Monday, June 15, 2026

THE INTERNET'S BUZZIN' WITH TRADE RUMORS TO REPLACE INJURED JUDGE


I don't even want to think about this, but after being asked about this constantly at work and now seeing rumors on the internet with every click I make....it feels impossible to avoid. Aaron Judge is sidelined and it's going to be a while. Now the Yankees moved back in first place over the weekend and everyone is asking how the Yankees are gonna keep it, without Judge playing.

If I am being honest, I am asking the same thing too. There are two very different versions of this team. There's the version with Judge playing that averages more runs score per game and then there is the version with no Judge and about two runs less scored per game. Not pretty splits to consider in a very right race with the Rays for the AL East.

And now we have to worry about exactly how long Judge is going to be out. The Yankees expect him to be back this season, but we do not know when. There's still a lot of baseball left so that's a lot of time that he could still be out. So now, the internet is abuzz with who the Yankees could trade for to fill-in for him until he does return.

That Judge fill in could be Seiya Suzuki, read more HERE. The Cubs are in a tough spot, they have been dropping games and the possibility of the Cubs becoming sellers at the deadline is becoming stronger. The Cubs have not played well since May 7th and unless they turn a corner, there is no reason for the Cubs to become a buyer by the deadline when they are 7.5 games back in their division.

And that makes the Cubs likely to trade away some of their impending free agents and that could easily mean Suzuki. He's a free agent at the end of the season and even though he had a rough stretch in May he's rebounded nicely in June with a .383 average, five home runs, and seven RBI's.

Suzuki is currently considered day-to-day after jamming his right knee after diving for a ball on Saturday. Initial reports are fine, the Cubs don't seem concerned but....time will tell. It's an option, and one the Yankees could consider with the injury bug still biting with Giancarlo Stanton and Trent Grisham. Confidence isn't as high as it should be with Jasson Dominguez and Spencer Jones so the Yankees will sniff around. But the question is where and around who?

The Yankees may need a rental. I don't like to think about it because we NEED Judge, but it might be a harsh reality.


--Jeana Bellezza-Ochoa
BYB Senior Managing Editor
Twitter: @nyprincessj






Sunday, June 14, 2026

THE KNICKS CHAMPIONSHIP CAME DOWN TO HONESTLY, HEART & STRONG LEADERSHIP


The Knicks didn't win a championship because they assembled the most expensive roster. They won because they built the healthiest culture.

For years, Knicks fans were told patience was required. Then Mike Brown arrived.

In remarkably short order, Brown transformed the Knicks from a talented team into a championship team. That's the difference between coaching and merely occupying the clipboard. Brown established accountability, developed the bench, empowered role players, and created a roster where every player knew exactly what was expected when his number was called. The stars shined, but the bench mattered. Walt Frazier has preached that formula for decades, and this team finally embodied it.

And then there's Jalen Brunson.

Forget the statistics for a moment. Brunson did something increasingly rare in modern professional sports: he put winning ahead of squeezing every last dollar out of the organization. By taking less money than he could have demanded when he resigned, he gave the front office breathing room to build a deeper, more complete roster. That's not just leadership. That's sacrifice.

The result? A championship.

Brunson's fingerprints are all over this title. Every loose ball, every fourth-quarter bucket, every moment when the season hung in the balance. Some players talk about culture. Brunson became the culture.

Meanwhile, Mike Brown deserves a statue before the championship confetti is fully swept off Seventh Avenue. Brown didn't need years. He didn't need endless excuses like we hear in the Bronx. He didn't need fans to lower expectations. He showed up, identified what needed fixing, and fixed it. And the most important part? He didn't lie to the Knicks fans. He didn't gaslight about injury or make excuses for his players after a loss.  That's leadership.  Because of it, the Knicks became disciplined, resilient, and prepared. Imagine that: a New York team that consistently looked more organized than its opponents.

Which brings us to Aaron Boone.


Watching Brown lead a championship run is a reminder of what decisive leadership looks like. Watching Boone manage often feels like watching someone repeatedly ask GPS for directions after driving past the exit three times.

Brown spent a short time building a champion. Boone has spent years giving Yankees fans PowerPoint presentations on why things will eventually work out. Brown and the Knicks organization developed depth. Boone has often manages as if the bench exists mainly for decorative purposes.

