Friday, July 10, 2026

BETTER LATE THAN NEVER ON THE JUDGE INJURY UPDATE


For the better part of a month, Yankees fans have been playing a game nobody signed up for: "Where in the World Is Aaron Judge's Medical Update?"

Every day brought another round of vague manager-speak, carefully worded front-office statements, and enough secrecy to make you think the Yankees were hiding the formula for Coca-Cola instead of discussing a baseball injury.

Meanwhile, the offense has spent that same stretch looking like it misplaced its bats somewhere between the clubhouse and home plate.

Finally, the Yankees have acknowledged that Aaron Judge is expected to undergo fresh imaging during the All-Star break. That's certainly better than silence—but let's not hand out participation trophies. This isn't groundbreaking news. It's the kind of update fans should have been getting all along.

One thing this organization has perfected isn't roster construction or player development—it's turning injury reports into classified documents.

Nobody is asking the Yankees to violate HIPAA or livestream Judge's doctor's appointments. Fans simply want honest communication. Instead, they get generic phrases like "making progress," "continuing baseball activities," or "we'll know more soon." In Yankees language, "soon" apparently means "check back in three weeks."

The reality is simple: Aaron Judge isn't just another All-Star. He's the engine that powers this offense. Remove him from the lineup, and suddenly pitchers stop worrying about mistakes over the middle of the plate. The intimidation disappears. The margin for error shrinks. The lineup becomes a collection of talented players waiting for someone else to deliver the big hit.

And lately, that someone hasn't existed.

Every game without Judge has felt eerily similar. The Yankees strand runners. They strike out in key situations. They score just enough runs to stay interested before reminding everyone why one superstar can change the entire complexion of a franchise.

To the Yankees' credit, they're absolutely right not to rush Judge back. Rib injuries aren't something you gamble with, especially when the player is your captain and the face of the franchise. A setback now could jeopardize not only the rest of this season but years to come.

But caution and communication aren't mutually exclusive. We needed an update.

The upcoming imaging should finally provide a clearer picture of how much healing has taken place. If everything checks out, Judge can begin ramping up baseball activities with an eye toward returning sometime in August. That's encouraging news—but it's still only one step in what has been an agonizingly slow process.

Unfortunately, Judge's absence has also exposed an uncomfortable truth about this roster.

For years, Brian Cashman has preached organizational depth. Yet every season seems to reveal the same flaw: remove Aaron Judge, and the Yankees suddenly resemble a team searching for its identity. Championship-caliber clubs can survive injuries to even their biggest stars. The Yankees haven't just struggled—they've looked completely different.

That's not on Judge.

That's on roster construction, something we have been saying for years over here at Bleeding Yankee Blue.

No player, no matter how great, should be solely responsible for making an offense functional. But once again, the Yankees have shown just how dependent they've become on No. 99 carrying the lineup.

The hope is that the new scans bring good news. Baseball is simply better when Aaron Judge is healthy and launching baseballs into orbit.

Until then, Yankees fans will continue refreshing their phones every few hours, waiting for an actual update instead of another carefully polished non-answer. Because while the Yankees have mastered the art of saying very little, one thing has become crystal clear.

This team doesn't just miss Aaron Judge.

It revolves around him... and maybe that's the problem.



Thursday, July 9, 2026

STOP ACTING LIKE YOU WON THE PENNANT

Well... look who finally decided to show up.


The Yankees exploded for 12 runs against the Rays today and, for a few hours at least, they looked like the club we've all been waiting to see. The ball was jumping off the bats. Guys were actually driving runners home instead of leaving them stranded. Ben Rice had himself a day, the lineup had life, and the dugout actually looked like it remembered baseball is supposed to be fun.

That's the good news.

Now here's the part nobody inside Yankee Stadium's social media department seems interested in talking about. Enough with the parade.

The Yankees' social media accounts were pumping out celebration after celebration as if they'd just wrapped up the American League East. 


You would've thought they had rattled off twelve straight wins instead of scoring twelve runs in one baseball game. It's embarrassing.

Stop it.

Fans aren't buying that anymore. This fan base has sat through too many ugly losses, too many nights where the offense vanished, too many sloppy games, too many excuses, and way too much underachieving to get fooled by one afternoon when everything clicked.

Want to celebrate? Fine. Then come back tomorrow and do it again. Us fans want to see consistency.

And Aaron Boone?

You know he'll sleep a little easier after this one. You know the pressure eased. The postgame questions suddenly become easier to answer when your club hangs a crooked number on the scoreboard.

But don't confuse relief with redemption. Not around here.

Us at Bleeding Yankee Blue has watched this movie before. One big offensive game followed by three nights of frustration. One convincing win followed by another stretch of inconsistency. We've been told "this is the turning point" enough times to know better.

Boone doesn't get a gold star because his hitters finally did what they're paid millions to do. He still has plenty to answer for. This team still has plenty to prove.

The Yankees are built to score 12 runs. They're built to win series. They're built to win divisions. They're built to win championships. The problem? Their manager can close.

One win against Tampa doesn't erase weeks of baseball that left this fan base shaking its head.

So, enjoy it Yankee fans, I am. Yes, smile about it. Tip your cap to the hitters.

Then flush it. Because tomorrow starts at 0-0.

And trust me... we'll be watching over there at BYB. Closely.

That's what real Yankees fans do.

Consistency in a season wins the day... not a 12-4 win in July.  Give me a break.



THE FISH ROTS FROM THE HEAD


It's official. Aaron Boone has turned the Yankees into an excuse factory. He has lost control and it needs to be addressed immediately.

Now look, for years Yankees fans have been force-fed the same corporate talking points. Trust the process. The analytics say everything is fine. The clubhouse is strong. The culture is healthy. Just be patient.

