When you line up the rookie seasons of Anthony Volpe and José Caballero, the surface-level story feels obvious: one was the everyday shortstop for the New York Yankees, the other a versatile piece for the Seattle Mariners. One was marketed as the next face of a franchise; the other was barely mentioned outside of deeper baseball circles.
But once you move past the headlines and dig into what actually happened on the field, the comparison tells a very different story.
Back then they were 2 players on very different paths. Both players were true rookies in 2023, adjusting to major league pitching, speed, and pressure in real time. That matters. Rookie seasons aren’t just about production—they’re about how quickly a player proves they belong.
Volpe was handed the keys to shortstop in New York on Opening Day. That’s not a small thing. The Yankees don’t casually give that position away. From day one, he was positioned as the guy—the next long-term answer in a lineage that carries real weight in that city.
Caballero, meanwhile, carved out his role the harder way. He wasn’t handed a starting job. He moved around the field, filled gaps, and earned playing time through performance rather than expectation. No marketing push. No “next big thing” label. Just production where he could find it.
The Yankees didn’t just promote Volpe—they pushed him. The narrative was clear: homegrown shortstop, future star, cornerstone player. And because of that, he played 159 games. That kind of leash is rare for a rookie, especially one struggling at the plate.
Caballero? 104 games. Fewer opportunities, shorter leash, less margin for error.
So if you’re judging purely by counting stats—home runs, RBIs, total hits—Volpe looks like the clear winner. More games, more chances, more totals.
But that’s where things get misleading.
The numbers that actually matter—the ones that strip away playing time and focus on performance—tell a different story.
Caballero finished his rookie season with a .343 OBP, much higher than Volpe’s .272. That’s not a small gap; that’s the difference between a player who consistently gets on base and one who struggles to do so.
Even more telling. I hate these nerdy stats, but it's worth it here:
- Caballero posted a 98 wRC+ (essentially league average)
- Volpe came in around 84 wRC+ (well below average)
That means, relative to the league, Caballero was a more productive hitter—despite fewer games, fewer at-bats, and far less organizational backing.
And then there’s efficiency. Their OPS numbers? Nearly identical. But Caballero reached that level with less playing time and a far better on-base approach. He didn’t need volume to prove value.
Volpe, on the other hand, needed 600+ plate appearances to get there—and still didn’t match Caballero’s effectiveness.
That’s the red flag, but the Yankee front office didn't want you to dig. But this is where context matters.
Volpe wasn’t playing 159 games because he dominated—he played because the Yankees needed him to be the guy. The narrative demanded patience. The investment demanded opportunity.
Caballero had no such safety net.
And yet:
- He got on base more
- He matched overall offensive output
- He contributed elite baserunning (26 steals in limited time)
If you flip their roles—if Caballero gets 600 plate appearances and Volpe is fighting for reps—the conversation might look completely different.
This isn’t about saying Volpe is a bad player. He’s young, talented, and plays an ok defense. There could be a real upside there. But when you compare rookie seasons honestly, without narrative bias, Caballero’s year holds up—and in key areas, surpasses Volpe’s.
He was:
- More efficient offensively
- Better at getting on base
- Just as impactful overall despite fewer opportunities
And he did it without the spotlight, without the hype, and without the organizational push.
Look, the Yankees sold Anthony Volpe as the next great shortstop in New York, and that belief bought him time, reps, and patience.
José Caballero had to earn everything.
And when you strip it down to what actually happened on the field—not the expectations, not the branding, not the market size—the numbers point to a simple truth:
Caballero’s rookie season wasn’t just comparable.
It was the more telling indicator of a player who was already producing at a higher level.



























