Showing posts with label Ronald acuna jr. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ronald acuna jr. Show all posts

Sunday, June 29, 2025

WE'RE HEARING A RONALD ACUNA JR. WHISPER

Every damn day I’m on the hunt—scouring the internet like a lunatic, clicking links I probably shouldn’t, dodging hot takes that should be illegal—just to bring YOU the good stuff. The real stuff. The stuff Yankee fans crave. While Bleeding Yankee Blue might not have its name etched in gold atop the baseball media mountain, let’s be honest: we’re unique, smart, sarcastic, and absolutely required reading for the pinstripe-obsessed.


And today? Oh baby, I found a nugget so juicy, it might just shake the Bronx.

Ronald Acuña Jr. to the Yankees? Interesting. With the sting of missing a World Series in 2024 still fresh, and Juan Soto ghosting the Bronx for some weird blue-and-orange alternate reality, the Yankees are trying to keep the engine running. They're sitting decent right now—47-35—and the bats look like they need caffeine and a stern talking-to.

So, what do you do when Judge is carrying the entire team on his back like a human freight train and Giancarlo Stanton has only played eight damn games? You call Atlanta, and you ask about their MVP.

The outfield right now—Judge, Bellinger, Grisham—is doing fine. But "fine" doesn’t win championships. Fans know that, why doesn't Aaron Boone? We want firepower. We want fear. We want pitchers across the league peeing their pants when they see your lineup card. Acuña Jr. is that guy.

Sure, he's missed a ton of time—just 49 games in 2024 and barely 30 so far in 2025—but when he does play? He's still electric. MVP-level explosive. And here's where it gets interesting: that injury history might finally make him... available.

And that’s where the Yankees should strike. Think about it—Acuña has only played more than 119 games twice in eight years. That’s a red flag for some GMs. But for Brian Cashman? That’s a green light bargain. The Braves, by the way, somehow managed an 89-73 season in 2024 with Acuña basically a spectator. They're deep. They're flexible. They can afford to listen.

If the Yanks can package some combo of competent vets and a solid prospect or two, this could be real. Like, actually real. This is the moment. Don’t wait. Don’t overthink.  We’re trying to win a damn ring while Aaron Judge is in his absolute peak—and adding Acuña would be flipping the script in a way that screams, “We’re going for it. Right now.”

Imagine Acuña Jr. in that short porch? Imagine him and Judge back-to-back? That’s not a lineup—it’s a crime scene.

So yeah, Bleeding Yankee Blue might not be your traditional news source, but we’re finding nuggets. We find these stories. We talk straight. We don’t sugarcoat. We don’t play nice. And when something seismic is brewing—we bring it right to your screen with a smirk and a swagger.

Bookmark us. Check in daily. You’ll be smarter for it.



Wednesday, June 7, 2023

"WE CAN'T REPLACE HIM" ATTITUDE PROVES YANKS NOT EQUIPPED WITHOUT JUDGE


Aaron Judge will be out for "weeks".  Because of that, the feeling around Yankeeland has suddenly become gloomy.  Bob Klapisch writes a great column about life without Judge today. In the headline, "It's not pretty" should be enough to want you to dive in.  Bottom line, reading it, you feel like doubt has entered that clubhouse.  There's a void, a dark cloud lingering.  As Bob says "It's grim enough to make Aaron Boone wake up in a cold sweat."  There's some truth to that.  Boone doesn't understand or navigate well when he's challenged as a manager. It's his biggest flaw. Not only will it be a test for the team, it will be a test for our manager, who is unqualified and unsure of himself.  Yelling at umpires does not make you a leader... it makes you a whiner and that's where we're at with this guy. So, in short, with Aaron Judge out, this will be a wacky ride.

With Judge out for what looks like weeks, the Yankees need to step it up, that's the bottom line.  Getting a quote from Josh Donaldson say "we can't replace him" worries me. Look, the Yankees just have to play hard. It wasn't great last night losing to the White Sox 3-2, but maybe that was the "initial shock" of not having Judge there.  It's one game, we need to improve on that.

But I guess the bigger question is these athletes and how they play the game. If I'm paying my hard earned money to see these athletes work their tails off, I really can't blame Aaron Judge for making a fantastic catch and then slamming into a wall to do it. He'd tell you he'd do it again. It's what athletes should do.  


Reminds me a lot of the Robinson Cano debate about longevity in baseball. Top athletes and playing hard, not jogging to first.  It was years ago now that that idiot Peter Keating of ESPN the magazine tried desparaging me writing that my opinion as a fan and journalist was twisted and wrong.  His solution was let them play 162 games at 50% so they can play for a long, long time.  


Everyone knew looking at Cano he was always looking for shortcuts except Keating. In the end, Keating was wrong. Cano banged around the league for a few more years and was even caught using PEDs. He was laughed out of baseball, and Keating was mocked on Bleeding Yankee Blue for years to follow and I will never stop. Dummy.  

But that "not playing hard" narrative continues on Pinstripe Alley, a site I admire, but the thinking is crazy to me:

"I’m not going to file this into the column of “Judge is injury prone,” but it is perhaps illustrative of why guys like Ronald Acuña Jr. and Bryce Harper have largely stopped trying in the outfield. These kinds of players are just so valuable at the plate that the runs they cede defensively are made up tenfold by the runs they produce by being healthy and at the plate. It’s impossible to tell a pro athlete not to try hard, but maybe Judge should have gone less than 100 mph trying to make that play."

The last statement is odd to me. Every athlete knows you can't stop momentum and going "100 mph trying to make a play" sometimes isn't a choice but exactly what it is, momentum.  But more to that, athletes should never stop trying. Athletes need to continue to play hard and no doubt Judge will too. That's what makes him great and the sport amazing. I actually think for the Yankees this is less about Judge's injury and more about how the Yankees and Boone will react.  They NEED to step up. Boone NEEDS to make hard decisions and navigate smarter than the nit-wit he is.  Boone's about automatic, and now he actually has to think.

Can the Yankees do it? Yes, but it won't be easy.

Get well soon Aaron, you will be missed. No doubt Yankee fans will rally. But can your manager? Serious question. Sadly, I don't know the answer.





Tuesday, July 9, 2019

A MET WON SOMETHING


No big surprise here, because Pete Alonso is a beast, but last night he won the home run derby. Pretty impressive.

SNY writes:

"The Mets slugger credited his strategy of conserving his energy throughout the night so he would not be tired come the final round. 'Yeah, survive and advance,' Alonso said at post-Derby press conference. 


'Go in with a killer instinct. It doesn't matter how many you hit, you just need to have more than the guy you're facing.'  Alonso did exactly that, hitting just one more home run than the hitter he was paired against in each round. 

In the first round, Alonso hit 14 to Carlos Santana's 13 and then Alonso hit 20 to Ronald Acuña Jr.'s 19 in the semifinal. Both times Alonso had earned the extra 30 seconds and both times he did not need to use it. 

'I'm really happy I didn't have to swing a lot going in the extra rounds,' he said. 'That's the one thing most of my teammates .... pretty much all were saying conserve as much energy as possible, stay hydrated, keep body loose.'"

Congrats to Alonso. Maybe now the Mets can celebrate something for a moment.