Meanwhile, the Yankees keep driving a Rolls-Royce straight into a telephone pole. At some point, "trust the process" becomes "stop insulting our intelligence."  I am fed up at this point.

Wednesday night in Tampa wasn't just another frustrating and ridiculous loss. It was another episode in the longest-running comedy on YES Network: Aaron Boone Tries to Manage a Baseball Team.

Boone and Brad Ausmus somehow managed to get themselves ejected after the Yankees bungled a replay challenge. Think about that for a second. The Yankees couldn't even lose efficiently. They managed to turn replay review into a three-ring circus. Sometimes calls don't go our way. Sometimes you don't get whatever you want Aaron. Sometimes you need to lead a team, not be a fucking crybaby. Act like you've been there before.

I want you to understand that Yankee fans, you are in a bad relationship with this team, and you don't even realize it.  Nearly a decade into the job, and we're still watching a manager learn lessons he should've mastered years ago.  At this point, Boone isn't steering the ship. He's standing on the deck explaining why they hit another iceberg.

And that's the Aaron Boone experience in a nutshell. Every loss comes with an excuse. Enough already.

This isn't bad luck. This isn't injuries. This isn't food poisoning. This isn't variance. This is culture. This is a culture Aaron Boone has created. It's getting worse and worse.

The Yankees don't merely make mistakes anymore—they expect them. Mental lapses. Terrible situational baseball. Bullpen decisions that age like milk. Young players who plateau instead of improving. Veterans who seem immune from accountability. An offense that routinely disappears for days at a time.

This isn't a slump. It's an identity. The old Yankees demanded excellence. Bad players would be benched.  Good players would continue the play and coaches will show they actually care. Boone looks like he knows he's getting his paycheck anyway so, "everything is fine."

But Boone is not necessarily the biggest problem. He's simply the most visible symptom. Brian Cashman assembled this roster. Hal Steinbrenner continues to rubber-stamp every disappointing season and is never around to address this shit show.

Even Aaron Judge recently admitted the team has lacked focus. He spoke to individual players, but nothing changed.  When the calmest, kindest superstar in baseball is publicly questioning the team's focus, that's not a red flag. That's a five-alarm fire. Boone has totally lost control, Cashman is not paying attention. 

How do I know, because of this latest bullshit with Anthony Volpe. Reports have now surfaced suggesting Volpe had previously resisted moving off shortstop. The report was later disputed, Michael Kay backed away from it, and Volpe strongly denied it. Whether the original report was accurate isn't even the point anymore though, let's be honest.

The bigger issue was Volpe's response. This organization bends over backward to protect him despite years of inconsistent production, yet somehow, he's become comfortable publicly defending himself while his play continues to lag behind the expectations that came with the hype. He is by far the most clueless, least electric Yankee player we have, STILL DEVELOPING REAL TIME 4 YEARS IN. Is no one paying attention?

Hey Volpe, here's a radical idea... Instead of winning the press conference... get a fucking hit. Win a baseball game.

Anthony Volpe has been handed opportunities that countless young Yankees never ever received. He's been defended by this organization going back to the bad Yankee scouts that used to coach him in Summer ball.

He's protected, marketed, excused. Every prolonged slump comes with another explanation. Every criticism is met with another reminder about his potential. At some point, potential expires. At this point Volpe is bad milk. He shouldn't be speaking to any microphone anywhere. He should be praying and clinching his rosary beads happy that he is a millionaire baseball player even though he is horrible at it. 

The Yankees can't keep selling tomorrow while today's box score keeps screaming the same ugly truth.


Volpe doesn't need another vote of confidence. He needs to start producing. And if another organization still believes he's the future superstar the Yankees once advertised, maybe it's time to let that organization pay for the dream. TRADE THIS LOSER. Sometimes the smartest trade isn't moving a bad player. It's moving a player whose value still exceeds his production.

That conversation shouldn't be taboo anymore. Because the Yankees have spent years making untouchable players out of athletes who haven't actually become indispensable. The larger problem, however, remains Aaron Boone.

Watch this team closely. Nobody looks afraid of disappointing the manager. Just ask lollipop sucking Jazz Chisholm.  Nobody plays with urgency. Just watch Austin Wells. Nobody seems to fear consequences. When players know tomorrow's lineup card was printed yesterday, accountability disappears.

That's absent leadership. Winning organizations create internal pressure. There is no accountability. The Yankees create comfortable jobs. They created this culture. Boone has now managed this club for nearly a decade, and what exactly is his signature?

The defense isn't cleaner. The fundamentals aren't sharper. Young players don't consistently develop. The offense repeatedly goes cold for entire weeks. The bullpen is managed like a roulette wheel.

And every October seems to end with another explanation about what almost happened. The Yankees used to make other teams nervous. Now they make their own fans nervous and ticked off every time runners reach scoring position.

This franchise once set the standard. Now it holds meetings explaining why the standard should be lowered. The dynasty Yankees weren't obsessed with protecting feelings. They were obsessed with winning.

Believe it or not, there was a time when nobody cared about exit velocity or expected statistics if the actual numbers weren't there. Produce. Or someone else gets your locker. It's simple.

Today this Yankee front office don't understand how any of this works. 

The fish rots from the head.

It always has.

Aaron Boone's meltdown last night wasn't an isolated incident, and his managing style hasn't improved, it's gotten worse based on the bad culture he created. Last night's ejection? It was a manager cracking under the weight of years of lowered standards.

Anthony Volpe's public defense wasn't the biggest problem either. It was just another reminder that this organization has become more concerned with controlling narratives than changing results.

