Sunday, May 17, 2026

BREAKOUT DAY FOR VOLPE BECOMES DEVASTATING MESS UP BY VOLPE


Anthony Volpe’s biggest talent right now might be convincing the Yankees organization that every disaster is somehow “growth.”

Because what happened in today's game against the Mets was not a little mistake. It was not “miscommunication.” It was not one of those harmless baseball quirks Boone loves laughing off in postgame interviews when it comes to his boy toy Anthony Volpe. It was overthinking and trying to be a hero at the worst possible moment for this high schooler. Wow.

Volpe plays shortstop for the New York Yankees like someone trying to remember instructions while assembling IKEA furniture these days. On the most important defensive play of the game, he wandered directly into Max Schuemann’s lane and blew up any realistic chance to save the game. Schumann's momentum would have taken him straight home with the throw giving the Yankees a chance.  If Volpe were to even get the ball, he would have needed to turn his body essentially running out of time and losing the game with no chance.  Everyone in the building knew it. Volpe... was trying to be a hero. It just didn't make sense.


That is Little League stuff. That is the kind of mistake coaches scream about when kids are 12 years old because by the time you reach the majors, you are supposed to understand where you are standing on a baseball field.

And yet here we are.


The most maddening part? Boone will absolutely protect him afterward. He always does. Boone treats Volpe like a fragile science project instead of a player who should be held accountable. Every brutal mistake gets wrapped in a warm blanket of excuses.

“He competed.”
“He had good at-bats.”
“He’s growing.”

"He's trying."

Enough already.

Volpe can go 3-for-4 all he wants, but if he’s physically colliding with his own teammate in the 10th inning because he lacks situational awareness, then what exactly are we celebrating here?

This is the Yankees. Not a developmental league. Not a summer camp. Boone keeps penciling him into the lineup every single day no matter how sloppy he plays, no matter how erratic the decision-making becomes, and no matter how many games get tilted because of boneheaded baseball. At some point, nonstop playing time stops being “confidence building” and starts becoming organizational negligence. Volpe is a liability.

And the worst thing Boone has done is convince Volpe that effort equals execution.

It doesn’t.

Nobody questions that Volpe plays hard. The problem is he plays reckless. There’s a difference. Diving around and sprinting into chaos does not make you fundamentally sound. Sometimes it just makes the mistakes louder. It looked like the first week when you bring all the kids out and introduce them to Tee-ball and on every hit, the flock of kids chase the ball. It was ugly.

The Yankees lost 7-6 to another last-place team because once again they played undisciplined baseball at the exact moment discipline mattered most. And once again, Boone will defend it as "we tried."

Meanwhile, the reality is ugly: Your shortstop sabotaged the final play of the game by crashing into his own second baseman.

That’s not unlucky.

That’s unacceptable.



GIVE IT A REST BOONE, IT'S TIME TO BENCH VOLPE


Let's talk about Anthony Volpe. Or more specifically, let's talk about what Anthony Volpe has not done since the Yankees brought him back from Triple-A Scranton on May 13th, because that list is considerably longer and far more interesting.

When José Caballero fractured his finger diving back to first base against the Brewers, the Yankees had no choice but to recall their former crown jewel shortstop. Why? Because Boone missed him. Caballero had been outstanding before the injury — hitting .259 with 4 home runs, a .720 OPS and 13 stolen bases in 41 games — and losing him stung. But fine, you plug the hole with the best available option, and Volpe was it according to the Yankees. I could have made an argument that you didn't need him at all, but here we are. 

And so Volpe flew into Camden Yards, got his name in the lineup for the May 13th series finale against the Orioles, and promptly went 0-for-3 with a fielding error in a 7-0 blowout loss. Not exactly the triumphant return anyone had penciled in.

After the day off May 14th, things did not improve from there. Over the next two games against the Mets in the opening weekend of the Subway Series, Volpe went 0-for-1 on Friday and 0-for-2 on Saturday. That's eleven at-bats since his recall. Zero hits. A batting average so low it would need a ladder just to reach the Mendoza Line. But Volpe walked 5 times. That's something right? Well, not really. I'll tell you why in a minute.

Now, Aaron Boone will tell you — and you can already hear him saying it in that calm, measured, Aaron Boone way of his — that Volpe has actually been seeing the ball well. That he's been patient. That the walks are a good sign. And look, technically, he's not wrong. Volpe drew three walks on Friday alone, and two more on Saturday, giving him five free passes in three games. For a guy who came up to the majors and spent the better part of two seasons hacking at anything that moved, plate discipline is growth. It's progress. It's something.

It's just that it means absolutely nothing if you never score. See what I mean?

