Friday, May 8, 2026

VOLPE LOOKS LIKE A LITTLE LEAGUER OUT THERE!


Anthony Volpe pulled off one of the dumbest baserunning mistakes you’ll see. I'll set the scene; May 6th. Somehow it made his already shaky situation look even worse. Two outs. Spencer Jones smokes a double. Every baseball player on earth knows you run hard immediately because the inning ends if you get thrown out anyway. And Volpe still failed to score from first base.

It wasn’t bad luck. It wasn’t a great defensive play. It was pure clueless baseball.


Whether he flat-out forgot the number of outs or just loafed down the line, the result was the same: a pathetic display from a guy supposedly trying to prove he belongs back in the majors. Fans immediately called him out because the play looked lazy, unaware, and completely unacceptable for someone fighting to save his job. Just read social media. And make no mistake — his job absolutely is in danger.

Volpe is sitting in Triple-A with Scranton/Wilkes-Barre after shoulder surgery rehab while Jose Caballero has basically stolen his spot by actually producing at the major league level. And he should, he's better. The Yankees didn’t send Volpe down because Caballero was “solid.” They kept Volpe down because the team looks better without him right now. My opinion, but they won't say that. But that’s the brutal reality.

Sure, Volpe has had a couple decent rehab games. A hard-hit infield single here, a double there, batting around .241 in the minors during recovery. Congratulations. None of that excuses looking completely brain-dead on the bases in a moment where basic effort and awareness were required.

This is supposed to be the part where Volpe dominates Triple-A and forces the Yankees to bring him back. Instead, he’s out there making mistakes that make people question whether he even understands situational baseball anymore. It's like Little League. When a former top prospect can’t score from first on a two-out double because he either forgot the outs or didn’t hustle, that’s not “rust.” That’s embarrassing.

At this point, the Yankees have every reason to keep him buried in Triple-A until he proves he can stop playing like a guy who’s completely overwhelmed. That or trade him to the Reds.



Thursday, May 7, 2026

IT'S SPENCER JONES TIME!

 Ladies and gentlemen, hide your fastballs. Spencer Jones is on the way to the Bronx.

According to Francys Romero of BeisbolFR, the Yankees are calling up their towering outfield prospect after Jasson Domínguez unfortunately landed on the injured list following a scary crash into the wall during today’s game. Domínguez stayed down for several minutes before being carted off, and Aaron Boone later confirmed the rookie will miss a few weeks with a low-grade AC sprain in his left shoulder. The good news? Concussion tests have come back negative so far.

The bad news for Triple-A pitchers? They no longer have to deal with Spencer Jones.

Because make no mistake — this guy has been bullying baseballs in Scranton. Through 33 games with Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, Jones has launched 11 homers, driven in 41 runs, and posted a .958 OPS while looking every bit like the Yankees’ next giant science project gone right. And yes, giant is the key word here. The man is 6-foot-7 and built like Aaron Judge was left in the dryer too long.

The power has always been absurd. Scouts drool over the “65-grade” pop. But what’s changed this year is the approach. Jones reportedly worked in a toe-tap timing mechanism similar to Shohei Ohtani’s, helping trim down the strikeouts and unlock the version of himself Yankees fans have been dreaming about since he was drafted.

This is also exactly why the Yankees added him to the 40-man roster back in November. They knew another team would’ve stolen him in the Rule 5 Draft faster than Boone can overmanage a bullpen.

Now the Yankees finally get their first real look at the kid in the big leagues.

The Martian may be temporarily grounded, but the Yankees are replacing him with a left-handed skyscraper capable of launching baseballs into low Earth orbit. Spencer Jones time has arrived.

Ben Rice, Spencer Jones. Both up in the same lineup? Bencer baby.