The Yankees don't have a talent problem nearly as much as they have a leadership problem. And until the people running this franchise decide that accountability matters more than excuses, the standings will continue telling the truth that no press conference ever can. But they won't, because they are all in on it and too stupid to look in the mirror and see the cracks.

Bad leadership doesn't always destroy a franchise overnight. Sometimes it does something worse. It slowly convinces everyone that mediocrity is acceptable. Judging by the way the Yankees operate right this second, that transformation is already complete.

#FIREBOONE



ANEMIC LOSERS!


My parents taught me that it's good to have goals! I think the Yankees have set a goal to to set the single season record for team strikeouts. That's not a goal we should have but we are well on our way. We accumulated 65 strikeouts in the last five games. We are an embarrassment circus of a professional baseball team. Send in the clowns!

Oh wait, we already do that. We have Aaron Boone managing the team. That's the biggest clown in the entire circus. This circus isn't the same one you saw as a kid though. It's boring, you don't get anything back for the high price of your admission and the lineup one through nine is anemic.

I said what I said. Right now our best case scenario is to split a four game series with the Rays. It's what I was afraid of, honestly. Instead of being four games behind the Rays like we were before the start of this series now we have to hope and pray for a miracle to not make that a six game deficit. You know for a $350 million payroll we look like we woke up on the wrong side of the bed because a $95 million team is exposing every flaw and weakness we have. Even deep pockets won't guarantee an offense that can hit over the Mendoza Line.

At this point, the Yankees need to go 40-30 for the rest of the season to win 90 games. Anyone else laughing at that possibility? Honestly, a little league team would have a better chance of achieving that compared to the Yankees. Hell, they would probably school the Yankees at hitting off a tee. That's how pathetic this team is.

Every last one of them not named Aaron Judge. He's the only stability on this team and that's not acceptable. That's not a championship caliber team. It's a bunch of anemic, dead souls vlogging the dugout and outfield that is "led" by a stupid clown that only knows how to get ejected from games. We are at 49 ejections and counting. When is the next one coming? Sooner rather than later.

I remember hearing my grandfather and uncles call this team the Bronx Bombers growing up. Now they are the Bronx bummers. Anemic, dead losers. Everyone needs to be fired. Maybe that will at least wake US up.


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






Tuesday, July 7, 2026

DOOFUS IN CHARGE

 At what point do the Yankees stop making excuses for Aaron Boone?

Tonight's 6-4 loss to the Rays wasn't just another frustrating defeat. It was another masterclass in questionable managerial decisions that continue to cost this team games. The Yankees struck out 17 times putting in wrong players, Will Warren imploded in the fourth inning, and Boone somehow found another way to make fans shake their heads. He just didn't pull him fast enough. The story of this guy's life.

Let's start with the move that made absolutely no sense.

Ryan McMahon was 1-for-1 at the plate. He had already produced in the game and looked comfortable. So, what does Boone do? He pinch-hits Anthony Volpe.

Why? Well, don't forget, I told you it was going to happen this morning when I wrote CABALLERO WINS BIG & BOONE WILL PUT VOLPE BACK IN THE LINEUP TODAY. The freaking dunce couldn't help himself and I knew it would happen.

The explanation is that Boone wanted the "better matchup" against the current pitcher and wanted Volpe batting as the tying run. That's baseball logic on paper. But baseball isn't played on paper.  It's played with gut. I guess Boone has stomach cancer cause he never uses his gut... OR his head for that matter.

Volpe has struggled for much of the season. McMahon had already delivered a hit. In a game where every baserunner mattered, Boone willingly removed the player who had actually produced in favor of one who has consistently struggled to come through offensively.

Sometimes managers outsmart themselves. Many times Boone doesn't think. This felt like one of those moments.

If you're constantly looking for the perfect matchup while ignoring who's actually producing that night, you're managing the spreadsheet instead of the baseball game. Fans aren't asking for complicated analytics. They're asking for common sense.

Then there was Boone's lineup construction.

Paul Goldschmidt entered the game in an ugly 0-for-30 slump, yet Boone continued to bat him in the order. The result? An 0-for-4 night with four strikeouts and multiple missed opportunities with runners on base. At some point, loyalty has to give way to accountability.

The fourth inning was another example of Boone reacting far too late.

Will Warren surrendered a game-tying double before allowing back-to-back home runs to Hunter Feduccia and Yandy Díaz. The game flipped in a matter of minutes, and once again Boone seemed content to watch the damage pile up before making a move. Don't worry though, he was blowing really good bubbles.

This isn't an isolated incident by the way. It's become a pattern.

Poor bullpen timing. Questionable lineup decisions. An obsession with favorable matchups that often ignores who's actually playing well in the moment. The Yankees had another opportunity to win a game they were capable of winning. Instead, they struck out 17 times, watched their starter unravel, and made another late-game substitution that left fans wondering what the manager was thinking.

If the Yankees are serious about competing for a championship, they have to stop pretending these decisions don't matter. Enough with the excuses. Enough with defending every questionable move as "playing the percentages."

Results matter. Winning matters. Accountability absolutely matters.

Right now, the Yankees aren't just being outplayed by their opponents—they're being outmanaged. If this team continues down this path, the front office has to ask the difficult question: Is Aaron Boone still the right manager for this team? I know the answer. He is not.

Because from where many frustrated fans are sitting, the answer is becoming more obvious with every loss. We are sick of this.





CABALLERO WINS BIG & BOONE WILL PUT VOLPE BACK IN THE LINEUP TODAY


The New York Yankees desperately needed something positive after what can only be described as a disastrous stretch of baseball.