Every single one of those five walks died a quiet death on the basepaths. On Friday in the third inning, Volpe walked to load the bases and Aaron Judge flew out to end the threat. He walked again in the fifth — stranded. Walked again in the seventh — stranded. On Saturday he walked with runners on and Austin Wells struck out to kill the inning. Then in the seventh, with the bases loaded and a chance to at least be a factor in a rally, Volpe grounded into a force out to end the inning entirely. Five walks, five dead ends, zero runs scored. He's been getting on base like a man who keeps boarding a train that never leaves the station, like his career.

The error on May 13th feels important to mention again, because it really did set the tone for this entire stretch. First game of the season, first opportunity to remind people why they once talked about this kid like he was Derek Jeter's spiritual successor, and he boots one in the field. The Yankees lost by seven. It was the kind of debut that makes you wince even if you like the guy. Volpe has been quoted as saying "I can't control what I can't control." But wait a minute little boy, you are back in the major leagues... YOU CAN CONTROL YOU DESTINY! YOU HAVE TO HIT! The dude's like a 5-year-old, was he ever media trained?

And Boone does like the guy. That much is obvious. There's a loyalty there that goes beyond the practical, it's creepy weird. The kind of managerial attachment that makes a skipper keep running a struggling player out there long past the point where the numbers justify it.

So look, here's the reality of what Volpe's 2026 has looked like: he started the year on the injured list recovering from shoulder surgery, did a rehab stint in Double-A Somerset, got sent to Triple-A, and then back to Double-A and then got yanked back to the big leagues because someone got hurt. That is not an ideal rehab runway for any player, let alone one who struggled as badly as Volpe did in 2025, when he hit .212 in 153 games and led the American League in errors with 19. The offensive questions that followed him into this offseason have not gone away. Trust you, I will remind you every day... and I will ride this kid until he's a backup 2nd baseman on the Reds. If anything, the first three games of his 2026 season have underlined them in red ink.

Zero hits. Zero runs scored. One error. Five walks that amounted to nothing. The Yankees went 2-6 on their road trip and hit a miserable 3-for-15 with runners in scoring position during the Mets series. Volpe didn't cause all of that, but he certainly didn't help. At some point, plate discipline without production is just a polite way of saying you're not doing any damage — and right now, Anthony Volpe is the least damaging baserunner in pinstripes.

Aaron Boone can talk about walks and process all he wants. The scoreboard doesn't grade on a curve, and we just broke down his performance, and it ain't good.


LIKE THIS? READ THIS:

WEAVER REMINDS THE YANKEES OF WHAT THEY COULD HAVE HAD

“I’m not the biggest guy in the room, but I ain’t scared of nobody.”
--Luke Weaver

Luke Weaver didn’t just expose the Yankees bullpen problem Saturday night — he was the answer they let walk out the door.


This wasn’t some overpriced superstar the Yankees couldn’t afford to keep. This was a guy they helped rebuild. A scrap-heap arm who turned himself into a bulldog in the Bronx. A “point and go” pitcher who took every role imaginable and somehow became one of the most reliable weapons Aaron Boone had when the season was hanging by a thread. Their closer.

And what did the Yankees do?

They handed out money elsewhere, watched Trent Grisham accept a one-year, $22 million qualifying offer, shrugged, and basically told Luke Weaver, “Thanks for the memories.”

Bad move, because Weaver clearly remembered.

The second he signed with the New York Mets, you just knew this matchup was circled on his calendar in permanent marker. Revenge games are real, and Weaver looked like a man who had spent months imagining this exact moment. Bases loaded. No outs. Two-run lead against his former team.

That’s either a nightmare or a movie script. Weaver made it cinema.

He punched out Amed Rosario. Then Grisham. Then he got the always-harmless Anthony Volpe to end the inning, because of course Volpe found a way to make the biggest moment disappear into a routine out. At this point, expecting a clutch hit from Volpe is like expecting New Jersey traffic to magically vanish at rush hour.

Weaver was breathing fire, too. The radar gun touched 97.6 mph — his highest velocity of the season. After one strikeout, he barked for the ball back immediately like a guy operating on pure adrenaline and spite. You could practically see the emotion pouring out of him.

And honestly? Good for him.

I’ve said it before and I’ll keep saying it: Luke Weaver has a legitimate case for being more valuable than David Bednar. Bednar is your classic ninth-inning closer. Fine. But Weaver gives you versatility, swing-and-miss stuff, multiple innings, and better adaptability for today’s game. Managers dream about arms like that in October. The Yankees can't win in October.

Most importantly, Weaver was a teammate. A gamer. The kind of guy Yankee fans naturally gravitate toward because he looked like he genuinely loved wearing the pinstripes.

