Thursday, July 16, 2026

BOONE'S LEGACY IS ONLY ABOUT WINNING REGULAR SEASON GAMES


There was a time when the Yankees measured success with parades. Not playoff appearances. Not Wild Card berths. Not division titles. Championships.

That was the standard George Steinbrenner built. If you didn't win the World Series, you answered for it. There was accountability. There was urgency. There was an understanding that wearing pinstripes came with expectations unlike any other organization in sports.

Fast forward to today, and the standard feels... different. Aaron Boone has been the Yankees' manager since 2018. During that span, the Yankees have won plenty of regular-season games. They've reached the postseason repeatedly. They've had MVP-caliber players, Cy Young-caliber pitchers, and one of the highest payrolls in baseball almost every single season.

And yet... Zero championships. That's not an attack.

That's a fact.

Every October seems to end the same way. The Yankees fall short, the front office talks about what they learned, Boone talks about how close they were, and everyone comes back the following spring saying this year will be different. Eventually, "close" stops meaning anything. Because in New York, banners—not participation trophies—define greatness.


To hear the Yankees' front office tell it, Aaron Boone is exactly the right man for the job. Listen to the organization's messaging, tune into YES broadcasts, scroll through team-controlled social media, and you'll find praise for Boone's calm demeanor, his communication skills, and the culture he has supposedly built.

That's all well and good. But fans see something much simpler. No rings. That's the résumé that matters. Fair or unfair, that's the scoreboard. Now let's talk about accountability.

One of the biggest criticisms Boone has faced over the years isn't simply his bullpen decisions or lineup construction. It's the perception that too many things happen under his watch without meaningful consequences. Take Jazz Chisholm Jr.

Jazz is an electric player. His swagger is part of what makes him special. Baseball needs personalities like his. But when he showed up at the plate with a lollipop in his mouth earlier this season, it became national news. Boone publicly admitted afterward that the stunt "pissed" him off because of the safety concerns. Jazz responded by saying Boone's message was essentially to keep having fun—but to be smarter about it.

That's probably the right response. But it also illustrates the larger conversation surrounding Boone.

Fans don't necessarily question whether Boone likes his players. We really don't care. We question whether he demands enough from them.

There have been too many mental mistakes. Too many sloppy innings. Too many baserunning blunders. Too many games where the Yankees look flat. Is every one of those Boone's fault?

Of course not. But when those issues become recurring themes year after year, eventually the manager has to own part of the culture. Then there's Brian Cashman. Cashman deserves enormous credit for being a part of building championship teams in the late 1990s and early 2000s. No one can erase that.

But it's also fair to ask whether this version of the Yankees has become too comfortable with falling short. The Yankees have invested hundreds of millions of dollars. They've retained stars. They've traded prospects. They've changed coaches. They've adjusted philosophies. Yet the one thing that hasn't changed is the leadership at the very top. At some point, every organization has to ask itself a difficult question:

If the results never change, why should the decision-makers? This isn't about calling Boone a terrible baseball mind. I mean, he pretty much is but this post is about something different. It's about not closing. BOONE CAN'T CLOSE.

Sometimes a clubhouse simply needs a different voice. Sometimes a franchise chasing greatness has to stop accepting "good enough." Because let's be honest.


When fans think about Joe Torre, they think about championships. When they think about Casey Stengel, they think about championships. When they think about Joe Girardi, they think about the 2009 championship

No one is going to think about Aaron Boone being a great manager. No one.  What will they remember?

A lot of regular-season wins.

The dynasty years weren't built because the Yankees were satisfied with being competitive. They were built because ownership demanded excellence and refused to confuse potential with accomplishment.

Can the Yankees get back to that level? Absolutely.

Aaron Judge is still one of the best players on the planet. Ben Rice has emerged as a legitimate star. The core has talent.

But talent alone doesn't build dynasties. Leadership does. Vision does. Accountability does.

So, here's the question every Yankees fan should be asking as another postseason approaches:

If this season ends the same way the others have, and I truly believe it will, is it finally time for Brian Cashman and Aaron Boone to step aside?

Or will the Yankees once again convince themselves that next year will be different? Because eventually, "next year" becomes "another year."

And that's not the Yankee Way.



BRAWLIN IN THE BRONX - WILL THE YANKEES SHOW UP?