Entering their series against the Tampa Bay Rays, the Yankees had dropped nine of their previous ten games, watching their grip on the American League East disappear while fans grew increasingly frustrated with an offense that had gone cold and a team that simply looked lifeless. It wasn't just the losses—it was the way they were losing. Poor situational hitting, inconsistent defense, and an inability to generate momentum had turned one of baseball's most talented rosters into a team searching for answers.

Then came Monday night's 5-1 victory over Tampa Bay. On paper, it looked like the kind of win that could change a season.

José Caballero, facing his former team, delivered the game of his life by crushing two home runs and driving in four runs. Cam Schlittler dominated for eight innings, allowing just one run while striking out eight without issuing a walk. Ben Rice added a ninth-inning home run as the Yankees earned one of their biggest wins in weeks. Despite striking out 17 times as a team, New York made the few hits it managed count—all three of them left the ballpark.  By the way 17 times striking out in one game for one team is HORRENDOUS. But what are the Yankees doing about it? 

But I'm getting ahead of myself. There was another storyline that immediately caught my attention.

Anthony Volpe wasn't in the starting lineup. Instead, Aaron Boone handed the shortstop job to José Caballero, and of course, he should have.

The result? Caballero responded with arguably the biggest offensive performance by a Yankees shortstop this season.

Now, here's where my opinion begins. I don't expect this lineup change to last. In fact, I fully expect Anthony Volpe to be right back in the lineup today.

Why?


Because, in my view, this follows a pattern we've seen from Aaron Boone over the past several seasons. Whenever pressure begins mounting around Volpe's struggles, Boone will occasionally sit him for a game. If the Yankees happen to win, many fans naturally focus on the victory itself rather than questioning whether the lineup looked different for a reason. Then, almost immediately, Volpe returns to his everyday role.

That's not reporting—it's simply how I've interpreted Boone's handling of the situation over time. Many fans see it differently, but from my perspective, Boone has consistently shown an extraordinary level of commitment to Volpe regardless of his performance. It's creepy to be honest.

I believe it traces back to the Yankees' evaluation of Volpe as a franchise cornerstone. The organization invested years promoting him as the future face of its infield. If Volpe ultimately fails to become that player, it raises uncomfortable questions about the Yankees' scouting, player evaluation, and development process. Again, that's my opinion.

Organizations rarely admit they were wrong about a highly touted prospect, especially one they've marketed as heavily as Volpe. In my view, continuing to play him every day becomes easier than acknowledging that the original evaluation may have missed the mark. Monday night's game only reinforced that belief for me. They're all in on it.

The Yankees finally removed Volpe from the lineup. Caballero stepped in. The offense immediately received an unexpected spark. Does one game prove Caballero should become the everyday shortstop?

No, but it should. But the Yankees don't work that way. One great night doesn't erase an entire season of statistics, nor does one poor stretch define a player's career.

But it does raise a fair question: If replacing Volpe for one night produced one of the Yankees' best individual offensive performances from the shortstop position this year, why isn't there more Caballero at SS?

I expect Boone to return to Volpe. If Volpe is back in today's lineup, it won't surprise me at all. Tons of us fans will point to Caballero's huge night as proof the Yankees found a spark. This is a fact Cab brings the energy. But while we are all distracted with the win today, I'll be watching to see Boone immediately return Volpe, with his extended struggles, back at Short and the excuse was "we just needed to rest him". For me, that's become one of the defining stories of this Yankees season.

Not because Anthony Volpe can't become a productive major league player. He might, but I doubt it. No, there's more to it.  In my opinion, Aaron Boone has reached a point where his commitment to Volpe appears unwavering, regardless of what the results on the field suggest.

One win over the Rays was badly needed. Whether Boone actually learned anything from it is another question entirely.


Monday, July 6, 2026

THE YANKEES HAVE A MAJOR LEADERSHIP PROBLEM

At some point, Yankees fans have to stop blaming bad luck.


This isn't a slump anymore. This isn't "baseball being baseball." This is the product of years of questionable decisions made by the same three people: the Yankees front office, Brian Cashman, and Aaron Boone.

They built this roster. They continue to defend it. They keep sending the same struggling players onto the field and expecting different results. That's not patience—it's organizational stubbornness bordering on malpractice.

The definition of insanity? Watching the Yankees do the same thing every night and expecting October to magically look different. 

Anthony Volpe: Four years in and still "developing".  Volpe has become the perfect symbol of everything wrong with the Yankees. The organization keeps telling everyone he's learning. Learning what?  This is no longer a rookie making understandable mistakes. Volpe is in his fourth season, and fans are still hearing about his "development." At some point, development either turns into production—or it becomes a red flag.


Right now, the warning lights are flashing. His physical tools have regressed. His sprint speed isn't what it once was, his arm strength has looked inconsistent, and it often shows on routine plays. Too many throws come with a double-clutch or rushed release because he doesn't appear to trust his arm. Those split-second hesitations turn outs into errors. Then there's the bat.

June was painful. A .239 average. A .310 slugging percentage. A .635 OPS. Zero home runs. Five RBIs. Seventeen strikeouts. He finished the month looking completely lost, collecting just one hit in his final 17 at-bats.

Pitchers know exactly how to attack him. Breaking balls off the plate continue to fool him, and he still hasn't established an offensive identity. One week he's trying to hit everything 420 feet. The next he's trying to slap singles the other way. The result? Neither approach works consistently.

Yet every night Boone writes Volpe's name into the lineup as if accountability is optional.

At what point does "he'll figure it out" become "he hasn't"?

Apparently, not in the Bronx.

Then there's Ryan Weathers. Another case of Yankees hype getting ahead of reality. The Yankees acted like they landed a difference-maker.

Social media celebrated. Fans were told to get excited. Then... reality showed up.