So no, don’t get it twisted — I’m still a Yankee fan through and through. But if you watched that moment Saturday night and didn’t feel even a little happy for Luke Weaver, you’re lying to yourself.

He wanted revenge, and he absolutely got it. That's what great baseball is.



Saturday, May 16, 2026

HOW YANKEE SCOUTS LOST THEIR WAY IN THE VOLPE RECRUITMENT


What makes the Anthony Volpe situation so strangely controversial is not simply that he has struggled offensively. Plenty of young players struggle. The real controversy — at least in my opinion — is that the Yankees organization/scouts appear to have abandoned objective baseball evaluation entirely because certain powerful scouts and execs became personally, emotionally, and perhaps even falsely invested in Anthony Volpe long before he was ready to become the starting shortstop of the New York Yankees.  And when you carefully examine the timeline, the relationships, the private access, the nonstop internal lobbying, and the almost obsessive organizational protection surrounding Volpe, the entire situation starts to feel far less like ordinary scouting and far more like an inside operation driven by favoritism, personal loyalty, and emotional bias disguised as baseball evaluation. This is my opinion and this is what we have been trying to figure out for years.  It has never made sense to me that Volpe was the golden boy for the New York Yankees.  With all the material I have found, I lay it out for you to decide. Sure, some of this will sound like regular scouting.  But some of it, is just plain weird and in my opinion, I chalk it up as favoritism, maybe even crossing uncomfortable lines.  

Why do I say this? Because Major League organizations are supposed to evaluate players objectively, professionally, and independently — not emotionally adopt families, attach themselves to narratives, and aggressively push handpicked favorites through the system while ignoring flaws that would absolutely slow down other prospects.

MY THEORY, MY OPINION 

There seems to be that certain Yankee scouts became so personally attached to Anthony Volpe that they spotted operating like objective talent evaluators and perhaps pushed narratives because of their family relationship.  At the center of this theory are Jim Hendry, Matt Hyde, Kelly Rodman, and ultimately Damon Oppenheimer — powerful evaluators whose influence appears to have transformed Anthony Volpe from a normal prospect into an organizational cause.

And in my opinion, once that happened, the Yankees were no longer evaluating Volpe fairly. They were protecting an investment they had emotionally committed themselves to years earlier. The Yankees did not just scout Volpe, they cultivated the family. 

This is where the story immediately becomes unusual.  Before Volpe was even drafted, Yankees personnel reportedly already had unusually close access to him and his family through mutual friends and Delbarton coach Bruce Shatel, who reportedly helped facilitate introductions and meetings.  This is not normal detached scouting. That is called relationship cultivation. And there is a major ethical gray area here that people gloss over, because once scouts stop acting like evaluators and start acting like trusted family insiders, the integrity of the evaluation process becomes compromised.

Now, it is my opinion that the Yankees were no longer simply assessing Anthony Volpe as a baseball player. They were recruiting the family socially and emotionally. And that matters because once evaluators become emotionally attached to the people behind the prospect, criticism becomes almost impossible. At that point, the scouts are no longer evaluating objectively. They are protecting relationships.

JIM HENDRY’S RELATIONSHIP WITH THE FAMILY LOOKS FAR DEEPER THAN ORDINARY SCOUTING

The pre-draft dinner at Roots Steakhouse may honestly be one of the most revealing moments in the entire story. According to reports, Yankees special assignment scout Jim Hendry took Volpe and his parents to dinner roughly a month before the draft. But the alarming part is not the dinner itself. It is how Hendry reportedly handled it. Instead of aggressively pitching the Yankees, Hendry reportedly focused on praising Vanderbilt University — its academics, prestige, and long-term value.

Why is that significant? Because Hendry appears to have understood that the real decision-makers were not just Anthony Volpe. It was the rich parents. Michael Volpe, a urologist. Isabelle Volpe, an anesthesiologist.

Highly educated professionals who reportedly valued education and stability. So, Hendry allegedly tailored the conversation specifically to emotionally disarm the family and gain trust. That is not traditional scouting behavior. That sounds much closer to strategic relationship management. And according to reports, it worked completely.

The communication became constant. Frequent contact with Anthony’s father. Ongoing personal conversations. A relationship that increasingly looked less professional and more familial.

Then came the most disturbing detail of all in my opinion.  When Volpe made the Opening Day roster years later, Hendry was reportedly invited to be there with the family when Aaron Boone delivered the news. That is extraordinary.

Scouts are not usually embedded into intimate family milestone moments years after the draft unless the relationship has become deeply personal. And in my opinion, once Hendry became emotionally invested in Volpe’s success, objectivity was gone. At that point, Hendry no longer had incentive to fairly evaluate Volpe. He had incentive to justify years of emotional investment and prove he was right...

And that creates dangerous bias.