I am NOT looking forward to this. The Dodgers are coming into town. That means I am going to hear all of the fake, annoying Dodger fans at work become even more obnoxious. Here come all of the jabs about the next three-peat and dynasty. You won't find a bigger pool of bandwagon Dodger "fans" then where I live. This is their breeding ground.

So here we go. First series back from the All-Star break and it has to be against the damn Dodgers. At least it's on our turf, but then again....it's on OUR turf! I still think about how the Dodgers embarrassed us in the World Series. We have been playing some very uninspiring baseball for too long. This could be a disaster in the making. I hope the time off invigorated the Yankees but this team for years has needed a lot more than time off to help them become real contenders.

At this point, we are at the halfway point. Wildcard standings, division races and trades matter more than ever. October is coming and fast. This series could be a preview of what's to come. Some fans are really serious about it, others aren't and that's a lot of what YES broadcasters discussed HERE. I think if you are the Dodgers this series doesn't matter as much, but the Yankees it matters a lot.

I love Paul O'Neill, he's a legend and I like listening to him call games. I just don't know if I share his same thoughts about this series. "I don't think a weekend series in July tells you how you're gonna play a team in the World Series. Everybody looks at that World Series where the Dodgers on paper look like they beat up the Yankees but the Yankees had a couple of games that they could've coulda won and it could've been a seven-game series. I never feel that the Yankees are truly overmatched by anyone. I would assume that the media will turn it up to be a big, big series, but Aaron Judge is not a part of it, Stanton's not a part of it. Ohtani, who knows? He might not even be a part of it, won't be pitching probably. It's gonna be a different scenario if you meet them again in October."

Coulda, shoulda, woulda won....but didn't. There's too many of these. O'Neill may not feel like the Yankees are truly overmatched by any team but they certainly play like they are sometimes. They lack fundamentals, can't hit the broad side of a barn, have circus ringleader Aaron Boone for a manager and are their own worst enemy. Teams don't fear them whether Judge is playing or not. He's only one guy on the field or in the batting lineup. The rest of the team does not compare and all signs point to Shohei Ohtani playing this weekend just most likely not pitching.

Do I think he's right that it will be a different scenario if we meet again in October? It could be. But first we have to get there and it's hard to have confidence that we will. Both teams slumped heading into the All-Star break, but we slumped a lot longer and harder. The Dodgers kick it up another gear once the postseason hits and we just have a hard time finding one that isn't reverse. 

I hope this weekend goes well for us. Hopefully the Dodgers continue their slump, and we find a spark. I think this series matters. Let's face it they all do but second half of the season against the Dodgers is a real test....and I am not sure that the Yankees are ready.


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





Wednesday, July 15, 2026

RYAN JEFFERS IS THE CATCHER WE NEED


Brian Cashman has reached the point where he can't afford to hope. He has to act. The Yankees have a championship-caliber roster, but one glaring weakness continues to drag down the offense, and it's behind the plate.

Austin Wells.

This isn't about piling on a young player. It's about recognizing reality. Wells was supposed to become the Yankees' catcher of the future. Instead, his bat has disappeared for much of the 2026 season. Through the first half, Wells has struggled to produce consistently, posting one of the weakest offensive lines among everyday catchers, with his batting average hovering in the mid-.100s and an OPS well below league average. FanGraphs has graded his offensive production as among the least productive regular catchers in baseball this season.

Meanwhile, over in Minnesota, Ryan Jeffers continues to do what good catchers are supposed to do.

Hit.

Jeffers has quietly become one of the better offensive catchers in baseball. He gives you power from the right side, drives the baseball with authority, and has consistently produced when healthy. Reports leading into the trade deadline indicate he's once again drawing plenty of interest because of his ability to change an offense immediately.

For a Yankees club that has been searching for production outside of Aaron Judge and Ben Rice, Jeffers feels less like a luxury and more like a necessity.

Because October isn't about potential. It's about production. And here's where the conversation gets uncomfortable.

The Yankees have spent years telling us about their can't-miss prospects. Anthony Volpe. Austin Wells. Every spring, every prospect ranking, every organizational update, fans were reminded these were cornerstone players who would anchor the next great Yankees team.

Yet here's the funny thing...