Ryan Weathers has struggled with consistency throughout the season, carrying an ERA north of four while surrendering far too many home runs. His biggest issue is straightforward: his four-seam fastball too often lives in the wrong part of the strike zone.

High-spin fastballs are supposed to play at the top of the zone. Weathers leaves them down. Major league hitters say thank you.

When those pitches leak inside to right-handed hitters, they don't miss. They elevate them into the seats. As games pile up, fatigue has only magnified the problem. His command fades, mistakes increase, and innings unravel in a hurry.

The Yankees sold optimism. Fans got inconsistency. Another questionable evaluation by a front office that seems far more interested in winning press conferences than winning baseball games. Yesterday's game was atrocious. 

Oh, and Austin Wells? This guy is a disaster.  Remember when the Yankees convinced everyone Austin Wells was the answer behind the plate? How's that working out?


Offensively, Wells has spent much of the season buried near the bottom among qualified catchers. Hard contact has disappeared. Extended slumps have become the norm instead of the exception. Meanwhile, J.C. Escarra and Ali Sánchez haven't exactly forced anyone to forget the position's problems. The catching position is all the fault of the Yankees front office.

This was supposed to be a strength. That's what they told us. Instead, it's become another glaring weakness.

Coming through the minor leagues, scouts believed Wells' bat would carry him while his defense might eventually force him away from catcher. Instead, the defense has become more acceptable than the offense. Which raises a larger question:

Who exactly is evaluating talent inside this organization? Because this isn't an isolated mistake anymore.

It's a pattern and it starts at the top. That's the part many people don't want to hear. I am happy to say it. Anthony Volpe didn't decide to keep batting himself in the lineup. Ryan Weathers didn't create the expectations around his arrival. Austin Wells didn't crown himself the long-term solution.

The Yankees did. Cashman assembled this roster. The front office sold these players as answers. Boone keeps running them out there every single night regardless of performance.

When players consistently struggle without consequences, that's not just on the players. That's a culture problem. The Yankees keep rewarding potential while ignoring production. They preach competition, yet there rarely seems to be any. Good organizations make difficult decisions. The Yankees make excuses.

And so, if the Yankees are serious about winning, difficult conversations have to happen immediately. Bench struggling players. Upgrade positions that clearly aren't working. Stop pretending every prospect is untouchable. Stop hoping tomorrow magically fixes today's problems. Most importantly, stop accepting mediocrity because someone was once considered a top prospect.

The Yankees entered this season believing they had a championship-caliber roster. Instead, they've exposed the same flaws that have haunted this organization for years: questionable talent evaluation, stubborn roster management, and an unwillingness to admit when they've gotten it wrong.

Until the front office, Brian Cashman, and Aaron Boone are held accountable for those failures, don't expect the results to change. The names may eventually change. The disappointment will not.




THE BEST OF THE BAD, BUT WILL THAT LAST?


Let's face it, the American League is awful this year. As bad as the Yankees are, they shouldn't be playing THIS bad. We just hit an all new low folks, and it's as embarrassing as it gets.

What a way to ruin a holiday weekend. For the first time since 2014, the Minnesota Twins just won a series against the New York Yankees in New York. To make it worse, they scored 17 runs in the final two games. That is just something no one should stomach. I never like to throw a George Steinbrenner reference because let's face it I want the man to rest in peace but his son has completely destroyed his franchise. There is no more "rest in peace" possible for poor George. He's rolling in his grave right now.

And he should be. This team is going no where. At this rate, we all know the National League easily walks through anyone this season. We won't be a factor because the Rays will finish us off and the Rays are no match for a Nation League power house. We have an infinite list of problems to fix. Some of the fixes are obvious, but the "decision makers" as I call them won't make the necessary choices.


There are some obvious moves to make:
1) Fire Aaron Boone, bring in new blood
2) Fire Brian Cashman
3) DFA Camilo Doval and recall Yovanny Cruz
4) Send Austin Wells to Triple-A and recall J.C. Escarra
5) Get rid of Anthony Volpe....FOREVER! 
6) Whenever Jazz Chisholm returns, stop relying on him
7) Bolster catcher, bullpen, right handed bat and starting pitcher depth at the deadline

Ideally, I'd say send Chisholm packing with Volpe but the Yankees have other more pressing needs so I don't see it happening. The Phillies have proven you can fire your manager and come back stronger. There's no logical reason to keep Baboonie as a manager. We aren't winning with him. He's not adding anything valuable and he's not delivering the expectation of WINNING. 


That's what the Yankee legacy was. We had the expectation to compete and win every year. That legacy died a long time ago. Now it's about doing just enough to line Hal Steinbrenner's pockets with cash. To hell with winning. The Yankees don't know how to do that anymore. They don't evolve. They don't surround themselves with actual leaders that know how to win.

So now we continue to lick our wounds. We get to be the best of the bad....but I don't even think that lasts long. We have a four game series coming up against the Rays. As of Sunday we were four games behind the Rays thanks to our freefall of failures. After this series ends on Thursday that could be 8 games if the Yankees don't pull their heads out of their ass. If we go 8 games behind the baseball world as we know it comes to an end.


I've never felt this disgruntled before. I've had my stretches of angst but this is a whole new level. This is a bad team and it's a bad team build by bad "decision makers" that don't know how to right the ship. It's time to clean house so we can stop being one of the best of the bad. Even those days are numbered.

That may be in Hal's DNA.....but it's not in mine!


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





Thursday, July 2, 2026

BOONE'S BIGGEST FAILURE IS THE CULTURE HE CREATED

When the leader stops leading, is when the collapse happens. This is a historic fact.  I encourage you to read this. It will open your eyes allowing you to understand the hell us Yankee fans are in the middle of.