THE RAYS ARE BREATHING DOWN THE YANKEES NECK


The 2026 New York Yankees are having the kind of season that makes the Bronx buzz again. Thank God. I mean the Yankees front office bet on their rotation doing what they wanted them to do without Rodon and Cole and for some strange reason, the rotation has been stellar. The rotation looks dangerous, the bats are loud and the standings suggest Yankees baseball is once again headed toward the upswing. Now I am a realist... it is only May, but damn it feels good. I had to laugh the other night. After the Yankees beat the Rangers 2 nights ago 7-4, Joe Girardi said something absurd. He said to Kay something to the effect of "This feels like 1998 all over again", to which Kay paused longer than normal and said... "Well, that's a mouthful." It was awkward and the reason is simple... it's only May. That being said, things are clicking. Aaron Judge continues to launch baseballs into neighboring zip codes, the bullpen has mostly stabilized, and the Yankees have looked like a legitimate American League powerhouse so far.

But there is one gigantic problem hanging over all of it like a rain cloud over the Bleacher Creatures. Wins are great, but we want a championship. And until Aaron Boone delivers one, every hot streak, every division lead, and every carefully worded postgame quote comes with an asterisk the size of the George Washington Bridge. Boone isn't a winner... a WORLD CHAMPION.  The Yankees have one standard: World Series titles. Boone has been manager since 2018 and still has not delivered one. That is the conversation. Everything else is background noise right now. Let's keep it real.

And speaking of uncomfortable conversations, here come the Tampa Bay Rays again.

Like clockwork.


Every single year baseball analysts predict the Rays will “take a step back,” and every single year they hang on. The Rays are once again neck-and-neck with New York in the AL East, and in some ways they may actually be the more complete team. They already swept the Yankees earlier this season and exposed some of the exact flaws that continue to haunt Boone’s Yankees in big moments: sloppy situational hitting, questionable bullpen management, defensive lapses, and an inability to adjust once momentum swings the other direction.  Tampa Bay, meanwhile, keeps doing more with less.

Less payroll. Less media attention. Less star power. And somehow, often, more competence. That is what drives Yankees fans insane.

The Rays are baseball’s version of the guy who beats you at golf using borrowed clubs while drinking a gas station coffee and wearing cargo shorts. Nothing about it looks flashy, but by the 18th hole you are down six strokes and questioning your life choices.  Tampa Bay’s pitching staff has again become one of the nastiest groups in baseball. Their ability to develop arms borders on black magic. Drew Rasmussen has been dominant again, the bullpen continues shutting games down with terrifying efficiency, and the Rays’ run prevention remains elite.

Meanwhile, the Yankees still too often look like a team waiting for Aaron Judge to solve every problem personally. And that is where Boone continues taking heat and he should. For example, you all know Boone wanted Anthony Volpe to be back with them in the Bronx, but thank God someone with a brain in their head realized that Volpe is no longer good, and no longer marketable in the Bronx. Fans don't like him, and don't want him.  And that's the problem with Boone. He made the wrong decisions, and in my opinion, while this run is great, it's May... don't worry, Boone will mess this up somehow.

When games tighten up, the Yankees can start managing scared. Bullpen moves become overcomplicated science experiments. Hitters abandon approaches. Defensive mistakes snowball. Fans watch Boone emerge from the dugout with the expression of a man trying to remember whether he left the oven on. The frustration is not about regular season wins anymore. Yankees fans have seen enough 95-win seasons with no payoff. 

What makes the Rays comparison especially brutal is that Tampa Bay often looks mentally tougher in high-pressure situations despite operating with a fraction of the Yankees’ resources. They play cleaner baseball. Smarter baseball. More adaptable baseball. And they do it without acting like every close game requires a four-hour committee meeting.

That is why the 2026 AL East race feels so fascinating.

The Yankees are absolutely dangerous right now. Their ceiling is still championship-level if everything clicks. But the Rays continue to look great, and that's the bottom line. And while I want the Yankees to succeed... I can't help but wonder when Boone will fall over himself and overmanage and take us on a losing streak, because let's face it... you know it's coming. 

Right now however, the Rays may honestly look more trustworthy when the games start mattering most. We shall see.  I hope I'm wrong, because as a true Yankee fan, it's really hard to root for this team with someone as incompetent as Boone at the helm.  

That's my issue, not yours.



Wednesday, May 6, 2026

IF YOU ARE A FAN OF TRADITION, YOU MAY NOT LIKE THIS!


For decades, we have seen the Yankees wear gray on the road and pinstripes at home. It's all we have ever known as 28 other teams have experimented in recent years. That may be about to change, and if you love the Yankee traditional uniforms, you just might hate it.

