Tuesday, May 6, 2025

VOLPE ISN'T JETER...


It's the kid vs. the Captain and the Captain wins hands down. That's how I see it anyway. 

Look, it's hard to wear the pinstripes. It's harder still to wear them as a shortstop. And hardest of all? Wearing them after Derek Jeter.

Anthony Volpe was supposed to be The Next. The New. The Revival. A homegrown kid with grit and glove, built from Jersey dirt and dreams, anointed by the Yankee machine as the reincarnation of Captain Clutch himself. But three years into his Major League career, Volpe’s star has flickered where Jeter’s once blazed.

Let's get one thing straight: comparing any young player to a Hall of Famer is unfair. The Yankees blew that. But in New York, we don’t do fair—we do rings, batting titles, and late October heroics. And when we look at Volpe next to Jeter, the difference is clear, stark, and not particularly flattering for the youngster.

The numbers don't lie. Let’s start with the cold, hard stats from each player's first three years:

Derek Jeter (1995–1997):

  • .314 batting average

  • .370 OBP

  • .430 SLG

  • 19 HR

  • 152 RBI

  • 58 SB

Anthony Volpe (2023–2025):

  • .213 batting average

  • .293 OBP

  • .425 SLG

  • 36 HR

  • 112 RBI

  • 51 SB

Volpe's power numbers are fine. His speed is solid. But that batting average? In a word: brutal. Yankee fans who know the game understand that batting average still matters. It's about consistent production, hitting behind runners, setting the table. Jeter was a master of that. Volpe, so far, has been an inconsistent bat with flashes of pop but gaping holes in his swing.

October 13, 2001. ALDS Game 3. Jeremy Giambi is barreling toward home. The throw from the outfield misses the cutoff man. And out of nowhere, here comes Jeter, sprinting across the diamond, bare handing the ball and flipping it to Jorge Posada for one of the most heads-up plays in postseason history. That wasn’t luck. That was instinct. That was preparation. That was Derek Jeter.

Now, look at Anthony Volpe in key moments. Just the other day in that game against Tampa Bay, Volpe committed a costly throwing error after an awkward arm angle follow-through, leading to the go-ahead run. Not a sin in and of itself—mistakes happen—but Volpe’s error total over his first three seasons? 35. That led all MLB shortstops during that span. A supposed defensive wizard shouldn’t be leading the league in errors. Golden Glove or not, the consistency hasn't been there.

Jeter had the gaze of a veteran at 22. He carried himself like a ten-year pro the moment he stepped into the clubhouse. Volpe? There’s a boyish energy, yes. But at times, it feels more like immaturity than charisma. Bad baserunning decisions, frustrated at-bats, and defensive lapses don’t scream “future captain.” They scream “still figuring it out.”

And that’s okay—if you’re in Kansas City. In New York? It’s a problem.

By year three, Jeter had won a World Series, Rookie of the Year, and a linchpin in a Yankees dynasty. He wasn’t the most talented player on the team, but he was the heartbeat. He played the game the right way, with a surgical focus and selflessness that elevated everyone around him.

Volpe? He’s still trying to get on base consistently.

General Manager Brian Cashman has stood by Volpe, chalking up struggles to “growing pains.” So has Boone, but Boone isn't smart. But maybe Cashman is right. But if the Yankees are serious about winning, they need more than potential. They need polish.

Volpe still has time this is true. At just 24, he’s got tools, work ethic, and a fan base that wants to believe. But the next few seasons will define whether he becomes a staple or a stopgap. Jeter was a once-in-a-generation leader. Volpe, to this point, is a promising athlete trying to find his groove. Not every kid can become The Captain.

For now, Derek Jeter’s shadow remains cast long and heavy over the Yankee infield. And Anthony Volpe? He’s still just trying to step into the light.

My opinion of course.



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