Winning organizations rarely implode because of one bad employee, one lazy player, or one unfortunate decision. They unravel when leadership stops leading. Whether it's a baseball clubhouse, a Fortune 500 company, a military unit, or the United States Congress, the pattern is remarkably similar. Standards begin to slip. Accountability disappears. Small problems become accepted behavior. Eventually, losing becomes the culture.

The old saying that "everything rises and falls on leadership" isn't just motivational fluff. History repeatedly demonstrates that organizations reflect the standards—or lack thereof—set by the person in charge.

This is a lesson worth reading.  Discipline and accountability is important. But it must come from the top. Every successful championship manager understands one fundamental truth: if the captain has to become the disciplinarian, Like Aaron Judge yesterday, the manager has already lost part of the clubhouse.

The manager, in this case Boone, needs to establish expectations. The players execute them. When those roles reverse, something has gone wrong.

One of the greatest examples came from Joe Torre with the Yankees dynasty. Torre wasn't known for screaming every day, but players understood where the line was. Veterans like Derek Jeter, Paul O'Neill, Jorge Posada and Bernie Williams never questioned who was running the clubhouse. Torre balanced personalities while holding everyone accountable. Players who didn't buy in didn't stay long.


Likewise, Bill Belichick built the New England Patriots on a brutally simple principle: "Do Your Job." It didn't matter if you were Tom Brady or the last player on the roster. Mental mistakes had consequences. Star status didn't exempt anyone from accountability.

Even fiery managers like Lou Piniella and Billy Martin understood that discipline wasn't optional. Their methods weren't always popular, but players never wondered who was in charge.

Contrast that with teams that spiral. Repeated defensive mistakes. Repeated mental errors. Repeated lack of hustle. Repeated public displays that would never be tolerated elsewhere. Those aren't isolated incidents. They're symptoms.

Believe me, don't believe me. Whatever. I'm right. Corporate history tells the exact same story. Look at Enron. Executives created a culture where ethical shortcuts became normalized. Financial manipulation went unchecked because leadership rewarded results instead of integrity. The company collapsed into one of America's largest corporate scandals, destroying thousands of jobs and billions in retirement savings.

Wells Fargo CEO John Stumpf and Community Bank head Carrie Tolstedt

Remember Wells Fargo? Employees opened millions of unauthorized customer accounts to satisfy unrealistic sales goals. Executives ignored warning signs for years because the numbers looked good. The eventual scandal cost billions in fines, permanently damaged the company's reputation, and forced leadership changes.

Boeing. Following the two 737 MAX crashes, multiple investigations concluded that cultural failures and weakened oversight contributed to catastrophic decisions. Engineers raised concerns. Communication broke down. Production pressure often outweighed safety priorities. The consequences were devastating.

Different industries. Same pattern. Leadership tolerated behaviors until they became disasters. Now think about Boone and the Yankees.  No true leadership, coddling, making excuses, and zero accountability. Wow.

Think about Government. Congress often becomes mired in dysfunction when leadership cannot enforce discipline within its own caucus. Party leaders rely on consensus, negotiation and political pressure to keep members aligned, but when factions ignore leadership or refuse compromise, legislation stalls, deadlines are missed, government shutdown threats emerge, and public confidence erodes.

Leadership in politics isn't simply about giving speeches, or in Boone's case, word salading press conferences. It's about maintaining order among dozens—or hundreds—of competing personalities.

When that disappears, so does effectiveness. the bottom line is history shows that leadership matters. Military history reinforces the lesson.


During the Battle of Gettysburg, Union leadership under George G. Meade maintained cohesion under immense pressure despite facing repeated Confederate assaults. Command discipline and coordinated execution helped preserve Union lines during one of the Civil War's decisive battles.

By contrast, historians frequently cite failures of coordination and command in numerous military defeats throughout history, where unclear authority, inconsistent discipline, or commanders ignoring warning signs contributed to disastrous outcomes.


Organizations succeed when leaders establish standards that everyone understands—and enforce. Am I being dramatic? Maybe. But it all goes back to leadership... something the Yankees are lacking with Aaron Boone in charge.

When Aaron Judge was forced to speak to players and address the team's lack of focus following another embarrassing stretch, it sounded like a captain trying to do the manager's job. in fact, he WAS doing Boone's job, because Boone doesn't command respect.  In short, he has no balls.

Now look, captains absolutely should lead. They should encourage teammates. They should set examples. They should speak after losses. But when the captain has to become the disciplinarian, one uncomfortable question naturally follows:

Where is the manager?


Aaron Boone has repeatedly defended poor performances, minimized prolonged slumps, and continued writing the same struggling names into the lineup.

Anthony Volpe entered this recent eight-game stretch hitting just .194 (6-for-31).

Austin Wells was even worse, batting approximately .077 between June 24 and July 2.

Yet both continued receiving opportunities while the offense spiraled. Slumps happen. Every player goes through them. Managers are judged by how they respond. Sometimes leadership means showing confidence. Sometimes leadership means making difficult decisions. Sometimes leadership means sending a message that performance still matters. he coddles Volpe and Wells. They should NOT see the lineup, they are automatic outs.

If poor performance never changes playing time, accountability becomes difficult to see. Then there are the optics.


Jazz Chisholm Jr. casually eating a lollipop while playing on the field may strike some fans as harmless personality, while others see it as poor timing during a stretch of embarrassing baseball. Regardless of where one falls on that debate, strong leadership often recognizes when a team's public image no longer matches its performance. Teams enduring prolonged losing streaks generally benefit from projecting urgency rather than comfort.