Last month, The Athletic reported HERE (subscription required) that players were in favor of alternate road jerseys. It's an interesting idea, and I know "interesting" might not be the word some fans use here. The Yankees have been all about branding and protecting that branding at all costs. It's a valid point, but also a way for the Yankees to make more money by offering more merchandise. Plus, if the players support it, I guess it's bound to garner more support.


"I think the alternates are cool," second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. said HERE. "For me, it's no big deal which uniforms we wear. When I was in Miami, wearing the teal pinstripes was a big deal. But I'm in New York. It's pinstripes, and we wear whatever else on the road. The road never really bothered me, or I've never thought about, ‘Oh, we need to change,’ or anything. It's whatever. If they don't do it, it's fine with me." 

Even Aaron Judge referenced tradition HERE and made a valid point. "I'm all about tradition, but we've got a patch on our sleeves," in reference to the Starr Insurance advertisements that were added to the Yankees uniforms in July of 2023. It's something that I certainly never thought was possible....until it happened. I still don't like it but if the Yankees are okay with advertising on their uniform, would adding another alternate jersey be so awful?

I guess if you are a purist, the answer to that question is YES. But if you are the Yankees it gives you more merchandise to sell and the opportunity to make more money. That is after all the only thing Hal Steinbrenner seems to care about. To hell with winning, he just wants to turn a good profit. This allows him to do that, so that's why it will happen.

Over the years, the Yankees have started to stray away from tradition. In addition to the Starr Insurance patch, last year the Yankees eliminated their nearly 50-year-old policy prohibiting beards. In-game entertainment has even changed with more frequent music and sound effects. The Yankees are evolving.

So why not with a uniform? And not even a NEW uniform at that. The Yankees have approval to use their existing spring training navy batting tops as an alternate uniform. It's already hanging in their closets, they already wear it and we know it. At least it's not a crazy City Connect uniform that doesn't match the Yankee branding. It could be a lot worse.

The Yankees aren't reinventing the wheel, but if you are a traditionalist you might still hate it. If you do hate it, you better start getting used to it because this sounds like the next big change. The days of only gray or pinstripes might be over.



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






THE GREAT VOLPE HYPOTHESIS


At some point, the Yankees’ entire Anthony Volpe evaluation stops feeling like development and starts feeling like institutional stubbornness wrapped in optimism.

Anthony Volpe was supposed to be the clean answer at shortstop—the polished, high-IQ, “we got our guy” prospect the organization could point to as proof its scouting machine still worked. Instead, what they’ve gotten is a player who looks less like a cornerstone in progress and more like a long, uncomfortable recalibration of expectations that never should’ve been this high in the first place.

And yes, that’s where the criticism has to start—not just with Volpe, but with the Yankees’ scouting and development staff that stamped him as the future face of the infield. Because if this is the result, then the original projection wasn’t just aggressive—it was wrong. Not slightly off. Not “needs time.” Wrong in the way that forces everyone else to keep adjusting the story around it.

Volpe’s bat simply hasn’t matched the billing. The glove keeps him in conversations, but the offensive production has never stabilized into anything resembling the impact bat the Yankees publicly sold. At a certain point, “he’s still developing” stops sounding like a phase and starts sounding like a delay tactic.

And yet, the organization continues to operate as if the original scouting report must eventually be vindicated through sheer repetition. Volpe gets reset after reset, runway after runway, as if opportunity itself is the missing tool. Meanwhile, the rest of the roster—and the system—gets contorted to preserve the belief.

That ripple effect is where things get even more revealing.


George Lombard Jr., a natural shortstop with legitimate defensive polish and rising offensive projection, is being pushed around the infield at Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, logging time at second base and third base despite being a true shortstop by trade. 

The justification is flexibility, versatility, readiness. The reality feels more like accommodation—shaping the next wave of talent around the uncertainty of the current one.

And that’s where the uncomfortable truth starts to form: the Yankees are effectively asking their best shortstop prospect to become something else, not because he lacks the ability to stick at the position, but because the guy ahead of him hasn’t justified being displaced.

Which leads to the inevitable, increasingly unavoidable thought: maybe Volpe’s long-term home was never shortstop to begin with.

