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.

