The Yankees have committed an alarming number of defensive mistakes, repeatedly looked fundamentally unsound, and suffered through extended stretches of lifeless offense. Eventually, fans like me stop asking what's wrong with the players. They start asking who's allowing it. That's Aaron Boone.

Look, leadership isn't about being nice. The best leaders aren't necessarily the loudest. They aren't always the smartest. They're the ones willing to make uncomfortable decisions. Bench a struggling veteran. Call out lazy effort. Demand fundamentals. Protect the culture before protecting feelings.

Every successful organization eventually reaches the same conclusion:

Culture doesn't maintain itself.

Standards don't enforce themselves.

Winning doesn't happen accidentally.

Leadership drives all three.

When players continually repeat the same mistakes, when accountability appears absent, when the captain feels compelled to deliver the message that usually comes from the manager, and when losing becomes expected instead of unacceptable, criticism naturally shifts away from the roster and toward the person responsible for leading it.

History has shown this in sports, business and government. Leadership either sets the standard—or allows the standard to disappear.

Hey Hal, are you paying attention? This manager is driving this team into the dirt. He's a loser.




BRONX BOMBED: ILLNESS & INEPTITUDE EXTEND YANKEES SLUMP TO SEVEN

 

As the cliche goes, a picture is worth a thousand words. This picture is the state of the New York Yankees. We are a giant dumpster fire and I don't think a thousand words even begins to scratch the surface of what is wrong with this team.

It's just story after story about what is ailing this team. Aaron Boone spins the story of illness completely taking over the clubhouse HERE and then Aaron Judge blames the long string of losses on a "lack of focus" HERE. Oh but rest assured fans, Judge can't play but he's still going to save us because "we'll be talking here as a bigger group soon."


Is that supposed to make any of us feel better? No disrespect to Judge, because this team was already flawed to begin with. The fact that he can't play right now just makes it worse. I appreciate the sentiment but a conversation as a group does not fix this team.

Do I think there is still a lack of focus? Sure. I mean, we already saw just how much Jazz Chisholm just doesn't care at all. He only cares about his blow pops and living in a fantasy land where he imagines collecting $35 million a season in a long term deal. There is clearly a fundamental problem with this team, little league teams everywhere execute this game better than paid professionals. 

But the problems with the Yankees go deeper than a lack of focus or illness. We've had 9 seasons worth of games to watch Baboonie. We know his strengths (I use this term very loosely) and weaknesses. He can't pick the team up when they are struggling. He can't put together a lineup that makes sense when the Yankees are riddled with injuries. Part of that is because Brian Cashman can't put together a strategic team but Baboonie still can't use what cards he is dealt. He always relies on a crazy law of averages. He waits for a large sample size to magically correct itself and just talks senseless babble to the media until things stabilize. Often times by then, too much damage is done. The false security of a 162 game regular season bites him in the butt when playoffs roll around he doesn't know how to handle a small window of opportunity. He needs to make smart decisions that give the Yankees the best chance to win and often times he makes dumb decisions that cost us valuable wins. He just doesn't have the smarts.

If he had the smarts, he also wouldn't have taken occasional catching duties away from Ben Rice. I'm not saying use him every game behind the plate either. Rice as a serviceable catcher was a strategic advantage for this roster. It would also mean not being "stuck" with Austin Wells because we really are stuck with him. It would've given some more flexibility in times like these....when people are all sick or injured.

This team isn't plagued by illness or a lack of focus. It's plagued by an infestation of incompetent decision makers. That's what I will call them from now on. There is no "leadership" characteristics in Baboonie or Cashman. In their world it's fine....everything's fine.

The Yankees are going down in flames. A healthy roster and more focus doesn't fix this dumpster fire. It needs to be torn down to the studs and rebuilt from scratch. 

Until then, we are left with excuses, anger and Baboonie babble. Oh and me writing more of these blogs bitching about "decision makers."


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




LIKE THIS? READ THIS:

BOONE. A MASTERCLASS OF MISMANAGEMENT

URGENT TRADES NEEDED TO FIX BOONE'S YANKEES

URGENT TRADES NEEDED TO FIX BOONE'S YANKEES


Just over a week ago, the Yankees looked like they were cruising toward another division title. Fast forward seven straight losses, and they've transformed into baseball's most expensive slapstick comedy.

It's one thing to lose games. It's another to actively invent new ways to lose them every single night.

The Yankees have committed 17 errors in their last 12 games, turning routine outs into adventures and making opposing offenses look like the 1927 Yankees. Every ground ball has become an exercise in suspense. Every fly ball feels like a coin flip. Somewhere, the fundamentals packed their bags and entered the transfer portal.

And standing in the middle of this circus is Aaron Boone.

At some point, "the guys have to execute" stops being a valid excuse. Boone has managed this club for years, and the same problems continue to surface: sloppy defense, lifeless at-bats, questionable bullpen decisions, and a team that routinely looks unprepared in big moments. The Yankees don't simply lose games—they unravel them. That's a reflection of leadership.

Then there's the middle of the diamond.

Anthony Volpe continues to receive the kind of organizational patience usually reserved for Hall of Famers, despite producing nowhere near that level. June came and went with barely a pulse offensively, and while his defensive reputation remains solid in some circles, the mistakes continue to pile up. For a franchise that expects championships, the bar can't simply be "he's young." The Yankees need production, not perpetual potential.

Behind the plate, Austin Wells hasn't exactly made life easier.

The bat has gone ice cold, and what was once advertised as elite pitch framing has lost much of its value in the era of the automated ball-strike system. If the offense isn't there and the framing advantage has diminished, what exactly is separating Wells from dozens of replacement-level catchers?

The front office is rumored to finally be asking itself the same question.

