The Yankees currently have a catching situation that can best be described as a three-ring circus — and unfortunately, nobody's laughing in the Bronx.
Two struggling catchers are on the major league roster, and the third, Austin Wells, is working his way back from the injured list. Wells was sidelined earlier this month with cervical headaches just before a series against the Red Sox, leaving J.C. Escarra and Ali Sánchez to handle duties behind the plate.
The problem? Neither has provided much reason for optimism.
Then again, neither has Wells.
And that's where the real blame belongs: the Yankees front office.
Virtually every Yankees fan saw this coming. The organization entered the season acting as if a collection of backup-caliber catchers would somehow turn into a strength. For one of the most successful and storied franchises in sports, settling for mediocrity behind the plate feels like an odd strategy. If the Yankees thought fans would embrace "good enough," they badly misread the room.
At some point, Wells will return. The question isn't whether he'll be back — it's how long the Yankees can afford to wait for him to figure things out.
If the headaches were contributing to his struggles, which I believe is why he's out, perhaps a healthy Wells can turn things around. But if he returns looking like the same hitter we've seen all season, the Yankees may be forced to confront a problem they never expected to have when spring training opened.
Wells has been one of the least productive hitters on the roster, posting a miserable .166/.278/.255 slash line. Simply put, the Yankees cannot continue getting this little offense from a position that already lacks impact around the league.
That's why trade speculation is beginning to heat up.
One name that continues to surface is Orioles star catcher Adley Rutschman. The fit is obvious. Baltimore has elite catching prospect Samuel Basallo waiting in the wings, while the Yankees are desperately searching for offensive production behind the plate.
Rutschman would instantly become the Yankees' best catcher. Through 51 games, he's hitting .265/.343/.481 with eight home runs and 15 doubles. With Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton currently sidelined, adding another legitimate bat has become an even greater priority.
Of course, talent is only half the equation.
Would the Orioles really trade a star catcher to their biggest division rival? Would the Yankees be willing to pay the enormous price it would take to make such a deal happen?
That's where this fantasy starts to get complicated.
The Yankees clearly need help at catcher. Everyone can see it. The bigger question is whether they have the courage to admit they got it wrong and make a bold move before the trade deadline.
For now, Yankees fans are left watching three catchers struggle and wondering how a franchise with championship aspirations ended up here in the first place.
Stay tuned.



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