Thursday, July 16, 2026

BOONE'S LEGACY IS ONLY ABOUT WINNING REGULAR SEASON GAMES


There was a time when the Yankees measured success with parades. Not playoff appearances. Not Wild Card berths. Not division titles. Championships.

That was the standard George Steinbrenner built. If you didn't win the World Series, you answered for it. There was accountability. There was urgency. There was an understanding that wearing pinstripes came with expectations unlike any other organization in sports.

Fast forward to today, and the standard feels... different. Aaron Boone has been the Yankees' manager since 2018. During that span, the Yankees have won plenty of regular-season games. They've reached the postseason repeatedly. They've had MVP-caliber players, Cy Young-caliber pitchers, and one of the highest payrolls in baseball almost every single season.

And yet... Zero championships. That's not an attack.

That's a fact.

Every October seems to end the same way. The Yankees fall short, the front office talks about what they learned, Boone talks about how close they were, and everyone comes back the following spring saying this year will be different. Eventually, "close" stops meaning anything. Because in New York, banners—not participation trophies—define greatness.


To hear the Yankees' front office tell it, Aaron Boone is exactly the right man for the job. Listen to the organization's messaging, tune into YES broadcasts, scroll through team-controlled social media, and you'll find praise for Boone's calm demeanor, his communication skills, and the culture he has supposedly built.

That's all well and good. But fans see something much simpler. No rings. That's the résumé that matters. Fair or unfair, that's the scoreboard. Now let's talk about accountability.

One of the biggest criticisms Boone has faced over the years isn't simply his bullpen decisions or lineup construction. It's the perception that too many things happen under his watch without meaningful consequences. Take Jazz Chisholm Jr.

Jazz is an electric player. His swagger is part of what makes him special. Baseball needs personalities like his. But when he showed up at the plate with a lollipop in his mouth earlier this season, it became national news. Boone publicly admitted afterward that the stunt "pissed" him off because of the safety concerns. Jazz responded by saying Boone's message was essentially to keep having fun—but to be smarter about it.

That's probably the right response. But it also illustrates the larger conversation surrounding Boone.

Fans don't necessarily question whether Boone likes his players. We really don't care. We question whether he demands enough from them.

There have been too many mental mistakes. Too many sloppy innings. Too many baserunning blunders. Too many games where the Yankees look flat. Is every one of those Boone's fault?

Of course not. But when those issues become recurring themes year after year, eventually the manager has to own part of the culture. Then there's Brian Cashman. Cashman deserves enormous credit for being a part of building championship teams in the late 1990s and early 2000s. No one can erase that.

But it's also fair to ask whether this version of the Yankees has become too comfortable with falling short. The Yankees have invested hundreds of millions of dollars. They've retained stars. They've traded prospects. They've changed coaches. They've adjusted philosophies. Yet the one thing that hasn't changed is the leadership at the very top. At some point, every organization has to ask itself a difficult question:

If the results never change, why should the decision-makers? This isn't about calling Boone a terrible baseball mind. I mean, he pretty much is but this post is about something different. It's about not closing. BOONE CAN'T CLOSE.

Sometimes a clubhouse simply needs a different voice. Sometimes a franchise chasing greatness has to stop accepting "good enough." Because let's be honest.


When fans think about Joe Torre, they think about championships. When they think about Casey Stengel, they think about championships. When they think about Joe Girardi, they think about the 2009 championship

No one is going to think about Aaron Boone being a great manager. No one.  What will they remember?

A lot of regular-season wins.

The dynasty years weren't built because the Yankees were satisfied with being competitive. They were built because ownership demanded excellence and refused to confuse potential with accomplishment.

Can the Yankees get back to that level? Absolutely.

Aaron Judge is still one of the best players on the planet. Ben Rice has emerged as a legitimate star. The core has talent.

But talent alone doesn't build dynasties. Leadership does. Vision does. Accountability does.

So, here's the question every Yankees fan should be asking as another postseason approaches:

If this season ends the same way the others have, and I truly believe it will, is it finally time for Brian Cashman and Aaron Boone to step aside?

Or will the Yankees once again convince themselves that next year will be different? Because eventually, "next year" becomes "another year."

And that's not the Yankee Way.



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