It's becoming increasingly difficult to ignore trade possibilities. Hunter Goodman has emerged as one of the more intriguing offensive catchers in baseball, while Ryan Jeffers would immediately provide more thump than the Yankees are currently getting from the position. Neither player is perfect, but perfection isn't the goal anymore. Competence would be a significant upgrade.

Shortstop may require an even bolder solution.

With virtually no internal alternatives and Volpe failing to seize the job offensively, the Yankees may eventually have to explore bigger names. CJ Abrams represents the type of athletic, impact player who could completely change the complexion of the lineup, though other potential targets remain unavailable due to injuries or circumstances beyond New York's control.

Then there's the rotation.

If Brian Cashman truly believes this team is built to win now, why stop with complementary pieces? Tarik Skubal is the kind of ace who instantly changes a postseason series. Reports suggesting the Dodgers have cooled on pursuing him only make the possibility slightly more realistic for New York—assuming the Yankees are willing to pay the prospect price.

Of course, none of these moves will matter if the team continues to kick the ball around the field like it's spring training.

Seven straight losses.

Seventeen errors in twelve games.

An offense disappearing for innings at a time. A manager searching for answers he's had years to find. The Yankees don't have a talent problem. They have an accountability problem. Until that changes, every postgame press conference will sound the same, every loss will feel familiar, and every "championship caliber" conversation will become harder to take seriously.

For a franchise that measures success in World Series championships, playing fundamentally bad baseball isn't just disappointing. It's embarrassing.



Wednesday, July 1, 2026

BOONE. A MASTERCLASS OF MISMANAGEMENT

AI generated

Just eight days ago, the Yankees sat atop the American League East with the best record in the league. Today, they look like a team that misplaced the map, the compass, and maybe even the captain.

Aaron Judge described the Yankees' recent collapse as a "lack of focus." That's certainly part of it. But this seven-game nosedive feels much bigger than players pressing at the plate. This is a club that looks completely directionless, and when a team appears lost, the spotlight naturally falls on the man writing the lineup card.

Aaron Boone's fingerprints are all over this collapse. The latest disaster against Detroit was another masterclass in how to lose a baseball game.

Camilo Doval entered the 11th inning and immediately retired the first two hitters on harmless ground balls. One out away from escaping the inning, the Yankees intentionally walked a batter to face Hao-Yu Lee. The strategy looked clever for about five seconds. Doval lost the strike zone, walked Lee, then walked Spencer Torkelson to force home the go-ahead run. Detroit didn't have to earn it. The Yankees handed it away.

The Tigers eventually won 6-2, but the game was effectively over the moment New York gift-wrapped that third run. Sound familiar?

It should.

For nearly two weeks, the Yankees have looked like a team inventing new ways to beat themselves. Defensive mistakes have become routine instead of rare. Over their previous 12 games, they committed 17 errors that directly led to 23 unearned runs. Championship teams don't play defense like that. Teams in free fall do.

Judge reportedly challenged teammates during the losing streak, trying to spark some urgency inside the clubhouse. Good for the captain. But let's be honest—why is the injured captain carrying the responsibility of lighting a fire?

Isn't that supposed to be the manager's job? Where the hell is Boone? Every manager deals with injuries. The Yankees are missing Judge because of a fractured rib, and Giancarlo Stanton remains sidelined. No one is pretending Boone has a fully healthy roster overflowing with All-Stars. That's exactly why good managing matters right now.

Anyone can pencil Aaron Judge into the third spot when he's healthy. Anyone can hand the ball to established stars when every option is available. The real test of a manager comes when the roster is wounded, the offense is lifeless, and confidence is evaporating.

That's where Boone consistently comes up short.

Night after night, day after day, the same struggling hitters continue appearing in the same spots. Ice-cold bats remain in the lineup. Players who desperately look like they need a mental reset are simply shuffled around instead of being challenged or held accountable. Players that shouldn't even be in the infield are still playing every single day and not hitting anything.  The offense keeps producing the same miserable results, yet the approach rarely changes.

At some point, repeating the same decisions while expecting different outcomes isn't patience—it's stubbornness.

Yes, players deserve criticism for failing to produce. Big leaguers have to hit. They have to catch the baseball. They have to execute.

But when the same players continue struggling for days, then weeks, while the manager changes virtually nothing, accountability eventually reaches the dugout.

Leadership isn't delivering clichés after another loss. Leadership is making difficult decisions before the game starts. Leadership is recognizing when a lineup isn't working. Leadership is pushing the right bullpen buttons. Leadership is creating urgency instead of hoping it magically appears.

Right now, the Yankees don't resemble a disciplined team. They resemble a ship taking on water while the captain insists everything is under control.

We've watched respected managers lose their jobs for far less than a seven-game collapse featuring sloppy defense, an anemic offense, questionable bullpen management, and lineup decisions that seem disconnected from reality.

For Yankee fans, this isn't just frustrating—it's embarrassing.

I've criticized Boone's managerial style since the day he took over because the same pattern continues to repeat itself. I dare you to google Bleeding Yankee Blue and Aaron Boone.  There are at least 100 articles of me ripping this guy to shreds because of incompetence.  

Look, when everything is rolling, the Yankees can overwhelm teams with talent. But when adversity arrives, when adjustments are required, when leadership matters most, the cracks become impossible to ignore.

This isn't about blaming injuries. It's not about blaming bad luck, food poisoning, the weather, or the baseball gods.

This is baseball.

Adversity is part of the job description.

The Yankees don't simply need Aaron Judge to return. They need someone in the dugout willing to challenge players, make uncomfortable decisions, and steer this franchise out of the storm. Boone does none of that.

So, untilit happens, don't be surprised if this ship keeps sinking.