Monday, February 23, 2026

DID JASSON DOMINGUEZ FALL VICTIM TO THE YANKEES OVERHYPE MACHINE?

The answer is yes, but please continue reading.


Why haven’t the New York Yankees won a World Series since 2009?

Because blaming the players alone is the laziest take in baseball—and also the wrong one.

Yes, players have to perform. If you wear a big-league uniform, excuses don’t come standard. But let’s stop pretending the Yankees’ long championship drought is just a matter of underachieving athletes. The common denominator here isn’t the clubhouse—it’s the front office. Specifically, the decision-makers who keep betting big on spreadsheets while ignoring the messy, inconvenient truth that baseball players are human beings.

We’ve seen this movie before. Bad casting, bad evaluations, and blind faith in numbers that look great in theory and crumble in reality. Joey Gallo wasn’t an accident. He was a front-office decision. And he wasn’t alone. These moves all trace back to the same source: Brian Cashman and the machine around him.

Back in 2007, Cashman famously said the Yankees had “three years” to rebuild the system and chase another title. Well, congratulations—the system got rebuilt. Multiple times. The championships? Still stuck in 2009, collecting dust next to the old DVDs.

What did thrive during that time was the hype machine.

Stephen Parello of Yanks Go Yard laid this out perfectly when he walked through the Yankees’ long history of prospect inflation. Remember when Phil Hughes, Joba Chamberlain, and Ian Kennedy were supposed to save the franchise? Or when Eric Duncan was untouchable? Then came Jesús Montero—anointed as the next superstar with mythical scouting grades and zero follow-through. Parello forgot to mention the killer B's in Manny Banuelos, Dellin Betances and Andrew Brackman, but he didn't really need to, it's more of the same.

But then the Yankees did finally win in 2009—and notice how that happened: by opening the vault for CC Sabathia, Mark Teixeira, and A.J. Burnett. Not hype. Not hope. Proven stars.

Fast-forward to now, and the pattern hasn’t changed—only the branding has. Today’s names are Anthony Volpe, Austin Wells, and Jasson Domínguez. The jerseys sell. The slogans hit. The expectations explode.

Domínguez is the clearest example. A talented kid, no doubt—but the Yankees slapped “The Martian” on him and let the marketing department turn him into something he never asked to be. Even Joel Sherman called it out, noting that the nickname alone created absurd comparisons to Mickey Mantle—comparisons no other organization actually believed. That wasn’t scouting hype. That was New York hype.

And here’s the uncomfortable truth: hype is profitable in the Bronx and you are all being fooled. If 100 fans buy a jersey, the team wins financially before the player ever takes a swing. If the kid struggles? He’s the problem. If he succeeds? The front office pats itself on the back and pretends it was genius all along.

Volpe might be the most glaring dilemma yet. Three years in, tons of merchandise sold, and very little return on the field. Internally, the Yankees know it. Publicly, they’re crossing their fingers and hoping surgery magically turns projections into production. But spreadsheets don’t heal players. And humans don’t reboot like software.

This isn’t “self-hating fandom.” This is realism—the same realism Bleeding Yankee Blue has preached for years. The Yankees’ definition of success has shifted. Second place is acceptable. “Almost” is good enough. As long as the money flows, urgency doesn’t exist.

That’s the real rot. So yes, players deserve blame when they fail. But who puts them there? Who overhypes them? Who markets dreams instead of building winners?

The front office.

And until that changes—until the GM is gone, Boone is shown the door, and the organization remembers that banners matter more than branding—the Yankees will keep selling hope instead of championships.

Don’t fall for it. This isn’t a dynasty in waiting.

It’s a business model built on “close enough.”



THE SPENCER JONES & "OHTANI LIKE" HYPE KICK-OFF SPRING TRAINING!


It was a big spring debut this weekend for Spencer Jones. It came with the expected shiny moment that showcased the enormous potential that Jones advocates would expect. It was also followed by the frustration we've seen on repeat the last couple of seasons. But now, Jones has a new batting approach and a new comparison to live up to?