Brown makes adjustments, takes ownership when things go bad, but compliments players when things go right. Boone sometimes treats adjustments like they're an optional streaming service he forgot to subscribe to.

Brown raised the ceiling of his roster. Boone has too often left Yankees fans wondering how a team with that much talent can feel so ordinary in the biggest moments.

That's what makes the Knicks' championship so satisfying. It wasn't built on excuses. It wasn't built on promises about next year. It wasn't built on explanations. It was built on leadership.

Brunson led with sacrifice. The bench developed into a weapon. Brown established a winning culture almost immediately. And while one New York coach was busy hoisting a championship trophy, another was still searching for answers he's been looking for since the last administration.

The Knicks are champions because they found a leader. Mike Brown didn't just change the team.

He changed the standard.

I am not a true Knicks fan, folks. But I am a New York fan, and I do love heart.  Brunson has heart, Brown has leadership.

In the Bronx? We are lacking.  Last night's Knicks championship? It was a stark reminder that the Yankees need an overhaul... and now.



STANTON OUT SINCE APRIL, YET HAS A BETTER BATTING AVERAGE THAN VOLPE


The Yankees keep piling up wins, but the bigger question is whether they can keep this train rolling while so much of their firepower remains stuck on the injured list.

The latest concern centers around Giancarlo Stanton, whose road back to the lineup just hit another pothole. After spending months recovering from a right calf strain, Stanton reportedly felt a slight tweak while running the bases at Yankee Stadium. That's never the kind of update a team wants to hear from a player with a lengthy injury history, and it could force the Yankees to revisit his recovery timetable and order additional testing.

According to reports, Stanton was taking part in on-field hitting drills and running exercises when he felt discomfort on his final sprint. The setback immediately slowed what had finally looked like positive momentum in his rehab process.

The timing couldn't be much worse. The Yankees are already trying to survive without Aaron Judge, who is sidelined with a rib stress fracture, while Trent Grisham remains out with a hamstring strain. That's a lot of missing production for a lineup that has somehow managed to keep winning games.

Before landing on the injured list, Stanton was quietly putting together a respectable start to his season, hitting .256 with three home runs and 14 RBIs in 24 games. He's been on the IL since April 28th. In 64 games... Volpe is batting .194. 

For now, the Yankees continue finding ways to win. The concern is obvious, though. Winning without your stars for a week or two is one thing. Doing it for months is an entirely different challenge. At some point, the lineup will need some of those big bats back if the Yankees expect to remain a serious threat when the games matter most.



WE NEED TO END THIS VOLPE FEVER DREAM OF HELL


George Lombard Jr. might not just be the Yankees' shortstop of the future — he might be the Yankees' escape plan from the Anthony Volpe problem very soon.

And let's be honest: a lot of fans believe that time can't come soon enough.

For years, every slump, every cold streak, and every offensive disappearance came with an excuse attached to it. Most recently, the conversation centered around Volpe's shoulder. But as some of us have been saying all along, this was never about a shoulder. It was about evaluation. The Yankees believed they had a franchise cornerstone. Read: HOW YANKEE SCOUTS LOST THEIR WAY IN THE VOLPE RECRUITMENT. Instead, they're watching a player hit .194 and somehow finding new ways to make the Mendoza Line look like an ambitious goal.

When Volpe comes to the plate these days, the energy leaves the stadium faster than Yankees fans fleeing a rain delay. That's why the George Lombard Jr. discussion refuses to go away.

Remember spring training? Lombard was making highlight-reel plays, flashing range all over the field, and looking like he belonged. For a few weeks, it felt like Yankees fans had discovered the next great Bronx shortstop. Sure, he cooled off later and was eventually sent down, but the excitement never completely disappeared.

And scouts aren't exactly subtle about the comparison. Most evaluators view Lombard as the better defender right now, with superior range and a stronger arm. That's not exactly the kind of report card Volpe supporters want to read.

The good news for the Yankees is they don't have to rush anything.

Lombard can continue developing in the minors, pile up experience, and potentially make his way to the Bronx later this season. In the meantime, the Yankees have Jose Caballero, who has quickly become the latest player fans are demanding receive a real opportunity.

Even former Yankee Todd Frazier has joined the movement.

"I think you give Caballero the shot and you see what he can do," Frazier said. "He's earned it. He deserves it."

Hard to argue with that logic.

At some point, results have to matter. Boone, stop gaslighting! 