If the Volpe bat doesn’t take the leap, and if the defensive value is no longer enough to carry everyday expectations at premium position standards, then the conversation naturally shifts. Not as a demotion, but as a correction. I believe that Volpe needs to move to 2nd base. A move to second base isn’t a punishment—it might be the most honest version of his skill set. Less pressure on range-based heroics, more emphasis on stability, contact, and role clarity.

In fact, if you zoom out far enough, the most realistic version of this entire infield puzzle might already be forming: Volpe as a second baseman, not a franchise shortstop, fitting into a roster that eventually changes around him anyway. Especially in a world where pieces like Jazz Chisholm Jr. rarely stay static and positional reshuffling is more rule than exception.

But none of that changes the core issue: the Yankees didn’t just draft Volpe. They declared him before he ever proved it. And now they’re living inside the consequences of trying to make the projection true instead of letting the performance define the player.

That’s why Lombard is moving around the infield and not playing his spot. That’s why Volpe keeps getting opportunities. And that’s why the entire infield feels like it’s being built around a dumb Volpe decision the organization made years ago—and is still trying, stubbornly, to justify today.

At some point, development stops being about what a player becomes… and starts being about what an organization refuses to admit.



Tuesday, May 5, 2026

RODON TO COME BACK WITH THE ROAR!


Carlos Rodón is in the home stretch of his rehab assignment following his October 2025 elbow procedure, where surgeons cleared out loose bodies and shaved down a bone spur. In baseball terms, the maintenance work is done, and now it’s about proving the arm is ready for prime time again.

If today’s Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre outing goes according to plan, the next stop isn’t another rehab start—it’s the Bronx. No layover, no delay—just straight back into the Yankees rotation.

“It felt good—just dialing in the fastball, mixing in some sliders and changeups, getting my work in,” Rodón said. Translation: the checklist is complete, and the engine’s humming.

And this hasn’t exactly been a casual tune-up. In his April 30 start with Double-A Somerset, Rodón struck out eight over 5.1 innings, looking far more like a frontline starter than a guy knocking off rust. Rehab? Sure. Dominant? Also yes.

Before the elbow detour, Rodón was quietly putting together a monster year:

  • 18–9 record (tied for second in MLB)
  • 3.09 ERA (firmly among the AL’s best)
  • 203 strikeouts 
  • 195.1 innings  

So, what happens when you drop that version of Rodón back into an already strong Yankees rotation? Good question—one with the kind of answer contenders love: too many good options.

And let’s be honest, if Rodón comes back throwing like this, somebody’s seat might get a little less comfortable. A bullpen shift for Weathers? Not exactly a wild idea—and honestly, it might make the whole staff even nastier.



Monday, May 4, 2026

END OF AN ERA


I crossed paths with John Sterling once, and it felt exactly how you’d hope it would. He was warm, gracious, and every bit the gentleman his voice suggested. We traded a few pleasantries, and I told him something I’d meant for years—that listening to him was a comfort, like a familiar rhythm in the background of life. I loved him in the booth, especially alongside Suzyn Waldman. Together, they weren’t just calling games—they were part of the experience. Yup, sometimes it was absurd, but many times looking back... it just worked.

There was always something a little larger-than-life about John Sterling. Not just the voice, but the presence behind it.

And now, some tough news to take in: John Sterling has passed away at 87. The New York Yankees confirmed it Monday. He took over play-by-play duties in 1989 and somehow turned consistency into legend—over 5,000 consecutive broadcasts without missing a game. That’s an ironman saga. Even when he eased into a lighter schedule later on, his voice never lost its spark.

And those calls… unforgettable. “It is high, it is far, it is gone!” still echoes like it’s bouncing off the upper deck. And when it was all said and done: “Ballgame over. Yankees win. Theeeeeeeee Yankees WIN!”—no one stretched a moment quite like he did.

Rest easy, John. Thanks for the soundtrack.



BEN RICE IS OUT, BUT FOR HOW LONG?


The Yankees have won the first three games of the series against the Baltimore Orioles with a chance to sweep. The win came with home runs from Ben Rice and Aaron Judge and a continued streak of good luck....with the exception of one moment that could jeopardize all of that luck.