There's been so much talk about Jones and his enormous potential over recent years. We all salivate over the potential of a new addition to this Yankees team that has five tool potential and can catapult this team to the next level. Now he has worked on his mechanics and a swing that has been called "almost Shohei Ohtani-like," read more HERE

The new "Ohtani-like" swing was seen Saturday with a gigantic home run that cleared right field and left the stadium. It was all of the excitement you could ask for in a first at bat of a new season, but it was followed by reminders of the past with two strikeouts in the following plate appearances. As much as I want to see Jones hit those exciting home runs, I want to see consistency. Jones and the Yankees are giving us HYPE with the Ohtani references and the great endorsements from Aaron Judge. We are way past promise of things to come. Now we need to see the high level of execution at the minor league level to earn the nig league call up.

And that's still where I stand today. In four years playing minor league ball, he's had 1,493 at bats and 554 strikeouts. His last two seasons have 379 of those 554 strikeouts. There's still some work there to do. The Yankees outfield is crowded. Even if it weren't crowded, and there was an opportunity to give him a clearly defined role....I'm just not there. He's not in a spot to help the Yankees.

That's a tough reality. I'm tired of watching these high strikeout guys that give us all or nothing. When they come up big it's great, but when they don't it is a massive failure in a clutch moment. It's not enjoyable to watch these high strikeout guys that we know have flaws at the big league level and just hope those flaws don't get exposed. We are at the point where athleticism and performance have evolved, but baseball fundamentals and smart play has become less important or emphasized. For me, Jones is not big league ready. He struggles down in the minors, it's not going to get easier for him when he has to face elite pitching. Giving him a promotion to the big leagues with these stats would only be doing him a disservice because we aren't setting him up for success.

I want Jones and the Yankees to stop giving me hype. The Ohtani reference is just a magical illusion. Stop giving me what COULD be. Jones is going to be 25 soon, so he's running out of time. It's time to stop pretending the same issues he's had the past two seasons aren't there anymore.....because they are. 

Sorry, but I am not buying the hype.


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





Sunday, February 22, 2026

INJURED OR NOT, THE YANKEES NEED TO MOVE AWAY FROM VOLPE


Let’s get honest, because the fairy tale has gone on long enough. Anthony Volpe didn’t earn his way to the Bronx — he was fast-tracked, rushed, and dropped into the majors because the New York Yankees had a gaping hole at shortstop and a marketing department itching for a savior. Local kid! Italian name! Future captain! It was a beautiful pitch. The results? Not so much. Injury or not, I'm done with this kid and you should be too.

Three seasons in, Volpe hasn’t moved the needle even a millimeter. He’s not exciting. He’s not dangerous. He’s not dependable. He’s the same flawed player he was on day one — except now we’ve wasted years pretending development happens by wishful thinking alone. He looks like a high school hitter trapped in a major league body, and that’s not his fault. That’s on the organization that shoved him into the spotlight and never gave him a safety net.

And let’s not gloss over this: Volpe has never been optioned to Triple-A. Not once. Now he’s coming off shoulder surgery and won’t be ready for Opening Day anyway. The optimistic take is that once he’s healthy, everything magically clicks. The realistic take? He’s posted a .660 OPS for three straight seasons. That’s not a slump — that’s who he is.

Yes, he’ll get a rehab assignment. He has to. But the Yankees should do more than that. They should finally admit the obvious.

Enter José Caballero, who is filling in at shortstop and quietly showing what competence looks like. Better range. Better instincts. Better baserunning. Better production. The Yankees, of course, keep calling him a “utility guy,” as if that label somehow disqualifies him from being the everyday shortstop. Newsflash: this team doesn’t need labels — it needs results.


I’ll even be generous and say Volpe’s shoulder likely impacted his defense. Fine. But his offensive issues predate the injury by years. His approach changes by the week: contact hitter today, launch-angle philosopher tomorrow. He spends weeks stepping in the bucket, wrecking his mechanics, and digging statistical holes he never fully climbs out of.

Caballero, meanwhile, has been the superior player by the numbers — elite defensive metrics, higher OBP, and real impact during the second half of 2025 while Volpe spiraled. And yet, we all know what’s coming: the moment Volpe is healthy, Caballero gets bumped, no matter how well he plays. That’s not competition. That’s favoritism disguised as “development.”

Plenty of fans are done with Volpe. I’m one of them.

To be fair, Joshua Diemert of SB Nation believes there’s still a version of Volpe who can be an above-average hitter — if he gets a real Triple-A run to fix his mechanics and his confidence. That’s a reasonable argument. But here’s the counter: why are the Yankees still operating on hope?

When players don’t perform, teams move on. They demote. They trade. They cut bait. For some reason, Volpe is untouchable — not because of production, but because of sunk cost and ego. The Yankees invested too much time selling this kid to admit they might be wrong.