Right now, Volpe simply isn't producing enough to justify an unlimited leash. The Yankees can keep waiting for a breakout season, but eventually hope becomes a strategy — and strategy becomes denial. The bigger problem? If the Yankees ultimately decide they've seen enough, there may not be an easy solution.

As Yanks Go Yard recently pointed out:

"What to do with Volpe when the time comes? We have no idea. There will be no interested trade suitors, and parking his $4 million salary in the minor leagues isn't exactly a good look. But something needs to be done if the former first-round pick can't meaningfully contribute to this team after countless opportunities."

And that's where things get uncomfortable.

Because if Lombard develops into what many believe he can become, the Yankees may soon be forced to answer a question they never expected to ask:

What happens when your shortstop of the future becomes your shortstop of the past? You know... Volpe?





CASHMAN & BOONE SHOULD BOTH APOLOGIZE... TO ALL OF US YANKEE FANS


Aroldis Chapman wants Brian Cashman to apologize to him.

And honestly? He probably should.

Actually, while we're handing out apologies, Cashman and Boone might want to issue a few to Yankees fans too.

For years now, especially during the Aaron Boone era, these haven't felt like the Yankees most fans grew up watching. The Core Four years gave fans legends they'll be talking about forever. When people look back on this generation of Yankees, Aaron Judge is probably the only player guaranteed to get that same treatment. No championships and we are wasting time.

The rest of the guys? Too often it's felt like a roster held together with duct tape, bargain-bin fixes, and crossed fingers. Every season begins with championship dreams and ends with fans staring blankly at their televisions wondering what went wrong this time.

But this story isn't really about us. It's about Chapman.

And I have to admit, I respect the balls. The man wants an apology from Cashman before he'd even consider a reunion in New York. That's some next-level nerve, and you've got to appreciate it.

The disagreement goes back to the 2022 postseason when Chapman was left off the Yankees' ALDS roster after missing a team workout and flying to Miami. According to Chapman, he had permission from the organization to make the trip. If that's true, then his frustration makes perfect sense.

And let's be honest: does anyone really think it's impossible that the Yankees gave him the green light and then later acted like the whole thing was his fault? Fans have seen stranger things from this organization over the years.

Of course, Cashman and Boone have consistently maintained that Chapman did not have permission to skip the mandatory workout, which is why he was excluded from the playoff roster. That's been the Yankees' version of events from the beginning.

But here's the bigger question: why is any of this suddenly a major story?

From a pure baseball standpoint, bringing Chapman back would actually make some sense. The Yankees bullpen has been a roller coaster, and Chapman is pitching better than several relievers currently occupying spots. He could help stabilize the late innings immediately.

The problem is that none of that matters because the Yankees aren't bringing him back.

Which makes this entire debate feel like arguing over where to put the furniture in a house nobody is buying.

Chapman wants an apology. Cashman isn't giving one. A reunion isn't happening. Everyone knows it.

So let's call this what it is: a funny little baseball sideshow in the middle of the season. Entertaining? Sure. Meaningful? Not really.

It's a non-story.

And a pretty silly one at that. By the way, anyone over at Talkin' Yanks know how to spell apologize?





Friday, June 12, 2026

BOONE & VOLPE ARE NOW A HALLMARK MOVIE


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.



EVERY LINEUP DECISION MATTERS & THE YANKEES ARE SCREWING IT UP!


It's bad enough that the Yankees can't construct a roster that makes sense let alone one that can be competitive and win. It gets worse when after Brian Cashman gives Aaron Boone a messy roster that he can't objectively evaluate it. He just tinkers with it like he's a scientist or something.

And a really foolish scientist at that. This isn't a franchise that is built or knows how to built to win anymore. Those days are gone. When you look at the lineup and see Baboonie shuffling between Anthony Volpe and Jose Caballero you know insanity has taken over. Logic and deductive reasoning do not exist. Baboonie doesn't even hesitate to put a .190 offensive and defensive liability at shortstop instead of the better all around player that is Caballero. The idea is to put the best players available on the field at all times, and that in no world means Volpe. He doesn't make the Yankees better, so he has no reason to even have a big league job anymore. He could literally be sent back down to Triple-A and rot.....but we see his mug in the dugout every game. 


