classic just a few months ago does not make you a complete player. Your time has passed Austin.
For us Yankees fans watching the standings and the calendar simultaneously, patience is a luxury that looks more expensive by the day. Austin Wells was supposed to be an answer. Right now, he's a question nobody in the Bronx knows how to solve.
As of this writing, he's "rallied" to a season batting average of .183. Wow. Remember when batting .240 was lousy? Opposing hurlers have discovered that breaking balls are essentially kryptonite — Wells is hitting .125 against them this season, a dramatic drop from his .221 mark in 2025. Left-handed pitchers have been particularly ruthless: he's batting .125 against their four-seamers and whiffing at a 40% clip against their sliders. Last year he hit .310 against left-handed four-seamers. This year, .125. You could watch that number drop-in real time and still not fully believe it. You know I hate nerdy stats, but this is horrendous, folks.
The logic is simple, if brutal: if you know a hitter can destroy a fastball, you don't throw him fastballs. You throw him junk. And in 2026, "junk" has been doing to Wells what the 1927 Yankees did to opposing rotations.
MLB insider Joel Sherman, a man not given to fits of panic, admitted he is "losing faith" in Wells at the plate. He recalled the promise of Wells' early career — crisp swing decisions, hard contact — and noted that those qualities feel like they've "backed up a little bit." Sherman said what many are now thinking out loud: does Wells become a player you pinch hit for in the late innings? Do we trade this loser? That's not a question anyone in the organization wanted to be asking about their starting catcher in mid-May, but yet here we are.
What makes all of this sting is the context surrounding it. Aaron Judge is slashing .268 with 16 home runs and a 1.057 OPS. Ben Rice — the backup turned fan favorite — is somehow batting .303 with 13 homers and a jaw-dropping 1.214 OPS. The Yankees, in spite of Wells, have been a dangerous offensive club when the big bats get going. But the catcher spot has been a sinkhole, and anyone who watches this team knows it.
The calls for a catcher shake-up are growing louder. Backup J.C. Escarra has been floated as a viable alternative — and perhaps most damning, it's becoming increasingly difficult to argue against giving him the job. Minnesota's Ryan Jeffers, batting .299 with a .899 OPS, has been mentioned as a potential trade target. Wells has three more years of team control on his contract, which means the Yankees own this problem for the foreseeable future unless they do something about it.
And try to make an argument that he's a good defensive catcher, and I don't really know how you can. Once known as a great defensive framer, does that really matter anymore now that the MLB uses ABS. It's kind of like AI taking over the graphics department at your company... you're no longer relevant. Being a catcher for the Dominican Republic and hitting a homer for them in the World Baseball Classic just a few months ago does not make you a complete player. Your time has passed Austin.
For us Yankees fans watching the standings and the calendar simultaneously, patience is a luxury that looks more expensive by the day. Austin Wells was supposed to be an answer. Right now, he's a question nobody in the Bronx knows how to solve.
Time to cut this bum loose.



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