Meanwhile, the facts are brutal: long stretches in 2025 with a .198 batting average and .255 OBP, declining defense, and zero payoff for the patience. Shoulder injury or not, the team still hasn’t won — and Volpe hasn’t justified the leash.

Since mid-2025, he’s been completely overmatched. Are we really supposed to believe everything fixes itself when he returns? Based on what? Blind faith?

For me, this experiment is over. We already have the upgrade standing right there.

His name is José Caballero.
Play him at shortstop.
And finally, mercifully — move on.



SURVEY: PLAYERS WILL GO AWAY, NOT GM & MANAGER IF YANKS FAIL

I’ve been trying—really trying—to keep my distance from Bleeding Yankee Blue for a bit. Call it self-care. Call it survival. Because the truth is, I’m flat-out miserable with the Yankees front office right now.

This front office? The GM? The manager? They’re spreadsheet people. Decimal-point romantics. They worship at the altar of projections and probabilities, while the human element of baseball—the grit, the urgency, the give-a-damn—gets shoved into a footnote. They guess. A lot. They stare at their charts, shrug, and convince themselves that second place or an early playoff exit is perfectly acceptable as long as the revenue graph keeps pointing north. Then comes the annual press conference lullaby: “Well, we tried.”

No, you didn’t. And this sure as hell isn’t the Yankees I grew up with.


Now comes the latest report: if the Yankees don’t succeed in 2026—and let’s be honest, they won’t, you heard it here first—the organization is supposedly ready to “blow it up.” Big changes. New players. Fresh upgrades. Bold moves... this according to an Athletic survey. Except… funny thing. The same executives who built this mess apparently get a pass. Never mind that the Yankees haven’t won a World Series since 2009. Never mind that this roster is their creation. Nope. When it fails, it’s always the players’ fault.

The standards are supposedly “high” in the Bronx as we head into spring, especially with this franchise trudging through a 16-year championship drought. That’s why we’ve heard endless chatter since the loss to the Blue Jays in the 2025 Division Series about Aaron Boone’s future. Yes, he’s only missed the playoffs once in eight seasons. And no—that doesn’t impress anyone anymore.

Because the point isn’t making the playoffs. The point is making the playoffs and winning the whole damn thing.

But brace yourself, because Michael Kay will be right there to soothe everyone: Hey, they made it to the World Series. That’s good.” No. It’s not. You don’t hang banners for “Almost.” And last year? They didn’t even get there.

So where does the pressure land in 2026? On Boone? On the roster? According to this Athletic survey of 36 MLB executives, former executives, managers, coaches, and scouts, the answer is clear: not the people in charge. The survey suggests the players—the core guys fans actually love—are the ones under the gun. Meanwhile, the front office and manager skate by, insulated by contracts, relationships, and the comfort of profitability.

Cashman’s deal runs through 2026. Boone’s through 2027. And if things go sideways, the expectation is roster surgery—not leadership change. Translation: the players you root for get shipped out, while the same decision-makers keep their seats because they’re familiar, friendly, and financially reliable.

Baseball is a business, folks. And this survey screams it. But where’s the survey of the fans? The people dropping thousands of dollars to watch their team come up short? That’s the data I’d like to see. Because if you ask executives, executives will protect executives. Fans don’t cheer for balance sheets—we cheer for players.

And yet, here we are. The money matters more. The fun is gone. Baseball doesn’t feel joyful anymore, and the Yankees feel like a corporation wearing pinstripes.

So yeah, that’s why I’ve been stepping away from BYB more lately. This version of the Yankees? Not fun. This leadership? Brutal. And until the organization remembers who actually fuels this whole machine—the fans—it’s hard to get excited.

We need to do better.
Not for the spreadsheets.
Not for the execs.

For the fan.



Wednesday, February 18, 2026

TONY CLARK IS OUT! NOW WHAT?


The upcoming Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) was already going to be dramatic....and now it's going to be extra dramatic. Everyone get ready to grab your popcorn, this one is going to be a doozy.

Players just reported to spring training in Arizona and Florida, so as focused as we are on a new season we are also questioning what is going to happen in nine months when the existing agreement expires? That's very much in the air now that Tony Clark the MLB Players Association Director is resigning, read more HERE. As Clark leaves, baseball is getting ready for it's most critical labor negotiation in years....and he won't be around to fight it.