MATT HYDE’S BEHAVIOR SOUNDS LESS LIKE SCOUTING AND MORE LIKE AN INTERNAL POLITICAL CAMPAIGN

If Hendry built the family trust, Matt Hyde appears to have become the chief political operator for Volpe inside the Yankees organization. And frankly, some of the reported behavior sounds wildly inappropriate for someone tasked with objective evaluation.

According to reports, Hyde watched virtually every Volpe at-bat, sent constant “Volpe’s on deck” mass texts to Yankees officials, pushed scouts to stop watching other prospects and focus on Volpe, and relentlessly marketed Volpe’s intangibles internally. That is called pushing an agenda.

That is not normal enthusiasm. That sounds like obsession. And the critical detail is this: Hyde had already coached Volpe directly for two summers before the draft. Meaning he already knew him personally. Already knew the family personally. Already believed in him emotionally before the Yankees even selected him. That creates an enormous conflict of interest. Because how can someone objectively evaluate a player they are personally attached to and publicly campaigning for?

In my opinion, they cannot. At that point, Hyde was no longer behaving like a scout. He was behaving like a promoter. Almost like a political operative inside the organization whose mission was to force the Yankees into adopting the Volpe narrative.  And according to Damon Oppenheimer’s own comments, other Yankees officials recognized how excessive Hyde’s lobbying had become. That is hugely important. Because it suggests the behavior was so relentless that even internally, people noticed it was abnormal.

DAMON OPPENHEIMER’S COMMENTS ACCIDENTALLY EXPOSE THE PROBLEM

What makes this even more questionable is that Damon Oppenheimer himself reportedly acknowledged Volpe was not viewed early on as some overwhelming physical prospect. He was reportedly seen as undersized, limited physically and lacking elite loud tools. Which raises the obvious question:

If Volpe was not universally viewed as a transcendent talent, why were certain Yankees officials pushing him with near-religious intensity? Why was there such an aggressive internal campaign? Why were evaluators seemingly emotionally attached to him before he even entered professional baseball?

Well, according to Oppenheimer, Hyde’s nonstop advocacy reportedly became almost “comical,” with internal reactions reportedly becoming: “Oh s—, here we go.”

That quote is devastating in my opinion. Why? Well, because it strongly implies Yankees personnel themselves understood Hyde was no longer operating like a neutral evaluator.

He was acting like someone emotionally obsessed with getting “his guy” into the organization.

And in my opinion, once scouting departments start functioning like that, the integrity of the process collapses.

THE YANKEES APPEAR TO HAVE CREATED A PROTECTIVE BUBBLE AROUND VOLPE

One of the strangest aspects of the entire situation is how the same organizational language followed Volpe at every stage regardless of actual performance.

Even during prolonged offensive struggles, the Yankees repeatedly used identical talking points:
“elite”
“special”
“work ethic”
“baseball IQ”
“competitor”

It almost felt scripted. As though the organization collectively agreed that Volpe’s image needed to be protected no matter what the numbers said. And in my opinion, that is what happens when organizations become emotionally invested in narratives instead of baseball reality.

The Yankees did not merely want Volpe to succeed, they NEEDED him to succeed, because too many influential evaluators had attached their reputations and egos to him years earlier.

THE YANKEES NEEDED “THE NEXT JETER” VOLPE FIT THE SCRIPT PERFECTLY

This may ultimately explain everything. After Derek Jeter, the Yankees were desperate for a symbolic successor. A homegrown shortstop, a clean-cut face of the franchise, a New Jersey kid, a marketable personality and someone easy to sell as the next eventual, "Yankees captain.” Anthony Volpe fit the screenplay perfectly. And in my opinion, the Yankees became intoxicated by the image long before the baseball fully justified it.

The organization did not simply evaluate him. They emotionally adopted the story. And once that happened, objectivity disappeared. Flaws were minimized, development concerns were ignored, timelines were accelerated and criticism became taboo. Because the Yankees had already psychologically committed themselves to making Anthony Volpe the face of the future.

THE UNCOMFORTABLE QUESTION NOBODY WANTS TO ASK

If Anthony Volpe were not Anthony Volpe — if he lacked the deep personal relationships with Hendry, Hyde, and Rodman, if he were not attached to the perfect “next Jeter” narrative, if powerful Yankees evaluators had not aggressively campaigned for him internally for years — would he have been promoted this aggressively or would he have been treated like countless other prospects with offensive flaws who spend additional years developing in Triple-A?

Because in my opinion, that is the real scandal here. Not outright corruption, but something potentially just as dangerous:

A powerful baseball organization allowing personal relationships, emotional attachment, internal politics, and narrative obsession to override objective player evaluation. And when that happens, the system stops being merit-based.