But that's not all, folks! Now the Yankees have Jasson Dominguez playing right field down in Triple A. Yup, the stupid science experiment continues. The Yankees need someone in right field with Aaron Judge out and their brilliant idea is to move the guy that sucks defensively in left field to right field and hope and pray he is a million times better? The guy who has never played right field in the big leagues is going to fill in effectively. This is a disaster waiting to happen.

Why? All in the goal of versatility. It's not about what's best and actually makes sense it's about versatility.


"We invested so much because we switched Jasson to left field before last year to help with the transition so we wanted him to really focus on that," Boone said HERE. "But to be able to have the versatility, I think, is important. Spencer has done a good job of getting some real reps in both corner spots as well as continuing to have center field in play. I think it just adds to their overall value a little bit."

I will admit, I am not a big fan of Spencer Jones but it's stupid to put Dominguez, who is defensively flawed already and plug him into a new role that he has no real experience and expect him to do better than the guy who actually CAN play right field. All for versatility. I guess it only matters that the player can stand in his spot on the field and not actually do the job well. 


I guess I shouldn't be surprised. The Yankees don't understand fundamentals or baseball at all. They just look at algorithms and hope it magically works. This is what they do....and this is why we haven't won a championship since 2009. 

This is a disaster waiting to happen AND just really freaking stupid.



--Jeana Bellezza-Ochoa
BYB Senior Managing Editor
Twitter: @nyprincessj






Tuesday, June 9, 2026

BOONE'S VOLPE OBSESSION HAS CROSSED INTO DELUSION


Anthony Volpe was 0-4 tonight. It's predictable. Volpe is now batting .203.  He's a horrible player.  What the fuck are we doing here?  At some point, unwavering faith stops being admirable and starts looking like a hostage situation.

That point may have arrived with Aaron Boone and Anthony Volpe.



Appearing on Jomboy's show, Boone doubled down yet again on his commitment to Volpe, confirming that the struggling shortstop would be back in the lineup against Cleveland. More remarkably, Boone pushed back on the notion that Volpe has received too much playing time compared to Jose Caballero. According to Boone, Volpe has been "really good" defensively and has simply been the victim of offensive bad luck.

Bad Luck.

Not poor performance. Not prolonged struggles. Not a player who has looked increasingly overmatched for long stretches. Just bad luck.

At this stage, Boone's defense of Volpe feels less like managerial support and more like performance art.

Nobody expected Boone to throw his young shortstop under the bus publicly. But there is a growing gap between protecting a player and pretending fans can't see what is happening right in front of them. Boone's comments managed to accomplish neither. Instead, they came across as a lecture to a fan base that watches the games, studies the numbers, and can recognize when reality and talking points have stopped sharing the same zip code.

The evidence is impossible to ignore. Tuesday marked Volpe's fifth start and sixth appearance in the Yankees' last seven games. Despite mounting criticism and increasingly legitimate questions about his role, Boone continues to pencil him in with the certainty of a man filling out a preprinted form. What happened to earning his job back? It was handed back to him and yet, Jose Caballero is a better player all around.

Meanwhile, the Yankees are approaching a roster crunch. Aaron Judge is sidelined. Giancarlo Stanton and Jasson Domínguez are nearing returns. The AL East race remains tight enough that every lineup decision matters. Yet Boone seems determined to treat Volpe's spot as the one position exempt from competition.

That's where the frustration boils over.

Jose Caballero has provided elite defense and a far more compelling argument for additional playing time than Boone appears willing to acknowledge. Lurking behind him is George Lombard Jr., one of the organization's most intriguing prospects and a player many believe could force the conversation sooner rather than later. The Yankees have alternatives. Boone simply appears uninterested in exploring them.

What makes the situation especially concerning is that Boone's actions suggest he can no longer objectively evaluate his own roster. If a player can struggle this visibly, receive this much runway, and still be described as "really good" with no meaningful adjustment in playing time, then what exactly would it take to lose Boone's confidence?

The Yankees are trying to win a division, not conduct a years-long science experiment.

When reinforcements arrive, Brian Cashman may have to make a difficult decision. But based on Boone's comments and deployment patterns, there's an argument that the decision should be taken out of Boone's hands entirely. Because if this level of commitment continues, the Yankees risk sacrificing better options simply to preserve a narrative that has long since stopped matching reality.

Faith is one thing.

Blind devotion is another.

And right now, Boone's commitment to Anthony Volpe looks a lot more like the latter. 