This was going to be a very tough fight already, and now without Clark it gets harder. He's been instrumental to the players union. He's accomplished a lot over the last 13 years, including the steady increase in salaries to MLB players. He has been the most consistent and coherent voice for the players, and now the union will need to find a new voice.

The timing of this couldn't be worse. Without Clark, the union will fill this role soon. They will look to stabilize the union and get ready for what is to come over the winter. According to MLBtraderumors HERE, the next director could be Bruce Meyer who is currently the union's lead negotiator. He helped Tarik Skubal win his arbitration case against the Tigers and has been gaining support among the players to take over as the new director.

The last CBA negotiation was volatile enough that it resulted in a 99-day lockout led by commissioner Rob Manfred and the owners. This lockout will be even worse. Several owners are advocating for a salary cap, which has been a non-starter for Clark in the past. Now he isn't here to fight that battle, so right now owners have the upper hand. Meyer has also shared the same view as Clark, so if he does become the new director, it will be interesting to see if he is as successful in the role as Clark was.

The new CBA is going to have new player representation.....and it's going to be a very bumpy (and probably long) ride. I hope this lockout won't be as long as I think it will be, but I don't think we are talking about 99 days on this one. Stay tuned....


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





Monday, February 16, 2026

JOEY GALLO THE PITCHER? IT COULD BE HAPPENING!


It's been almost a year since Joey Gallo told the world he intended to continue his MLB career as a pitcher. I laughed (and I'd be lying if I said I wasn't still laughing) at the idea thinking it would never happen but he's still trying to make it happen and I'm still paying attention.

I really got tired of talking about Gallo when he played for us. He frustrated the hell out of me so when we got rid of him I was excited to never talk about him again. I guess he has proved me wrong no matter what happens with his new pitching quest because here I am talking (and trying not to laugh) about this. 

Gallo just turned 32 in November, and he is trying to reinvent himself. He's posted enough videos on X of him pitching to garner some attention from not only me but also some scouts. According to Jon Heyman, he's caught the eye of several teams.


So Spring Training is happening, and teams have actually made an effort to go watch him at a showcase. I never thought this would happen, even after seeing some videos but apparently, anything really is possible. His videos were good enough to catch the interest of scouts. I will give him some credit, he did used to have a good throwing arm so maybe he can harness that somehow and reinvent himself? He's posted content, and he's trying. We've all seen worse.



So could someone take a chance on him? Anything is possible. Hell, since the Yankees want to run out the same team they had last season they could be crazy enough to one up it and go back to 2022. I hope not, because as much as we need a stronger bullpen I'm not ready to experiment on Gallo 2.0. If he wants to try to channel his Shohei Ohtani skills and be the once hitter that also pitches then good for him! Just do it away from the Bronx, please.

I will never poo on anyone's goals, so credit to Gallo for trying. However, I'm not sure where this can really go. I did say anything is possible before.....and for me that could include Gallo finding a way to  strike himself out. I guess we'll see if this grows legs and goes anywhere.....



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





Sunday, February 15, 2026

THE YANKEES "SCORED" ON THE INTERNATIONAL MARKET



Yankee fans, inhale… exhale… and maybe keep that skeptical eyebrow cocked just in case.

The New York Yankees have wandered into some unfamiliar territory, signing 17-year-old Mexican pitcher Felipe Hernández on the international market. The radar gun is already flirting with fantasy—he’s reportedly touching 95 mph—and yes, that’s the kind of number that makes people in the Bronx start daydreaming about parades before the kid can legally rent a car.

The paperwork just became official, and from that moment on, the hype train left the station with no brakes. Clips started circulating, projections started flying, and the familiar whispers of “future ace” echoed through the digital upper decks of Yankee Stadium.

There’s just one small detail worth underlining in bold: he’s still a teenager. A gifted one, no doubt—but one without a single professional inning under his belt, no dog days of August grind, no long bus rides, and no firsthand experience with baseball’s favorite pastime: humbling you when you least expect it. Banking emotional stock in raw youth is a newer move for a franchise that usually prefers pitchers who arrive with mileage, scars, and a résumé thicker than the media guide.

Hernández does bring more than just gas. Scouts are already drooling over an 82-mph curveball that’s being labeled “big-league ready,” and his command and poise have raised eyebrows for someone his age. That combination—velocity with polish—is what convinced the Yankees to lock him up for the future without blinking.