It becomes favoritism disguised as scouting.

And to many fans, Anthony Volpe increasingly looks less like a player who unquestionably earned the Yankees shortstop job through undeniable Major League readiness, and more like the beneficiary of one of the most aggressively protected internal scouting campaigns the Yankees organization has seen in years... in my opinion.


Friday, May 15, 2026

STILL WANT THE VOLPE KID? MOVE HIM TO SECOND


Let me state for the record that I don't want Volpe on the Yankees at all.  But for the sake of compromise, Boone will never part with his boy toy, so keep him in the Bronx and make him play second at least? Why? Cause Jazz sucks. Have you noticed?

Remember when our second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. announced he was gonna be a “50/50 guy”? You know… casually aiming for a club so exclusive that only Shohei Ohtani has ever actually gotten through the velvet rope.

After going 31 homers and 31 steals in 2025, Jazz rolled into his contract year talking like baseball’s version of a motivational poster. “Why not shoot for the stars and land on the moon?”

Well… the rocket appears to have exploded on the launchpad.

First, it was “too cold” in the spring. Then the bat disappeared entirely. And now? We’re 43 games into 2026 and Jazz is hitting .203 with 4 home runs and an OPS that looks like a backup catcher’s blood pressure reading. The underlying numbers somehow look worse. Weak contact, low hard-hit rate, disappearing barrels — the whole thing has turned into a masterclass in warning-track sadness.

Which brings us to the Yankees’ next ongoing science experiment: Anthony Volpe.

The Yankees are once again trying to convince the public that Volpe is a shortstop, despite half the baseball world watching him range around the infield like a guy searching for his car keys in a supermarket parking lot.

And look — if the Yankees absolutely insist on keeping him in the lineup because Aaron Boone treats him like a Make-A-Wish success story, then Volpe better start taking ground balls at second base immediately. Because the clock is ticking.

If Jazz keeps hitting like this, the Yankees are eventually going to have to make a decision by the trade deadline. Bench him? Move him? Trade him? Something has to give. And if that happens, second base suddenly becomes Volpe’s last realistic lifeboat.

Scouts have quietly said for years that Volpe’s arm fits better at second anyway. The problem is, moving him across the bag doesn’t magically fix the bat. Hitting around the Mendoza Line isn’t exactly a “position-specific issue.”

But maybe — maybe — getting him out of shortstop could help his confidence. Because right now the Yankees have managed to combine a struggling second baseman with a shortstop who probably shouldn’t be a shortstop, and somehow the solution keeps being: “Just give it another month.”

At this rate, Yankee Stadium is gonna need a support group for middle infielders.  We all hoped this season would be different didn't we? When Cashman declared this was a top caliber team, remember? Well... it's not... it's more of the same, and add in the chaos.

Jeez.




MAX FRIED OUT!


The Yankees got some unsettling news Friday, announcing that Max Fried is headed to the 15-day injured list with a bone bruise in his left elbow — never the kind of phrase fans want attached to a pitcher carrying a $218 million contract.

Fried underwent both an MRI and CT scan and was examined by team physician Dr. Chris Ahmad, while noted specialist Dr. Neal ElAttrache is also expected to review the imaging. The left-hander exited Wednesday’s start after just three innings with what the Yankees initially described as posterior elbow soreness, though the follow-up testing suggests this may be more than routine midseason discomfort.

That’s especially concerning given how important Fried has been to New York’s rotation. Before landing on the shelf, the 31-year-old was quietly putting together another excellent season, going 4-3 with a 3.21 ERA.

Fried was coming off a dominant 2025 campaign as well, posting a 19-5 record with a 2.86 ERA and 189 strikeouts over 195.1 innings — exactly the ace-level production the Yankees envisioned when they handed him an eight-year, $218 million deal during the 2024-25 offseason.

Now, New York suddenly finds itself holding its breath a bit. Carlos Rodón, Ryan Weathers, Cam Schlittler, and Will Warren remain in the rotation, while veterans Paul Blackburn and Ryan Yarbrough could be asked to stabilize the back end. Top prospect Elmer Rodriguez is also an option for a call-up.

The Yankees have enough arms to survive in the short term. But if Fried’s absence stretches beyond the minimum stay, this becomes far more than a temporary inconvenience. Much like I said in the offseason, we don't want a situation where we don't have stability in the rotation and right now it's a crap shoot with Fried out.



BOONE'S OBSESSION WITH VOLPE COULD JEOPARDIZE LOMBARD AT SHORTSTOP


There’s a growing perception among fans—and in my opinion, Aaron Boone’s continued faith in Anthony Volpe borders on an obsession that isn’t really being justified by results on the field. Volpe has shown moments where he contributes, with the occasional hit or home run, but the overall consistency, both offensively and defensively, still doesn’t look like what you expect from a locked-in major league shortstop. That concern only got louder after his return game, where he went 0-for-3 and committed an error at shortstop, reinforcing for critics the idea that the same issues keep surfacing at key moments.