Where was all that noise about Ben Rice? Rice wasn't the prospect dominating headlines. He wasn't the player fans were constantly told would become the next star.

Then he got his opportunity and all he's done is become one of the biggest breakout stars in baseball.

He's mashed home runs. He's driven in runs. He's become one of the most dangerous hitters in the Yankees' lineup while showing an advanced approach at the plate that looks years beyond his experience. His breakout has been one of the best stories in baseball this season.

So, here's the question that deserves to be asked. What exactly were Yankees scouts seeing?

They spent years selling everyone on Wells and Volpe. But Ben Rice? He almost felt like an afterthought until he forced everyone to notice. How does that happen?

How do you spend years hyping one group of prospects while another player quietly develops into arguably the best young hitter in your organization? Maybe Rice simply exceeded every projection. Maybe development isn't linear. Or maybe the Yankees' player evaluation process deserves a harder look than it's been getting.

Either way, Rice's emergence raises some legitimate questions.

Back to the catching situation, I'm rambling. Ryan Jeffers isn't a magic fix for every problem the Yankees have.

But he absolutely lengthens the lineup. He gives opposing pitchers another legitimate bat to worry about. He provides more thump. More experience. More consistency.

Most importantly, he allows manager Aaron Boone to stop running an everyday lineup spot that too often has become an offensive black hole. The Yankees don't have time to wait for Austin Wells to figure it out if they're serious about winning a World Series in 2026.

If Wells rebounds, terrific, but he won't. Championship front offices don't make decisions based on "maybe."

They make them based on who gives them the best chance to win today. Right now, that's Ryan Jeffers. Brian Cashman has been aggressive before when he believed a championship was within reach. This is another one of those moments. If the Twins are willing to listen, Cashman needs to pick up the phone.

Because if the Yankees are going to make a deep October run, they can't keep hoping the catcher position magically comes alive. They need to upgrade it. Ryan Jeffers is sitting there.

Now it's up to Cashman to decide whether he's serious about winning another championship—or whether he's willing to let loyalty to an underperforming roster spot stand in the way.



RICE HAS BEEN A REVELATION, BUT COULD THE DERBY COME BACK TO HAUNT HIM?


If there has been one constant bright spot in the Yankees' lineup this season, it's been Ben Rice.

What started as an opportunity has turned into a full-fledged breakout, and Rice has rewarded the Yankees' faith in him every step of the way. He's evolved into one of the most dangerous left-handed hitters in baseball, giving the lineup power, patience, and a mature approach that has made him one of the American League's biggest surprises.

At the All-Star break, Rice had established himself among the league leaders with 29 home runs, nearly 70 RBIs and an OPS hovering around .970, while consistently producing quality at-bats and driving the baseball to all fields. His advanced metrics are just as impressive, with elite exit velocities, hard-hit percentages and barrel rates confirming that this isn't smoke and mirrors—Ben Rice has become one of baseball's legitimate impact hitters.

Perhaps what's been most impressive is how complete his offensive game has become. Rice isn't simply swinging for the fences. He's taking walks, hitting with runners in scoring position, and consistently delivering in big moments. Whether he's launching tape-measure home runs or lining doubles into the gap, he's become the type of hitter opposing pitchers genuinely fear.

He's been everything the Yankees could have hoped for—and then some.

That made Monday night's Home Run Derby such an interesting—and perhaps concerning—storyline.

Rice accepted the invitation to participate, making it a memorable family affair by having his father, Dan, throw batting practice to him. It was one of the more heartwarming moments of All-Star Week and something Rice will undoubtedly treasure forever. Unfortunately, the results on the field weren't nearly as memorable.

Rice managed just seven home runs, the fewest of any participant, and was eliminated in the opening round. Afterward, he admitted he became overly anxious and rushed his swing instead of staying within himself. Even so, he called the experience a success because he was able to share it with his father.

The Derby itself isn't the concern.

What happens after the Derby is.

For decades, baseball has debated the so-called "Home Run Derby Curse." Is it real? Or is it simply coincidence?

There have certainly been players who fueled the legend.


Bobby Abreu put on one of the greatest Derby performances ever in 2005, crushing an astonishing 41 home runs in the opening round. But after the All-Star break, his production dipped noticeably, and many pointed to the Derby as the culprit.