The signing itself was kept low-key, finalized quietly in Tamaulipas with family and team officials present. Months of planning led to February’s handshake, and now Hernández is headed for the Yankees’ development complex, where the real work begins—far from bright lights and bold headlines.

This isn’t a bad signing. It’s an intriguing one. Just remember the fine print: potential doesn’t equal production, radar-gun readings don’t guarantee durability, and dreaming on teenage arms is a long, winding road. Enjoy the buzz—but keep your patience handy.



Saturday, February 14, 2026

ADDING ANOTHER SIGNING TO OUR TEAM OF MISFIT MINOR LEAGUERS

The New York Yankees have officially crawled into spring training the same way you crawl into a 24-hour diner at 3 a.m.—tired, uninspired, and hoping something on the menu magically fixes your problems.

Case in point: Rafael Montero.


According to MLB reporter Hector Gomez, Montero is joining the New York Yankees on a minor-league deal with an invite to spring training. If he somehow pitches his way onto the big-league roster, he’ll earn $1.8 million, plus a $500,000 signing bonus. If not? Thanks for stopping by Tampa. Don’t forget your luggage.

This isn’t a signing designed to move the needle. It doesn’t electrify the fan base, terrify opposing lineups, or even raise an eyebrow outside the Bronx. It exists for exactly one reason: low-risk, veteran bullpen depth. That’s it. Full stop. No secret upside, no hidden master plan, no “Cashman cooking” subplot. Just another arm to toss onto the pile and hope something sticks.

Montero’s recent résumé doesn’t exactly scream renaissance. In 2025, the right-hander struggled mightily with the Atlanta Braves, posting a 5.50 ERA across 36 appearances before being shipped off to the Detroit Tigers. That’s not a rebound story—that’s a relocation.

And yet, here we are. Another spring training invite. Another “maybe he figures it out” flier. Another reminder that the Yankees’ current roster philosophy seems to be less Death Star and more yard sale. A lot of no-names. A lot of minor leaguers. A whole lot of hope doing the heavy lifting.

This is what passes for roster construction now: plugging holes with bubble wrap and crossing fingers. The Yankees aren’t attacking weaknesses; they’re politely acknowledging them and moving on. The bullpen isn’t being reinforced—it’s being padded with insurance claims.

Montero isn’t the problem. He’s just the symbol. A perfectly reasonable, perfectly uninspiring addition to a team that once collected stars and now collects lottery tickets. Spring training used to be about sharpening a powerhouse. Now it’s about auditions.

Welcome to camp, Rafael. You’re not here because you change the Yankees’ fate. You’re here because you were available—and apparently, that’s the bar now.



YOU'RE ABOUT TO WASTE ANOTHER YEAR, YANKEE FANS...

And you should be pissed about that.


The most alarming thing about the Yankees right now isn’t any single injury, signing, or quote. It’s the overwhelming sense that nothing has actually changed. Strip away the hype videos, the spring optimism, and the buzzwords, and the 2026 Yankees look almost indistinguishable from the 2025 version—a team that already showed you exactly who it was.

This front office continues to operate as if baseball is played on spreadsheets instead of by human beings. Everything is optimized, projected, and simulated—except health, fatigue, and reality. That blind spot is now staring them in the face with Cam Schlittler. The Yankees practically crowned him the next Cy Young winner before he threw a meaningful pitch, and now he’s sidelined with mid-back inflammation. Aaron Boone told reporters Schlittler won’t be throwing off a mound for several days. They didn’t account for the fact that bodies break down, especially young ones pushed into oversized expectations.


Schlittler’s issue may not feel catastrophic today—but that’s the point. Yankees injuries never are, until suddenly they are. And it matters because Schlittler is one of only two reliable arms expected to be ready on Opening Day, alongside Max Fried, who led all of baseball in wins last season. Beyond that? The same fragile depth, the same question marks, the same crossing-your-fingers routine fans have endured for years.

The rest of the roster feels just as automated. The Yankees have become baseball’s version of a rerun factory—collecting familiar names, recycling narratives, and pretending it’s progress. Bringing back Paul Goldschmidt is the clearest example. Why, exactly? His 2025 season was a disappointment by any honest standard. He punished left-handed pitching but collapsed against righties, hit just 10 home runs in 146 games, and cratered after the All-Star break, batting .245 while losing at-bats to Ben Rice. That’s not a bounce-back candidate—that’s a warning sign.