Rice started the game off with a home run in the first, but left the game after the third inning with a bruised left hand after fielding a pickoff throw from Max Fried.
 

"I read that the throw was going to going to be low. I thought it was going to be a little lower than it actually was," Rice said. "So I kind of went down quickly like it was going to be in the dirt and then it kind of just stayed up at the end. So I caught it poorly, kind of hit in the palm," read more HERE.

Rice has already had X-rays done, and they have come back negative thankfully, but now what? Deep  bruises like that can linger and that hit on the palm can make it hard to get that good grip on the bat. Any potential missed time from Rice would be a huge void for the Yankees. So far, Rice has a .343 batting average with 12 homers and 27 RBI in 33 games, with 25 starts at first base.


After the game, Rice was already saying he is feeling better, and the Yankees will approach his injury as day-to-day. Right now it sounds like the Yankees have dodged a bullet with Rice and now we all hold our breath and hope this doesn't turn into a bigger thing. We've had relatively good luck so far this season (when you compare every other recent year) with only Giancarlo Stanton being the notable exception. I'd like to keep it at that.

So I'm not gonna expect to see Rice in the lineup today....but I am gonna hope to see him in a game here very soon. Fingers crossed.



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






Sunday, May 3, 2026

VOLPE GONZO


The easiest decision the New York Yankees have made all season finally happened—and yes, it involved sending Anthony Volpe to the minors.

Let’s not pretend this was some bold, galaxy-brain move by the front office. The New York Times called the decision "shocking". The only person who is shocked is Anthony Volpe's daddy.  Trust me.  Every fan knew this was baseball common sense. The kind of move that, had they not made it, would’ve triggered a full-blown Bronx meltdown. We’re talking pitchforks out, talk radio on fire, and Aaron Boone and Brian Cashman getting absolutely roasted like it’s a summer cookout in the bleachers.

Instead, credit where it’s due—they read the room. Barely, but they got there.

The Yankees made the announcement shortly after steamrolling the Baltimore Orioles 11-3 in the Bronx, a game that—conveniently—highlighted exactly why Volpe doesn’t belong anywhere near the big-league lineup right now.

And sure, Boone will step up to the mic eventually and deliver the usual greatest hits: “still rehabbing,” “just needs reps,” “not quite 100%.” You can practically hear it before he says it. But let’s cut through the PR fog.

Meanwhile, José Caballero is doing everything in his power to make this decision permanent. The guy is raking, playing sharp defense, and generally looking like someone who understands the assignment: hit the ball, help the team, don’t make it complicated.

This isn’t a rehab assignment story. This is a performance story. It has to be.

And right now, one guy is producing… and the other is a question mark with a once-promising label that’s starting to peel.

So yes, the Yankees finally did the right thing. Not the flashy thing. Not the hopeful thing. The right thing.

Now the real test?
They stick to it.



THE ONLY DECISION SHOULD BE TO KEEP CABALLERO AT SHORTSTOP


Everyone keeps parroting that the New York Yankees have this “very hard decision” to make on Anthony Volpe. Let’s stop pretending. The decision isn’t hard—it’s just awkward to admit out loud for the Yankees front offce.

Because the truth? The Yankees already know what they’re going to do. They’re bringing Volpe back, plugging him in as the starting shortstop, and hoping—really hoping—that this time the bat shows up, the glove behaves, and the growing pains finally come with a payoff. It’s less a plan and more a wish written on a folded lottery ticket.

And that’s exactly the problem.

This isn’t about disliking Volpe. He was drafted by the Yankees, he wears the uniform, and if you’re a fan, you want him to succeed. That part is easy. But liking the story and believing the production are two different things. The Yankees—and their fans—keep getting sold on effort. You’ve heard it a million times: “He works so hard.” Great. So does everyone. The real follow-up question never gets asked though: what are the results?

Because working hard while spinning your wheels isn’t progress—it’s cardio.

Volpe hasn’t shown enough results. Not in the majors, and not convincingly on this rehab assignment either. Yes, there’s a .280 average floating around, but it’s built on roughly 40 at-bats—barely a sample, more like a suggestion. Zoom in a little closer and it’s not exactly dominant: hitless in a 13–3 win for Somerset the other night, a hit with another strikeout in an 11–0 game for Somerset last night. This is Double-A. He’s supposed to look like a finished product visiting a lower level, not a guy still searching for the instruction manual.