Josh Hamilton's unforgettable 2008 Derby performance remains one of baseball's iconic moments after he blasted 28 first-round home runs. While he remained productive overall, his second-half numbers declined, reigniting debate about whether the Derby had altered his swing or simply worn him down.

Aaron Judge experienced something similar in 2017. After winning the Derby in Miami, his second-half production dipped significantly. Was it because of the Derby? Or because pitchers adjusted to him and the grind of a 162-game season caught up with a rookie? Even Judge himself has never blamed the event, but the discussion has lingered for years.

Of course, there are just as many examples proving the opposite.

Pete Alonso has won multiple Home Run Derbies without seeing his swing disappear afterward. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. has participated and continued producing. Juan Soto has remained one of baseball's elite hitters regardless of Derby appearances.

That's what makes this debate so fascinating. Is there truly a curse? Or do fans simply remember the slumps and forget the players who kept right on hitting? Now that question belongs to Ben Rice.

Could one night of trying to launch every baseball into the upper deck throw off the smooth, controlled swing that has made him one of the Yankees' best hitters? Could his timing be affected? Could he begin overswinging in search of home runs?


Or will this simply become a fun memory from an incredible first half before he picks up exactly where he left off?

Personally, there's every reason to believe Rice will be just fine.

Everything we've seen this season suggests he's more than just a slugger. He's a disciplined hitter with an advanced understanding of the strike zone, tremendous bat speed, and a mature offensive approach that doesn't rely solely on brute force. Those qualities generally survive temporary mechanical hiccups.

Still, baseball is a game built on rhythm, timing and routine. Even the smallest change can snowball into something larger. The Yankees don't just need Ben Rice to be good in the second half. They need him to continue being one of the most dangerous hitters in their lineup. If he does, the Yankees' offense remains capable of carrying this club deep into October. If the Derby somehow disrupts that rhythm—even temporarily—it becomes one of the more intriguing storylines to watch over the next several weeks.

Hopefully, years from now, fans will remember Ben Rice's first Home Run Derby not because it started a slump, but because it marked the season he officially announced himself as one of baseball's brightest young stars.

The Yankees—and their fans—are certainly hoping that's exactly how this story ends.



Monday, July 13, 2026

GOOD THINGS COME IN PETTITTE PACKAGES!


Andy Pettitte was made for pinstripes, and now maybe his youngest son, Luke Pettitte is too! It's another one of those "like father, like son" cliche moments....or is it?

We don't need to talk about how great Andy was. We all know. Luke could be a great pitcher too, but there's some differences. Honestly, much needed differences so he's not living in the shadow of his dad. I keep seeing on  X everyone is talking about how Andy was a one of a kind, and we shouldn't compare Luke to him.

And we shouldn't. That I agree. Andy was a left handed battle tested pitcher with a pick off move that was unmatched. Luke is right handed so he might not have the same pick off move but he's still talented. He's a two-way player that organizations drool over now that some guy named Shohei Ohtani came in and changed baseball as we know it.

But the Ohtani comparison stops there. They both are two-way players but that's it. Luke started playing at Dallas Baptist College as a pitcher, but Tommy John surgery forced him to step away from the mound. Instead of treating his time away recovering as a lost year in his journey he turned his attention to hitting in his junior year where he hit .337, with 16 home runs and 48 RBIs in 42 games. That's nothing to sneeze at. Hell, he would be an instant upgrade to the current lineup right now considering some guys are hitting .150 right now (here's looking at you Austin Wells), sometimes the truth hurts.

It will be interesting to see what happens going forward. Does Luke even sign? There's no guarantee that he will. No matter what does happen, he already has some bragging rights compared to his old man. Andy was picked in the 22nd round of the 1990 draft, but Luke was picked in the eighth round of this years draft. No matter what happens, he gets that for bragging rights. Honestly, Tommy John or not, scouts have a lot to say about his good command, so I like the pick.

The Yankees need to learn how to evolve and honestly, in more ways than one. Their "run it back" philosophy and overly analytical decisions have not helped this team win anything. There isn't a ton of risk with this draft pick, even with a recovery from Tommy John. Luke has something unique to add and we certainly need something.

We've been saying we are tired of "more of the same" and this isn't it. It's about time! Welcome to the Yankees, Luke!