@yankees Have you checked the Weathers today? #ryanweathers #yankees #springtraining ♬ original sound - Yankees

And yet, here we are again, complete with hype videos for a fifth starter like Ryan Weathers, as if the Yankees cracked some secret code that guarantees a title. Is this a joke? This is not how serious contenders behave. When teams fall short, they usually overhaul. They get uncomfortable. They get aggressive. The Yankees did none of that.

In the latest episode of his podcast, New York sports radio icon Mike Francesa said the quiet part out loud. The Yankees, he argued, are perfectly content. Winning 95 games and falling short doesn’t trigger panic—it triggers profits. “There is a satisfaction inside the Yankees that their fans don’t feel,” Francesa said. The organization isn’t operating in crisis mode because, financially, there is no crisis.

He echoed what fans—and places like Bleeding Yankee Blue—have been screaming for over a year: nothing changes until the money does. Empty seats. Empty luxury boxes. Fewer jerseys sold. Fewer $15 beers consumed. Until ownership feels it, complacency reigns.


And that’s what makes this all so infuriating. The Yankees are actively wasting the prime of Aaron Judge, one of the greatest players of his generation. Instead of building aggressively around him, they’re signing minor leaguers, patching holes, and pretending continuity equals competitiveness.

The Cam Schlittler injury may not derail the season today—but it’s a symbol. A reminder that this pitching staff is still hanging together with duct tape, that nothing structural has been fixed, and that the lessons of last year were ignored.

The bottom line is unavoidable: the 2026 Yankees are a mirror image of the 2025 Yankees. And teams with the same flaws, the same philosophy, and the same manager who still struggles to manage cannot suddenly become champions. Sorry to break it to you—but this isn’t a title team. 

It’s just another rerun and another year wasted.




Thursday, February 12, 2026

THE DAMN PENNY PINCHING YANKEES!


I know the Yankees aren't "cheap" like the Athletics are. We spend a lot of money on a roster unlike the Athletics (as flawed as it is) and Hal Steinbrenner has talked a lot in recent years about pulling back on the budget for sustainability. For a long time we have wondered exactly where Hal would draw that line and say 'no more' and we have our answer.

We keep hearing about the Yankees "running it back" out again in 2026, and we can see that again....in an attempt that thankfully failed. The Yankees tried to bring back another guy from last season, and a very unimpactful one at that. The Yankees pursued Austin Slater again but he said 'no thanks' and packed his bag for Detroit, read more HERE

So the Yankees offered $1 million, but the Tigers gave Slater a minor league deal with an invitation to Spring Training worth $2 million with an additional $500,000 in potential incentives. Interesting how the Yankees chose to lose in this scenario for what is literally pocket change for them. Even at max incentive earnings, I never thought I would see the Yankees just fold like that. Not that I REALLY wanted Slater in particular, because he was not impactful for us but damn....I never thought I would see THAT happen. 

But honestly, that isn't even the first time or the first Austin. The Yankees were connected to Austin Hays all winter as a backup option if Cody Bellinger did not return. It was also rumored he could be a potential bench piece for us. The Mets were also interested because if the Yankees are interested the Mets have to be too. Last week, Hays signed a $6 million deal with the Chicago White Sox so Hays won't be playing for either New York team. It's crazy to think about but if the Yankees passed on the cheaper Slater this week, I guess it shouldn't surprise us the Yankees were out at the higher price tag.

Honestly, I would've preferred Hays over Slater but it doesn't matter now. What does matter is the Yankees need more right-handed options in the lineup so they need SOMEONE. Trent Grisham is left-handed, Cody is left-handed, and Jasson Dominguez might as well be left-handed because he is beyond weak on the other side of the plate. We need more than just Aaron Judge as a right-handed option in the outfield.

The Yankees need to do something here. Honestly when you look at remaining options it's pretty embarrassing to lose out on both of these guys for a dollar amount that is so insignificant to them in the grand scheme of things. This isn't a small market team with thin profit margins....but they are acting like one.


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






Tuesday, February 10, 2026

DO THE YANKEES HAVE DIFFERENT PLANS FOR DOMINGUEZ THIS SEASON?


There are many questions about the Yankees heading into the 2026 season. Now that we have some questions answered about who is playing where....now one of the biggest ones left unanswered is what role does Jasson Dominguez have? Now that the Yankees have a full outfield, everyone has a clear role except Dominguez.