Monday, June 8, 2026

CAN THE YANKEES WIN WITHOUT THEIR LEADER?


It's a legitimate question. Aaron Judge is the leader of this team, he's the heart and soul of it. Aaron Boone is just a clueless mouthpiece. Who are the Yankees without Judge? They are a team with a ton of holes that are left for the entire world to see season after season. They are a roster full of guys that should've been replaced at the trade deadline, DFA'd, sent down the minors....it's an endless list.

So can the Yankees win without Judge? We've watched what the team does when Judge isn't on the field and it's A LOT less. I hate to think that the Yankees are just a shell of a team without him, but the more I think about the more I have to be honest and say no.

At this point, it feels like the absolute best-case scenario is we get Judge back on the field in August. A lot can happen between now and then and it leaves a lot of time for the weakness of this team to be exposed. It also means the starting pitching needs to work even harder to hold games close. They've done it well so far but it adds more pressure to a team that is already working with a shorter bench.

The starting rotation is legit and we have much better odds with Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodon back in action but can anyone really see this team trying to emphasize more of a strategy off small-ball offense without big bats? I don't see that. They've never cared about small ball or even good fundamentals so I am not feeling great that they can do it now with an emphasis on run prevention. I don't see that happening and it's an even bigger task with a huge strikeout guy like Spencer Jones filling in. Pretending the Yankees have the length and offense they need without Judge just isn't sane. Judge has single handedly made them LOOK like a better team than they really are for years now. Take him out of the lineup and this team is much less productive.

Perhaps the part I like the least about this indefinite injury to Judge is we have already had the Rays on our tail all season, and we are still tied with them but the uncertainty of Judge and his timeline means the AL East just became more interesting. Instead of this being a race against the Rays, teams under .500 suddenly have the option to become buyers at the trade deadline instead of sellers. Sure, Toronto and Baltimore are 7 and 8 games behind now, but if the Yankees go in a downward spiral then those bottom feeding teams can make up some ground. I could see it happening....I don't want to, but it's not impossible.

This team has been constructed poorly for years now. Brian Cashman hasn't been able to put together a real championship caliber team. Now without Judge, I feel like that will only become magnified. If it does, we won't be able to ignore it, Yankee brass won't be able to deny it but they won't change anything.

This team cannot afford to be without Judge. He is the hard and soul to the whole operation. I don't care how weak the rest of the American League is....the Yankees without Judge is an entirely different team.



--Jeana Bellezza-Ochoa
BYB Senior Managing Editor
Twitter: @nyprincessj






Sunday, June 7, 2026

MR. .200

For years, Yankees fans have been told to ignore what they were watching. Every time Anthony Volpe struggled, there was always another explanation waiting around the corner. It was his shoulder. It was bad luck. It was mechanics. It was confidence. It was timing. It was everything except the possibility that the Yankees may have simply gotten this one wrong. Well, here we are in June of 2026, and the excuses are finally running out.

As of June 7, Volpe is batting .222. Against right-handed pitching, the numbers are downright alarming. He's hitting just .167 with 12 strikeouts in 42 plate appearances. Those aren't the numbers of a franchise cornerstone. Those aren't the numbers of a player turning the corner. Those are the numbers of a hitter who continues to get exposed by major league pitching.

The funny part is that we all knew this was coming.

Just a few weeks ago, Volpe got off to another one of his patented hot starts. Predictably, the usual crowd started celebrating. Social media was flooded with "he's finally figured it out" takes. The Yankees broadcast crew started talking about growth. Aaron Boone was giddy.  He practically looked ready to nominate him for the Hall of Fame. But anyone paying attention knew exactly how this story would end because we've watched the same movie for three years.

Volpe gets hot. The Yankees declare victory. Pitchers adjust. Volpe struggles. The Yankees invent excuses. Repeat. We wrote about it in DON'T BE FOOLED BY VOLPE'S HOT START.

At some point, a pattern stops being a coincidence and starts becoming reality. Major league pitchers have figured Anthony Volpe out. They attack him with velocity at the top of the zone and breaking balls moving away from him. They know he chases. They know he swings through pitches. They know where the holes are. The book on Volpe isn't exactly classified information anymore. Every team in baseball has it.

What's truly remarkable isn't that pitchers adjusted. That's baseball. The remarkable part is that neither Volpe nor the Yankees coaching staff have been able to adjust back.