The bigger frustration is how this plays out structurally within the organization. After Volpe’s rehab stint, the New York Yankees optioned him to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, but the ripple effect seemed to immediately complicate the infield picture. Volpe returned to shortstop in the minors, while George Lombard Jr. was shifted around to accommodate that alignment, moving across different infield spots instead of settling into one consistent developmental track.

Boone addressed Lombard Jr.’s versatility, saying: “George[Lombard Jr.], like he’s done a lot, will bounce around. And then again, we’ll—we’ll keep revisiting this as we move through it. But George [Lombard Jr.] has already had a lot of experience playing third, second, short—all very well. So, it won’t be anything too different for George.”

From a development standpoint, that approach has raised eyebrows. Lombard Jr. is viewed by many as the more dynamic, athletic, and versatile defender, and there’s a belief among some observers that constantly shifting his position while juggling Triple-A adjustment periods may not be ideal for his long-term growth. In contrast, Volpe continues to be given a steady runway at shortstop, which fuels the perception—fair or not—that he’s being prioritized in a way that overrides pure performance evaluation.

This also feeds into a broader organizational critique of the New York Yankees’ ability to consistently develop homegrown position players over the past 20-plus years. Outside of a few clear successes like Brett Gardner and Aaron Judge, the track record is often viewed as uneven, with prospects like Oswald Peraza frequently cited as examples of stalled or complicated development paths.

Taken together, it’s created a messy infield picture: Volpe being given continued opportunity at shortstop, Lombard Jr. being asked to adapt around him, and an overall sense among fans that the development plan is becoming harder to follow than it needs to be.

We will see how this plays out, but I find it annoying and disgusting and downright weird.



THE YANKEES, STANTON INJURY PROBLEM

 


The Yankees have officially entered that part of the season where fans are screaming at Aaron Boone like he personally forgot how to swing a bat. And listen, Boone deserves heat. The guy manages bullpen games like he’s picking lottery numbers.

But the bigger issue? Giancarlo Stanton’s annual trip to the Injured List Cinematic Universe.

Because here’s the frustrating part: when Stanton is healthy, he is an absolute monster. The man does not hit baseballs. He sends them into witness protection. Pitchers suddenly start checking Zillow listings in other cities. But healthy Stanton now feels like spotting Bigfoot riding the subway. People swear it exists, but nobody sees it consistently.

This calf injury is not some harmless little setback the Yankees can brush off with “he’s progressing.” Progressing to what exactly? He is nearly three weeks into recovery and still cannot ramp up running.

That is... not ideal for a professional athlete whose job technically requires legs.

The Yankees can toss around “late May return” all they want, but right now that timeline feels like airport departure boards during a thunderstorm. Delayed, confusing, and nobody trusts it. The MRI on May 14 reportedly still did not show enough healing, which explains why Stanton is stuck doing stationary drills like a dad rehabbing after pickup basketball.

Sure, he can hit. Great. Awesome. Fantastic. But designated hitters still need to move without their calf exploding while jogging to first base. And remember, this injury happened while Stanton was running the bases in Houston — not hurdling fences, not robbing home runs, not wrestling a bear. Jogging.

That is the scary part. The Yankees desperately need his right-handed power because this lineup changes completely when Stanton is healthy. Without him, the offense can suddenly look like Judge and a collection of guys trying their best.

And this is the cycle Yankees fans are exhausted from. Every season becomes the same conversation:
“Man, if Stanton can just stay healthy…”  Meanwhile the baseball gods are already warming up the “day-to-day” graphic package.

The real issue is not simply that Stanton is hurt. It is that the recovery feels murky, slow, and weirdly familiar. No running progression this far into a calf strain is a massive red flag.  At this point, the Yankees are basically trying to operate a Ferrari with a check engine light permanently on.

Could Stanton return in late May? Sure. Could this drag into June while Boone gives vague updates that sound like hostage negotiations? Also yes.

Stay tuned for the chaos, because the Yankees somehow turned “jogging” into a season-defining event.



Thursday, May 14, 2026

THE FALSE REALITY OF WHAT MAKES CASHMAN GREAT


Something is seriously wrong with Aaron Boone.

But the Yankees don’t just have a manager problem. They have a general manager problem too. And before the Brian Cashman defense squad starts printing Hall of Fame plaques, let’s revisit a little thing called history — something Aaron Boone clearly treats like optional reading.

The Yankees dynasty wasn’t born the second Cashman sat in the GM chair. That’s revisionist history wrapped in pinstripes.