That's not a fun place to be. It certainly seems to be the Yankees operating model over the years though log jams and insanity is the norm. Now according to a recent report HERE, MLB insider's believe they have a clear picture on the future of Dominguez. The Yankees aren't confirming this yet but it makes sense.... Jon Heyman reports that "barring something unforeseen," Dominguez looks to be destined for a start the 2026 season with Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.

It all makes sense. After the All-Star break last year, at-bats were very few and far between so why not send him down? His development would be better served with regular playing time. Even Brian Cashman said he considered doing it last season but ultimately decided against it. 
"He wasn't playing. I could have sent him to Triple-A," Cashman said. "I didn't think that was right to do, either. He provided the chance for us to run into something off the bench, especially with his speed to go along with José Caballero. But I still think there's some upside there."

The Yankees had some upside last season with a deeper bench, but his lack of regular playing time didn't help against left-handed pitching where he batted .186 with one home run and nine RBI's. Some regular playing time would help him work on some of his deficiencies, especially since he didn't have much of that in the minors. 

"We're talking about a very, very young player that didn't play a ton of Minor League baseball," Aaron Boone said. "And what suffers from that? The side you don't hit from as much. He's a natural right-handed hitter, so I don't think it's out of the question that at some point the right-handed catches up to the left side."


I think we saw a lot of red flags last season with Dominguez. He needs time to develop, he's not ready for a full time big league roll. Until he is, he shouldn't be a spare piece riding the bench. It does no good for him. If the Yankees intend to keep him he needs to go down and work on fundamentals. He was one the worst left fielders in the league last year. He cannot hit lefties, righthanded. He cannot help the Yankees.....yet.

So I think it is time to go back down, it's a terrible 23rd belated birthday present but if we are talking about what's best for him, the minor league demotion is the only right answer.



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





 

Monday, February 2, 2026

JUST WHO DOES BRIAN CASHMAN THINK HE IS KIDDING?


The Yankees have been dreaming of a rematch with the Dodgers at the World Series. Brian Cashman thinks running the same team back on the field this season is gonna get the job done. Now he is trying to gaslight all of us into thinking the Yankees are gonna be better than they were last season....

And no one sane believes that. Great, the band is back together once Gerrit Cole returns. The magic will be back and suddenly everything is supposed to change. Oh and having a full season of Cam Schlittler is a big upgrade IF he can stay healthy and productive but Cashman is all in on this team. He's as stupid and delusional as ever and wants us to join him in delusion land. "We all understand in the postseason, you've got to bring your best baseball every series and if you don't, you're going home. It doesn't mean we weren't capable of great things. We just didn't get the job done in that time frame against the Toronto Blue Jays," Cashman said HERE.

And naturally Aaron Boone is his parrot and feels the same way. "At the end of last year, in so many ways, it's as good as I felt about our team heading into the postseason in the years I've been here," Boone said. "Obviously, we got beat up in the division round. It didn't go our way. That doesn't mean it's not gonna go our way the next time. We think we’re really good. That doesn’t mean we’re gonna win 94 games again. It doesn't mean we're gonna win 88. But we think we have the pieces." 

Obviously both of these bozos believe we are so good we didn't need to make any improvements. We can just run the same team back out there and do it all again but win this time. Never mind that the rest of the division has made improvements and is stronger on paper. We can stay the same and maybe win 94 games again....or not. I'm leaning towards not because the left side of the infield is a disaster and Anthony Volpe is such a lost cause, but the Yankees will continue to foolishly stand behind him. The Yankees was us to believe he is the right piece? NOT EVEN CLOSE!

We are two weeks away from Spring training and Fangraphs have already made their predictions for this season and they disagree with the Yankees strategy, read more HERE. Not only do they think the Yankees are a LONGSHOT to win the division at 18.9%, but they only have a 41.1% chance at winning one of three wildcard spots. Hell, they even predict the Yankees to finish in FOURTH one game behind the Orioles. It hurts to read but I can't say I disagree.

I want to see this team get back to the World Series and win but we couldn't beat the Blue Jays last season. They owned us in the regular season so losing to them in the postseason wasn't a surprise to anyone with a brain....so of course that excludes Cashman and Baboonie. The Blue Jays have made improvements over the winter, so unless they regress A LOT and the Red Sox and Orioles massively underperform Yankee fans should be ready for a long and frustrating season.

These clowns need to stop gaslighting us. I'm sick of it!


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