If Volpe were the elite player Aaron Boone constantly claims he is, we would see counters. We would see growth. We would see evolution. Instead, we see the same weaknesses year after year. At some point, the conversation has to move beyond potential and focus on production.

Then came Friday night's loss to Boston, which perfectly summed up the entire Volpe experience. The Yankees trailed by two runs in the ninth inning against Aroldis Chapman. They needed baserunners. They needed urgency. They needed somebody willing to compete.

Volpe watched three straight strikes go by.

Three.

Didn't swing. Didn't battle. Didn't even make Chapman work. If you're trying to come back in a baseball game, you have to swing the damn bat. Yet somehow, every time Volpe fails, we're told not to believe our own eyes.

Meanwhile, José Caballero continues doing what winning baseball players do. No, he's not a superstar. He isn't appearing in promotional campaigns. He wasn't marketed as the future captain of the Yankees. He's simply producing. Caballero is hitting .259 with a .314 on-base percentage and a .392 slugging percentage. He steals bases. He creates chaos. He plays excellent defense all over the diamond. He does the little things that help teams win games.

Imagine that. A player being judged by performance instead of prospect rankings. At this point, Caballero should remain the Yankees' everyday shortstop. Not because he's a future MVP candidate, but because he's currently the better player. That's supposed to matter on a team that claims to be chasing championships.

Unfortunately, championships don't appear to be the Yankees' top priority anymore. Protecting narratives seems far more important.

The Yankees didn't just draft Anthony Volpe. They fell in love with Anthony Volpe. Read: HOW YANKEE SCOUTS LOST THEIR WAY IN THE VOLPE RECRUITMENT. As we discussed in our article, the organization became emotionally attached to proving they were right. Once that happened, objective evaluation disappeared.

Every flaw became explainable. Every concern became unfair criticism. Every failure came with a built-in excuse. The Yankees didn't develop a player. They developed a storyline. And nobody appears more obsessed with keeping that storyline alive than Aaron Boone.

Boone talks about Volpe as if he's describing a player the rest of baseball can somehow see only through special Yankees-issued glasses. Boone continues treating Volpe like an untouchable star despite years of evidence suggesting he's simply an average player struggling to hold down a premium position. The obsession has become weird, and impossible to ignore.

Fans have watched this front office spend years forcing players onto the roster while insisting everything is fine. Now they're trying the same playbook with Volpe and Austin Wells. The organization keeps selling development projects while simultaneously talking about winning championships.

The fans aren't buying it. We're tired of it. Nobody is paying major league ticket prices to watch prospects learn on the job and if you are, shame on you. I am not interested in another five-year development plan. Yankees fans want championships. We want the best players on the field. We want accountability. We want results.

Most importantly, We are tired of being told that what they're seeing isn't real. Anthony Volpe's struggles aren't about a shoulder. They're not about bad luck. They're not about timing.

They're about a player who was overhyped, over drafted, overprotected, and overpromoted by an organization desperate to prove it made the right choice. The reality is becoming harder to ignore with every passing game. The Yankees bet big on Anthony Volpe becoming the face of their future.

But in the end, he's just a .200 hitter and that's the truth.



BEN RICE CAN'T BE IN TWO PLACES AT ONCE



When the Yankees decided to bring Paul Goldschmidt back for 2026, it was difficult to find fault with the move. Goldschmidt came with a résumé that spoke for itself. He was a former MVP, a respected veteran, a proven run producer, and one of the smartest players in the game. The Yankees weren’t asking him to be the centerpiece of the offense. They simply needed him to provide stability at first base while helping bridge the gap to the next generation of players. Last year with him wasn't great, but perhaps he would do alittle better this year. At the time, it seemed like a sensible plan.

Three months later, that plan doesn’t look nearly as solid. The issue isn’t that Goldschmidt has been a disaster. He hasn’t. He still has value as a defender, he remains a professional hitter, and his presence in the clubhouse is unquestionably respected. The problem is that the Yankees suddenly need more than what Goldschmidt is providing.

As the calendar turns to June, the Yankees find themselves facing an uncomfortable reality. The catcher position has become a major concern. Offensive production behind the plate has been inconsistent, and the organization has already begun making roster adjustments in search of answers.

Meanwhile, Ben Rice has emerged as one of the most productive hitters on the roster.

That’s where things become complicated.