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





Saturday, July 11, 2026

THE VOLPE SOAP OPERA WILL BLOW UP IN THE YANKEES FACES

Don't forget that Gleyber Torres was not resigned for pretty much refusing to move to third.  More on that in a minute.

Aaron Boone's Anthony Volpe obsession and the fact that the Yankees are all in on a personal relationship with this guy and the team dating back to his high school days has become their biggest problem... and I bet they will regret it.  Why? Cause they're stuck.  

At this point, Aaron Boone doesn't just support Anthony Volpe. He defends him with the kind of unwavering loyalty usually reserved for family members, childhood best friends, or someone holding embarrassing vacation photos. And that's where this story continues.

Because if you took a poll of Yankees fans right now—people who have actually watched every throw into the first-base dugout, every rushed decision, every routine play turned into an adventure—I would bet close to 89% would tell you the same thing:

Anthony Volpe may have been a terrific shortstop in high school. That doesn't automatically make him a Major League shortstop.

Those are two completely different jobs.

Playing shortstop in New York isn't simply about fielding ground balls. It's about handling relentless pressure, surviving daily scrutiny, making split-second decisions under the brightest lights in baseball and proving, every single season, that you belong.

Right now, many fans simply don't believe Volpe does.  but Aaron Boone can't quit Anthony Volpe, and it is my opinion that that is a direct order from our Yankees front office. Boone's a puppet anyway so...

Look, Boone's defense of Volpe has reached a point where it almost feels... personal. Whenever criticism surfaces, Boone appears almost programmed to immediately reassure everyone that Volpe is "really good." No matter what happens on the field. No matter what the numbers say. And that's become part of the frustration.

Because baseball is supposed to be a meritocracy. You earn your job. You keep your job. You lose your job if you suck. That's professional sports. That's life too by the way... that's life if you don't live in a bubble where people and personal relationships are protecting you.

Volpe often feels like the one Yankee playing under an entirely different set of rules.

Jose Caballaro is the better shortstop. We all know this. He's more athletic. He brings more energy. He's quicker. Throws stronger, hits better. Many fans like me believe he simply looks more natural at shortstop. Yet the Yankees continue treating him like he's trapped inside a spreadsheet labeled "UTILITY."

That's the danger of front offices becoming too attached to paperwork. On paper, Caballero is a utility player. On the field, plenty of people believe he's the better defensive shortstop. But organizations can become prisoners of their own evaluations. The Yankees invested years developing Volpe.

They sold him to the fan base. They marketed him. Now admitting someone else might simply be better becomes far more difficult than it should be.

Summer Coaches don't win Major League games. One of the more bizarre developments surrounding Volpe has been the constant reliance on glowing scouting reports from people connected to his youth baseball career. That's wonderful.

It also doesn't matter anymore. This is Major League Baseball and they were wrong. They sold the Yankees front office and us fans a bill of goods. Nobody gets lifetime tenure because they dominated summer tournaments. Every player becomes replaceable the moment they reach the big leagues.

The Yankees don't owe Anthony Volpe a career. Anthony Volpe owes the Yankees production, and he owes us fans an apology for taking the money and not delivering product.

Look, this whole report that Volpe reportedly wasn't interested in moving off shortstop. Whether every detail of that story is accurate almost becomes secondary. Because if a player truly refuses to play another position, professional organizations generally have three choices:

Move him. Bench him. Trade him. OR, in Gleyber Torres's case, don't resign him. 


We all forget that Torres was the coveted one and did actually have solid numbers with the Yankees. But the Yankees asked him to move positions and Torres didn't want to.  And so what happened next?  When his contract was up... they didn't bring him back.  That was a Cashman, Boone decision.  Gleyber Torres had finally found his baseball home at second base after the Yankees' shortstop experiment went sideways. Once he settled in there, he made it pretty clear he wasn't interested in playing musical chairs again. Second was his spot, and as far as he was concerned, that's where he belonged.

The Yankees, meanwhile, kept looking for ways to solve their infield puzzle. As different roster combinations came and went, third base inevitably entered the conversation. There were reports during the 2024 season that the club at least kicked around the idea of sliding Torres across the diamond.

