Something feels a miss to me.
Look, Anthony Volpe’s shoulder has officially become the Yankees’ favorite bedtime story. Every time he looks lost at the plate or boots another routine play, somebody inside the organization whispers “well, maybe the shoulder…” like fans haven’t been watching this disaster unfold for years.
But Aaron Boone accidentally destroyed that excuse himself. Boone admitted today Volpe had “zero issues” with the shoulder during the final stretch of rehab. Zero. None. So enough already. The shoulder didn’t make Anthony Volpe a bad hitter. The shoulder didn’t make him overrated defensively. And the shoulder certainly didn’t force the Yankees to keep pretending he’s a cornerstone player when he keeps performing like a replacement-level stopgap.
The real issue feels much uglier. Anthony Volpe just is not a good baseball player.
And the people responsible for pushing this kid into untouchable status deserve to be called out directly. it is my opinion that Matt Hyde should be under serious scrutiny for this scouting miss. Yes, Hyde gets praise for finding later-round gems like Ben Rice and Cam Schlittler. Great. Nobody’s denying that. But when it comes to Volpe, Hyde sold the Yankees a fantasy.
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| Matt Hyde |
And honestly, the details surrounding this whole thing are bizarre. We did alittle digging. Volpe himself talked openly about the “bond” Hyde and the late Kelly Rodman formed with the Volpe parents. Not professional respect. Not admiration for the player. A “bond.” Damon Oppenheimer reportedly spent significant time around Volpe’s parents at tournaments and showcases too.
Why? Seriously, why? This is Major League Baseball scouting, not family counseling.
Scouts are supposed to evaluate talent objectively. Front office executives are supposed to make cold baseball decisions. Instead, this whole thing sounds like Yankees officials emotionally attached themselves to a local kid and completely lost perspective. Somewhere along the way, they stopped acting like evaluators and started acting like proud family friends rooting for the kid to succeed no matter what the evidence showed.
That’s dangerous. Because once emotion enters the equation, honesty leaves the room. And that’s exactly what happened here with Anthony Volpe.
The Yankees became so invested in the “New Jersey kid living the dream” narrative that they ignored the glaring flaws right in front of them. The weak contact. The inconsistent glove. The inability to adjust. The complete lack of impact for long stretches. They fell in love with the story instead of the player.
Now the organization is trapped protecting its own ego. Volpe returned against Baltimore today and immediately went 0-for-3 with an error. That wasn’t some shocking off day. That was the same Anthony Volpe Yankees fans have watched for years now — overmatched at the plate and unreliable in the field despite endless hype telling everyone otherwise.
Yet the Yankees still hand him the shortstop job automatically, even with better options available. Why is Ryan McMahon not out there even though he is stronger defensively? Why is Max Schuemann, who is actually hitting .273, treated like an afterthought while Volpe gets endless chances to fail upward? Boone pushes this kid out there constantly. Why?
Because admitting Volpe is a bust means admitting Hyde and Oppenheimer badly misjudged him, and the Yankees organization hates admitting failure more than it hates losing games.
So look, the shoulder excuse? That's dead now. Boone killed it himself. So, what’s left? Just the uncomfortable truth nobody inside Yankee Stadium wants to say publicly:
Anthony Volpe isn’t struggling because he was hurt. He’s struggling because the Yankees overrated him from the very beginning, and the scouts who got emotionally invested in him helped create one of the most overprotected disappointments this franchise has seen in years.
