The foundation of the dynasty was built by Gene Michael“Stick” Michael — from 1990 through 1995. He was the stubborn architect who refused to trade away the young core when everybody else wanted shiny new toys. No Derek Jeter deal. No Mariano Rivera deal. No Andy Pettitte tossed away for some fading veteran. Stick protected the future while the rest of baseball played checkers with Yankee prospects.

Then came GM Bob Watson in 1996. The pieces were already in place. The engine was built. Watson helped guide the Yankees to a championship while the Core Four era officially arrived.

By the time Brian Cashman took over in 1998, the Yankees were essentially a luxury sports car with the keys already in the ignition. From 1998 to 2000, they dominated baseball — but pretending Cashman created the dynasty from scratch is like giving the guy who watered the lawn credit for building Yankee Stadium.

That’s why many people around baseball — and many Yankees fans — view 2009 as Cashman’s one undisputed championship. Why? Because that team had George Steinbrenner and his fingerprints all over it. And how did the Yankees win that title?

By opening the vault like a casino owner on New Year’s Eve.

CC Sabathia.
A. J. Burnett.
Mark Teixeira.
Nick Swisher.

The Yankees didn’t “develop” their way to that title. They went on a shopping spree that looked like George Steinbrenner had discovered unlimited credit. And to Cashman’s credit, it worked. But since then? A whole lot of headlines, analytics buzzwords, and October disappointment.

Which brings us to the recent Brandon Tierney-Aaron Boone exchange — a conversation that accidentally exposed why Boone always sounds like the last guy in the room to realize the fire alarm is real. Brandon Tierney was wrapping up the interview and talking about the Yankees’ roster depth and urgency this season when Boone decided to launch into a full infomercial for Cashman.

Boone called Cashman a Hall of Famer.

Tierney, probably wondering if he accidentally switched studios and wandered into a Yankees PR meeting, before politely pushing back.

Because here’s the reality: Hall of Fame executive? Based on what exactly? One championship in the last 16 years? An endless parade of expensive contracts that aged like milk in July? Constant playoff exits? A roster-building philosophy that too often feels like fantasy baseball run by a hedge fund intern?

That’s not greatness. That’s surviving in New York while owning an unlimited budget. Cashman is not a hall of fame GM.

Boone, of course, doubled down.

“He’s great at it, BT. He’s really good at it,” Boone said.

And that’s when Tierney hit the brakes.

Great’s a little bit of a stretch. 2009’s been a minute, Booney.”

Correct. Completely correct.

The Yankees haven’t been starving for resources. They haven’t been rebuilding in a small market. They haven’t been operating with limitations. This is the Yankees. The standard isn’t “pretty good.” The standard is championships. Parades. Rings. October dominance.

Instead, Yankees fans have gotten aging rosters, bloated payrolls, analytics experiments, and postseason exits that arrive faster than Boone’s postgame line about how “the guys battled.” And Boone just kept talking — which is usually where Boone gets himself into trouble. He talks like a guy trying to finish an essay five minutes before class. More words don’t make the argument smarter.

Tierney ended the segment perfectly: “Go get a win.”

Exactly. Not 700 regular-season wins. Not another Wild Card appearance. Not another analytics seminar about launch angle efficiency. Win a championship.

That’s the job. If Cashman wants Hall of Fame talk, win another title. If Boone wants praise as a Yankees manager, stop managing October games like they’re spring training experiments in Tampa.

Until then, Boone can keep defending Cashman all he wants. Maybe he’s brainwashed. Maybe he’s loyal to a fault. Maybe he genuinely believes what he’s saying.

But one thing he definitely isn’t?

Right.



THE WELLS EXPERIMENT NEEDS TO END



There is a particular kind of agony unique to New York Yankees fandom: watching a player the organization anointed as a cornerstone quietly dismantle your faith in them, at-bat by excruciating at-bat, while the rest of the league politely pretends not to notice. Austin Wells is providing that agony in 2026, and he's doing it with uncommon efficiency.

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.

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.



WHY WERE YANKEE SCOUTS COZYING UP TO VOLPE TO CLOSELY?

Something feels a miss to me. 


Look, Anthony Volpe’s shoulder has officially become the Yankees’ favorite bedtime story. Every time he looks lost at the plate or boots another routine play, somebody inside the organization whispers “well, maybe the shoulder…” like fans haven’t been watching this disaster unfold for years.

But Aaron Boone accidentally destroyed that excuse himself. Boone admitted today Volpe had “zero issues” with the shoulder during the final stretch of rehab. Zero. None. So enough already. The shoulder didn’t make Anthony Volpe a bad hitter. The shoulder didn’t make him overrated defensively. And the shoulder certainly didn’t force the Yankees to keep pretending he’s a cornerstone player when he keeps performing like a replacement-level stopgap.

