Sadly, Boone is obsessed with him.
But seriously, let’s stop tiptoeing around it and just say what a whole lot of Yankee fans are already shouting into the void:
Most of them don’t want to see Anthony Volpe in the Bronx anymore—and they definitely don’t want to see him back with the big club right now.
Harsh? Sure. But it didn’t come out of nowhere.
Volpe is on the verge of returning, possibly as soon as Friday, and the Yankees are acting like the cavalry is arriving. Meanwhile, the numbers say he’s barely unpacked his bags in rehab. Twenty-two at-bats. Seven games. Even if he crams in a few more appearances, he’s still nowhere near the “full spring training” workload the team itself claimed he’d need.
So what exactly are we doing here?
While all this is happening, José Caballero is out there actually producing—getting on base, making plays, doing the job without fanfare. The Yankees are winning games. The machine is running. And yet, there’s this looming sense that none of it matters because the organization is just waiting to reinstall Volpe like a software update nobody asked for.
Manager Aaron Boone says he wants Volpe ready to play every day. That sounds great—until you realize his rehab hasn’t even been handled like that’s the goal. Days off, limited reps, a slow ramp. It’s not exactly screaming “this guy is about to carry the load.”
And that’s where the frustration turns into something stronger.
Because fans have watched this movie already. They’ve seen the extended leash. They’ve seen the struggles brushed aside. They’ve seen a player hit .212, commit 19 errors, battle injuries—and still be treated like an untouchable piece of the future.
At some point, patience runs out.
This isn’t about rooting against a kid for the sake of it. It’s about exhaustion. A lot of fans have simply reached the point where they don’t believe anymore. They don’t see a breakout coming. They don’t see a cornerstone. They see a player who’s been given chance after chance while others—like Caballero—have to fight for every inning.
And now, with the team playing well, the idea of forcing Volpe back into the lineup feels less like optimism and more like stubbornness from Brian Cashman and Boone.
That’s the real disconnect.
The Yankees don’t have a glaring hole right now except for Austin Wells. They’re not desperate. There’s no urgent need to rush anything. And yet, here comes the push to get Volpe back in uniform, back at shortstop, back in the spotlight—ready or not.
So yeah, the tone has shifted.
It’s no longer “we hope he figures it out.”
For many fans, it’s become: “we’ve seen enough.”
And whether that’s fair or not, it’s the reality the Yankees are choosing to ignore as they prepare to bring him back anyway.


























