At this point, Aaron Boone's loyalty to Anthony Volpe has moved beyond baseball analysis and entered the realm of a Hallmark movie.
Seriously, what other explanation are Yankees fans supposed to come up with?
Volpe's numbers have been sitting in plain sight for everyone to see. The on-base percentage remains alarmingly low for a player whose game is built around speed. The Statcast metrics flash warning signs like a highway construction zone. The hard contact isn't there. The exit velocity isn't there. The expected batting average isn't there. Even the strikeout rate remains high enough to raise concerns about whether a major offensive breakthrough is actually coming.
Yet every time it appears the Yankees might finally hold Volpe accountable, Boone swoops in like the leading man in a romantic comedy determined to reunite with his true love before the credits roll.
Then there's Jose Caballero.
All Caballero has done is hit, defend, make plays, and give the Yankees reasons to keep him in the lineup. In a normal baseball universe, that's how you earn more playing time. In Boone's universe, apparently that's how you earn a front-row seat to the Anthony Volpe Protection Program.
When Boone says, "Both guys are going to play," Yankees fans hear something very different.
They hear: "Don't worry, Anthony. Nobody is taking your spot."
And that's the part that feels bizarre.
Because managers are supposed to fall in love with production. They're supposed to fall in love with winning. They're supposed to fall in love with players forcing their hand.
Instead, Boone seems completely captivated by potential that has yet to consistently materialize at the major-league level.
If Caballero played like Volpe, would Boone be this patient?
Does anyone honestly believe that?
Of course not.
That's why fans keep asking questions. Not because they hate Volpe. Not because they want him to fail. They'd love nothing more than for him to become the superstar the Yankees promised he would be.
But at some point, the relationship between Boone and Volpe starts looking less like manager and player and more like a creepy love story.
The Yankees keep telling fans to trust the process.
Fans keep looking at the box scores and wondering if Boone has Volpe's picture tucked inside his wallet.
Because when one player keeps getting unlimited grace while another keeps producing and still has to share the stage and be a utility guy, people are naturally going to wonder what they're missing.
Maybe it's faith.
Maybe it's stubbornness.
Or maybe Aaron Boone simply believes in Anthony Volpe with the kind of unwavering devotion usually reserved for Nicholas Sparks novels.



























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