The problem? Torres never seemed to warm to the idea. Learning a new position on the eve of free agency wasn't exactly on his wish list, and he appeared content to plant his flag at second. Whether that ultimately influenced the Yankees' decision is open to debate, but it certainly didn't make fitting the pieces together any easier. Torres is batting .280 with the Tigers this season. Volpe with the Yanks? .240.

But when it comes to Volpe, Boone tried to make it seem like it was a nothing burger, even though we all know it is.  Michael Kay poured gasoline on the story, suggesting Volpe had resisted moving to second.

Fans exploded. Then, almost as quickly, Kay walked much of it back. Coincidence? Maybe. Or maybe someone reminded Kay that the Yankees also happen to sign his checks. That's my opinion.

But then Aaron Boone tried explaining it. Yup, stupid Boone was left cleaning up the controversy. Except...he really didn't at all. Instead came one of the more impressive word salads you'll hear from a Major League manager:

"He's been our shortstop, and he got hurt and had surgery over the winter. He's coming back, and we really haven't had — until Cabby walked in the door last year — a real competition-based thing there. By the way, he's been a damn good shortstop. I hate to break it to everyone, but that still is real. Has he had his struggles? Sure. But he's also played really well out there in some long stretches defensively."

Translation? Volpe was the shortstop because...Volpe was already the shortstop. Competition? Not really. Boone acknowledged Caballero existed, then immediately circled back to telling everyone Volpe has been "a damn good shortstop", which we all know is a lie.

That's become the organization's default setting. Every criticism. Every mistake. Every rough stretch. Every defensive lapse. The response is always the same. "We still believe."

Fine.

But eventually belief has to intersect with reality. And here it is, AGAIN. The Yankees wanted the next Derek Jeter. The Yankees weren't simply looking for another shortstop. A homegrown kid. A New Jersey native. Clean-cut. Easy to market. Nice face. Future captain, and oh yeah, maybe there's a personal connection to the family which will make it all so much easier.

Anthony Volpe checked every box. In my opinion, the Yankees fell in love with the story before they finished evaluating the player. Once that happens, objectivity becomes incredibly difficult. Weaknesses become "development." Mistakes become "growing pains." Poor stretches become "learning experiences." Everyone else competes. The chosen one develops.

It is the relationship that no one wants to discuss. The uncomfortable conversation almost nobody wants to have.

Volpe's rise through the organization has long been intertwined with relationships involving influential Yankees evaluators who knew him long before he became a professional player. Nobody is accusing anyone of criminal wrongdoing. But personal relationships and emotional investment absolutely have the potential to cloud objective judgment.


That's true in every business. Why would baseball be any different? If Volpe were simply another prospect without those relationships... Would he have been promoted this aggressively? Would his offensive struggles have been tolerated this long? Would every mistake be explained away?

Those are fair questions.

They're also questions very few people have the balls to ask. But here's the bottom line, this Volpe experiment failed and the Yankees have a mess on their hands. They're emotionally invested in proving themselves right instead of honestly evaluating what's in front of them.

That's dangerous. Read  HOW YANKEE SCOUTS LOST THEIR WAY IN THE VOLPE RECRUITMENT for more.  

Look, organizations that become obsessed with proving past decisions correct often ignore present reality. Many fans now believe that's exactly what's happening. Boone continues defending Volpe. The front office continues defending Volpe. The marketing machine continues defending Volpe.

Meanwhile, fans keep watching the same shitty movie. The bottom line? You need to hold the Yankees accountable. This entire experiment has blown up in the Yankees' faces. Instead of admitting mistakes, they continue protecting the investment. Fans deserve better.

Merit should matter more than narrative. Performance should matter more than friendships. Results should matter more than reputation. In my opinion, Anthony Volpe is not the answer at shortstop for the New York Yankees.

The Yankees desperately wanted the next Derek Jeter. Instead, they've spent years forcing a script that many fans no longer believe. And I truly wonder if the Yankees are regretting every minute of this, because whether you believe it or not, it is a true mess.  The Bronx franchise is crumbling because of a high schooler who infultrated a major league park because mommy and daddy knew the high school summer coach.  It's an absolute travesty and disgusting.  

Mark my words, the Yankees will not win another championship under this front office, GM and manager because they are doing their job wrong.   And until this organization starts rewarding performance over loyalty, the controversy isn't going away.

Neither is the frustration.  


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.