But can they do it in the playoffs?
The New York Yankees have come flying out of the gate in 2026, sitting at 6–1 as of April 4 and planting themselves atop the AL East. Early on, it’s been a mix of dominant starting pitching, better depth, and—shockingly—some aggressive base running.
Through the first stretch, Yankees starters have been nearly flawless, allowing just two earned runs. Young arms like Cam Schlittler and Will Warren have stepped up and delivered, helping stabilize things while the bigger names work back into form. Max Fried already has two wins, including a shutout to open the season, while Schlittler made noise immediately with eight strikeouts in his debut.
Offensively, this team looks more alive. In their home opener, they went a perfect 5-for-5 in stolen base attempts, with Jazz Chisholm Jr., José Caballero, and Aaron Judge all getting involved.
At the plate, Ben Rice has been red hot, hitting .409 with two homers and eight RBIs through seven games. Judge added a blast in the home opener, and Giancarlo Stanton is doing what he does best—four home runs in just 22 plate appearances.
And for once, health hasn’t been a disaster. The Yankees actually made it through spring training with most of their core intact, which feels borderline historic at this point.
But let’s not get carried away.
Because the real question isn’t what they’re doing now—it’s whether they can keep doing it when it actually matters.
The Yankees recently highlighted Aaron Boone reaching 700 managerial wins. That’s nice. Truly. I had my own fun changing it to what fans really care about. Because, quite frankly, the dude can't close.
For this fanbase, numbers like that don’t move the needle unless there’s a championship attached. Boone wasn’t brought in to collect regular-season wins—he was brought in to win a World Series. Until that happens, milestones feel hollow.
A strong April isn’t something to celebrate—it’s the baseline. This is what the Yankees are supposed to look like. Fans aren’t asking for a good start. They’re asking for a strong finish.
Even when Schlittler says he enjoys the hate, it’s hard not to smirk a little. It’s easy to embrace that mentality in April. Let’s see how that plays in the dog days of summer. No disrespect—but we’ve all seen this before. Different year, same script.
General manager Brian Cashman continues to defend the roster, insisting it’s championship caliber. But as Ian O'Connor wrote in his recent article:
“I’ve been openly willing to challenge anybody that we don’t have a championship-caliber roster and team,” Cashman said in January, when he was already tired of complaints that he was bringing back the same squad that didn’t even reach the ALCS, complaints later notarized by Aaron Judge himself.
“Brutal” and “pretty tough to watch” read the captain’s scouting reports on his team’s early inaction in free agency.
“I’m like, ‘Man, we’re the New York Yankees.’”
And that speaks to the essence of where this team stands right now.
Because the truth is, the Yankees aren’t really the Yankees anymore."
And that’s exactly what we’ve been saying all along here at Bleeding Yankee Blue.
This isn’t a top-tier roster. It’s a collection of good players. The front office leans too heavily on numbers and not nearly enough on the tangibles—the things you can actually see and feel on the field. The edge. The instincts. The moments.
That’s baseball.
Numbers help, sure. But baseball isn’t built on spreadsheets—it’s built on feel.
So yes, the Yankees look dominant in April. But it’s hard to believe that holds up in June. Or August. I really hope so, but I am a realist.
Look, I hope they prove everyone wrong, me included. But I’m already thinking ahead… and the Yankees don’t. And let me be clear, it's not the players... it's the front office that makes bad decisions, Boone included.
And that’s exactly the problem.

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