Meanwhile, the major league roster didn’t exactly fall apart without him. In fact, it found a spark. José Caballero has been one of the hottest players on the team since mid-April—hitting, running, creating energy, actually impacting games. That matters. Baseball has always been brutally simple: play the guy who’s producing. Ride the hot hand until it cools, not until a pre-written script says otherwise.

And yet, here we are, bracing for the Yankees to force the narrative again. Because that’s what this feels like: an organization trying to prove it was right about Volpe instead of honestly evaluating what’s in front of them. Fans see it. You can’t sell potential forever without delivering reality.

Here’s the part people don’t want to say out loud: maybe he just hasn’t earned it. And that’s okay. Not every prospect becomes the guy. It doesn’t make him a villain—it just makes him… not the answer.

So why rush him back? He wasn’t fully developed the first time. Keeping him in the minors isn’t punishment—it’s common sense. Let him actually build something resembling consistency. And if an opportunity comes along? Explore it. Trade him for a utility piece, bullpen depth, whatever improves the roster. Holding on just because of draft status is how you stay stuck.

Also, timing matters. His rehab assignment is ending, which forces a decision: bring him up or keep him down. For me, it’s simple—keep him down. Especially when there are already alternatives on the roster, even beyond Caballero, like Ryan McMahon. Why bend over backwards to reinsert someone who hasn’t proven it?

Baseball history is full of reminders that jobs aren’t guaranteed. Wally Pipp sat out with a headache and Lou Gehrig took over for good. Opportunity doesn’t care about prospect rankings or front office narratives.

And here’s one more uncomfortable thought: what if Caballero is just… better? That’s a perfectly reasonable conclusion based on what’s happening on the field.


If Volpe eventually proves he can handle New York—great, try him again. If he can’t, that’s information too. Maybe he fits somewhere else, in a lower-pressure environment, even as a depth piece behind someone like Matt McLain, the second baseman on the Reds.

But forcing him back into the lineup now? That’s not development. That’s denial.

And the worst part? It risks stalling the progress the team is actually making. When something’s working, you don’t “fix” it—you let it run.

And for the record... Wally Pipp? He ended up in Cincinnati after Gehrig took his job. 1926. Baseball's funny sometimes. 



CABALLERO VS. VOLPE BY THEIR ROOKIE NUMBERS ALONE

When you line up the rookie seasons of Anthony Volpe and José Caballero, the surface-level story feels obvious: one was the everyday shortstop for the New York Yankees, the other a versatile piece for the Seattle Mariners. One was marketed as the next face of a franchise; the other was barely mentioned outside of deeper baseball circles.

But once you move past the headlines and dig into what actually happened on the field, the comparison tells a very different story.

Back then they were 2 players on very different paths. Both players were true rookies in 2023, adjusting to major league pitching, speed, and pressure in real time. That matters. Rookie seasons aren’t just about production—they’re about how quickly a player proves they belong.

Volpe was handed the keys to shortstop in New York on Opening Day. That’s not a small thing. The Yankees don’t casually give that position away. From day one, he was positioned as the guy—the next long-term answer in a lineage that carries real weight in that city.

Caballero, meanwhile, carved out his role the harder way. He wasn’t handed a starting job. He moved around the field, filled gaps, and earned playing time through performance rather than expectation. No marketing push. No “next big thing” label. Just production where he could find it.

The Yankees didn’t just promote Volpe—they pushed him. The narrative was clear: homegrown shortstop, future star, cornerstone player. And because of that, he played 159 games. That kind of leash is rare for a rookie, especially one struggling at the plate.


Caballero? 104 games. Fewer opportunities, shorter leash, less margin for error.

So if you’re judging purely by counting stats—home runs, RBIs, total hits—Volpe looks like the clear winner. More games, more chances, more totals.

But that’s where things get misleading.

The numbers that actually matter—the ones that strip away playing time and focus on performance—tell a different story.


Caballero finished his rookie season with a .343 OBP, much higher than Volpe’s .272. That’s not a small gap; that’s the difference between a player who consistently gets on base and one who struggles to do so.