The real issue feels much uglier. Anthony Volpe just is not a good baseball player.

And the people responsible for pushing this kid into untouchable status deserve to be called out directly. it is my opinion that Matt Hyde should be under serious scrutiny for this scouting miss. Yes, Hyde gets praise for finding later-round gems like Ben Rice and Cam Schlittler. Great. Nobody’s denying that. But when it comes to Volpe, Hyde sold the Yankees a fantasy.

Matt Hyde

And honestly, the details surrounding this whole thing are bizarre.  We did alittle digging. Volpe himself talked openly about the “bond” Hyde and the late Kelly Rodman formed with the Volpe parents. Not professional respect. Not admiration for the player. A “bond.” Damon Oppenheimer reportedly spent significant time around Volpe’s parents at tournaments and showcases too.

Why? Seriously, why? This is Major League Baseball scouting, not family counseling.

Scouts are supposed to evaluate talent objectively. Front office executives are supposed to make cold baseball decisions. Instead, this whole thing sounds like Yankees officials emotionally attached themselves to a local kid and completely lost perspective. Somewhere along the way, they stopped acting like evaluators and started acting like proud family friends rooting for the kid to succeed no matter what the evidence showed.

That’s dangerous. Because once emotion enters the equation, honesty leaves the room. And that’s exactly what happened here with Anthony Volpe.

The Yankees became so invested in the “New Jersey kid living the dream” narrative that they ignored the glaring flaws right in front of them. The weak contact. The inconsistent glove. The inability to adjust. The complete lack of impact for long stretches. They fell in love with the story instead of the player.

Now the organization is trapped protecting its own ego.  Volpe returned against Baltimore today and immediately went 0-for-3 with an error. That wasn’t some shocking off day. That was the same Anthony Volpe Yankees fans have watched for years now — overmatched at the plate and unreliable in the field despite endless hype telling everyone otherwise.

Yet the Yankees still hand him the shortstop job automatically, even with better options available. Why is Ryan McMahon not out there even though he is stronger defensively? Why is Max Schuemann, who is actually hitting .273, treated like an afterthought while Volpe gets endless chances to fail upward? Boone pushes this kid out there constantly. Why?

Because admitting Volpe is a bust means admitting Hyde and Oppenheimer badly misjudged him, and the Yankees organization hates admitting failure more than it hates losing games.

So look, the shoulder excuse? That's dead now. Boone killed it himself. So, what’s left? Just the uncomfortable truth nobody inside Yankee Stadium wants to say publicly:

Anthony Volpe isn’t struggling because he was hurt. He’s struggling because the Yankees overrated him from the very beginning, and the scouts who got emotionally invested in him helped create one of the most overprotected disappointments this franchise has seen in years.



Wednesday, May 13, 2026

FEARS THAT FRIED IS DONE


Maybe Anthony Volpe really is really just bad luck. Because every time the Yankees seem ready to settle in, another disaster drops out of the sky like a piano in a cartoon.

Now it’s ace lefty Max Fried heading to the medical report, and the timing couldn’t be worse.

Coming into Wednesday, Fried had been everything the Yankees could’ve asked for and then some. Through his first nine starts, he posted a 2.91 ERA with a 4-2 record and 48 strikeouts over 58 2/3 innings. The guy’s been a workhorse too, throwing more innings than any pitcher in baseball so far this season. In other words, he’s been the one adult in the room while the Yankees have played their usual game of “How Creative Can We Get With Heartbreak?”

But against the Baltimore Orioles on Wednesday, something looked off almost immediately. Fried labored through three innings, giving up five hits, walking one and allowing three runs while striking out just two. The command wasn’t sharp, the velocity looked shaky, and Yankee fans everywhere probably started stress-eating sunflower seeds by the second inning.

Then came the moment nobody wanted to see.

After finishing the third inning and throwing only 61 pitches, Fried walked straight down the tunnel. Minutes later, right-hander Paul Blackburn began warming in the bullpen, which basically sent Yankees Twitter into full DEFCON 1 mode.

Soon after, the Yankees announced Fried exited with left elbow posterior soreness. He’ll undergo imaging in New York and be evaluated by team physician Dr. Chris Ahmad.

And let’s be honest here: anytime you hear Chris Ahmad’s name attached to a Yankees pitcher, it feels less like a medical update and more like the opening scene of a horror movie.

Hopefully this turns out to be precautionary and nothing more. Because despite the chaos surrounding this team lately, Fried has been one of the few steady, reliable forces holding the rotation together. The Yankees can survive a bad night. Surviving a long-term Fried injury? That’s a much scarier conversation.