Rice was originally viewed as a versatile young player who could move around the diamond while developing into an everyday contributor. Now he has become far too important offensively to sit on the bench. His bat needs to be in the lineup every single day.

But where exactly should he play?  The obvious answer would seem to be first base. Rice looks increasingly comfortable there, and many believe it is his long-term position.  The other possibility is catcher.

Yankee fans have seen Rice behind the plate, and from the eye test alone, he's better than the catchers we have.  And so, the problem is simple.

He can’t catch and play first base at the same time.



That is why the Goldschmidt situation has become more significant than many expected. That's why the catching situation is a huge failure by the Yankees front office. The Yankees signed Goldschmidt because they believed he would provide certainty. Instead, his presence has become part of a larger roster puzzle.

If Goldschmidt were delivering impact production every day, the Yankees could comfortably leave him at first base and use Rice for catching help. But if his performance remains merely adequate rather than difference-making, the equation changes.

Now the Yankees have to ask a difficult question: Where do you put Rice full time?

If the answer is yes, then the catcher position becomes an even bigger issue. Look, this is not necessarily an indictment of Goldschmidt. In many ways, he has been exactly what the Yankees thought they were signing: a veteran presence who can still contribute and help a contending team.

The problem is that the Yankees’ needs have changed. When the season began, first base appeared settled. Catcher appeared manageable, according to the Yankees, even though us fans knew otherwise. Rice was just viewed as a useful player. He's become better than they thought. Rice IS one of the lineup’s most important players. Catcher looks unsettled. First base no longer feels like a position with a clear long-term answer.

But baseball has a funny way of changing the conversation. As the trade deadline slowly approaches, the Yankees may find themselves searching for help at catcher, help at first base, or perhaps both.

And that’s the last situation they expected to be in, but again, for us fans, we saw it coming.

Stay tuned. It's going to get interesting.



Saturday, June 6, 2026

THEORY: YANKS HIDING WELLS UNTIL HEAT IS OFF


The Yankees’ catching situation just took another sharp turn, with Austin Wells suddenly being placed on the injured list right as the Yanks were about to play the Sox today. Officially, the move is being attributed to injury—reports have referenced a physical issue that required him to be shut down,“cervical headaches” to be exact. But it is my opinion that the timing is familiar.

Because let’s be honest about the context here: Wells has been taking a beating in the court of public opinion. His offensive production has been inconsistent, his bat has not lived up to expectations, and the fan base has been increasingly vocal about it. I think he's horrible. I'm not sugarcoating it. When a young player struggles in New York, it doesn’t stay quiet for long—and Wells was firmly in that spotlight.

That’s where the skepticism starts to creep in. This is not the first time the Yankees have suddenly leaned on an “injury explanation” during a period of underperformance and fan pressure. Last season, Anthony Volpe endured prolonged stretches of offensive struggles, and then—almost out of nowhere—he was placed on the injured list. The explanation at the time didn’t exactly come with a clear, obvious injury narrative that fans could easily point to, in fact out of no where the Yankees narrative was Volpe suddenly had a shoulder injury, and to me, it left a lingering sense that something else might have been going on behind the scenes.

Whether you agreed with that interpretation or not, the pattern is what sticks in my mind.

So now with Wells, the reaction is similar: the official report says injury, but the timing lines up a little too neatly with a player under heavy scrutiny and a fan base that has already begun turning on him. That combination inevitably leads to questions—fair or not—about transparency and messaging.

The Yankees organization has always been aggressive about controlling narratives. Sometimes that’s just smart roster management and protecting players. Other times, it creates the perception that information is being selectively framed depending on performance, pressure, or roster convenience. And once that perception takes hold, it becomes hard to shake.

To be clear, there is no concrete evidence suggesting Wells is not actually dealing with something physical. Injuries in baseball are constant, often vague, and frequently underexplained in real time. Catchers especially take a beating over a long season. But in a market like New York—where every slump is magnified and every roster move is dissected—the benefit of the doubt doesn’t come easy anymore.

So fans are left where they often are with this team: reading between the lines.

Maybe Wells is legitimately hurt and this is just another unfortunate break in a difficult season. Or maybe it’s simply the Yankees doing what they’ve done before—quietly reshaping the roster narrative while trying to protect a struggling player from an even harsher spotlight.

Either way, trust is always the subtext with this franchise now.

Stay tuned.