Even more telling. I hate these nerdy stats, but it's worth it here:

  • Caballero posted a 98 wRC+ (essentially league average)
  • Volpe came in around 84 wRC+ (well below average)

That means, relative to the league, Caballero was a more productive hitter—despite fewer games, fewer at-bats, and far less organizational backing.

And then there’s efficiency. Their OPS numbers? Nearly identical. But Caballero reached that level with less playing time and a far better on-base approach. He didn’t need volume to prove value.

Volpe, on the other hand, needed 600+ plate appearances to get there—and still didn’t match Caballero’s effectiveness.

That’s the red flag, but the Yankee front office didn't want you to dig. But this is where context matters.

Volpe wasn’t playing 159 games because he dominated—he played because the Yankees needed him to be the guy. The narrative demanded patience. The investment demanded opportunity.

Caballero had no such safety net.

And yet:

  • He got on base more
  • He matched overall offensive output
  • He contributed elite baserunning (26 steals in limited time)

If you flip their roles—if Caballero gets 600 plate appearances and Volpe is fighting for reps—the conversation might look completely different.

This isn’t about saying Volpe is a bad player. He’s young, talented, and plays an ok defense. There could be a real upside there. But when you compare rookie seasons honestly, without narrative bias, Caballero’s year holds up—and in key areas, surpasses Volpe’s.

He was:

  • More efficient offensively
  • Better at getting on base
  • Just as impactful overall despite fewer opportunities

And he did it without the spotlight, without the hype, and without the organizational push.

Look, the Yankees sold Anthony Volpe as the next great shortstop in New York, and that belief bought him time, reps, and patience.

José Caballero had to earn everything.

And when you strip it down to what actually happened on the field—not the expectations, not the branding, not the market size—the numbers point to a simple truth:

Caballero’s rookie season wasn’t just comparable.

It was the more telling indicator of a player who was already producing at a higher level.



Saturday, May 2, 2026

SCHWARBER & THE BABE


Baseball has a funny way of sneaking history up on you. One minute you’re watching a routine Thursday doubleheader, the next you’re blinking at a stat that makes you do a full-on cartoon double take.

Here it is—the kind of number that deserves a dramatic drumroll:

Through 1,321 MLB games, Babe Ruth smashed 348 home runs.
Through 1,321 MLB games, Kyle Schwarber… hit 350.

Yes, you read that right. The Sultan of Swat has company, and it’s a guy who looks like he could just as easily be grilling burgers at your neighborhood cookout as launching baseballs into orbit.

Let’s set the stage. Ruth isn’t just a legend—he’s the legend, still sitting third all-time with 714 home runs, trailing only Barry Bonds and Hank Aaron. His name isn’t just in the record books—it practically is the record book.

So when Schwarber’s name pops up next to Ruth’s in any statistical sentence, it’s not just notable—it’s borderline absurd in the best way.

And yet, here we are.

On a breezy day at Citizens Bank Park, with the Philadelphia Phillies locked in a tight game against the San Francisco Giants, Schwarber casually did what Schwarber does: he went yard. That swing marked his 350th career home run, delivered with the same no-nonsense energy he brings to every at-bat—step in, grip it, rip it, admire the chaos.

The kicker? He reached that milestone in his 10th season, at age 33, putting him squarely on a trajectory that could see him cruise past 500 if he keeps this pace. That’s not just “pretty good.” That’s “start-clearing-space-in-Cooperstown” territory.

Schwarber’s rise isn’t built on myth or mystique like Ruth’s. There’s no sepia-toned nostalgia, no called shots—just raw power, a sharp eye, and a swing that treats baseballs like they’ve personally offended him. He’s the modern slugger: efficient, fearless, and perfectly comfortable living in the three-true-outcomes era.

But stats like this? They bridge eras. They connect black-and-white legends to high-def heroes. They remind us that while the game evolves, greatness still leaves the same unmistakable mark—over the fence.

So the next time Schwarber digs into the batter’s box, remember: you’re not just watching another at-bat. You’re watching a player who, game for game, kept pace with the most iconic power hitter baseball has ever known.

Not bad for a guy just casually rewriting expectations one moonshot at a time.