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Yankees Thoughts: Offended by This Offense

The Yankees produced two hits over the last 17 innings of their series with the Athletics. Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. The Athletics showed up in New York giving up nearly six runs a game and the Yankees eked out a win on Tuesday because one of their bench bats hit two home runs, then they got one-hit from the second inning on in a loss on Wednesday and got one-hit in a 1-0 loss on Thursday.

2. The ‘Run It Back’ offense is doing exactly what I feared it would. It’s heavily reliant on the top of the order carrying it, and when the top of the order isn’t hitting (as it currently isn’t) then the Yankees can’t win. At 8-4, the start of the season looks great, but the Yankees are a Paul Goldschmidt home run, an eighth-inning rally against the Marlins and the Amed Rosario game from it being much different.

3. Getting one-hit from the second inning on in Wednesday’s loss was embarrassing enough, but the Yankees took embarrassing to a new level on Thursday when they were one-hit for the entire nine innings, and if not for a seventh-inning single by Ben Rice, the Yankees may have been no-hit by Jeffrey Springs.

The Yankees stocked their bench with right-handed bats that have a history of destroying left-handed pitching, so that they couldn’t be shut down by left-handers anymore. So much for that. All of the platoon bats were stifled by Springs. The Yankees have faced two left-handed starters this season in Springs and Robbie Ray and both have shut down the platoon bats.

4. It’s been October and postseason weather in the Bronx since the Yankees returned home last week and they have played like they do in October and the postseason. Trent Grisham and Jazz Chisholm are nowhere to be found, Aaron Judge hasn’t done anything since his first-inning home run against the Marlins a week ago, the bottom of the order remains automatic outs, the starting pitching has been spotty, the bullpen shaky and Aaron Boone is making questionable choices.

5. “Look, we got shut down today,” Boone said.

Actually, you got shut down on Wednesday and Thursday and everyone aside from Rosario got shut down on Tuesday.

“We didn’t generate much,” Boone said. “We have a few guys struggling to get on track a little bit.”

A few guys? Let’s check in on each player’s OPS so far this season with their career OPS in parentheses.

Ben Rice: 1.155 (.803)
Paul Goldschmidt: .967 (.882)
Amed Rosario: .941 (.709)
Giancarlo Stanton: .811 (.873)
Aaron Judge: .758 (1.025)
Cody Bellinger: .746 (.817)
Trent Grisham: .597 (.719)
Jazz Chisholm: .511 (.764)
Austin Wells: .486 (.709)
Jose Caballero: .362 (.646)
Ryan McMahon: .319 (.735)
J.C. Escarra: .100 (.579)
Randal Grichuk: .000 (.762)

Just a few guys!

“Hopefully, we’ll get things going,” Boone said.

“Hopefully?” Boone is one to tell you they will get things going. That a corner will be turned. That everything is always right in front of them. Now he’s resorting to “hopefully” after 12 games? That’s not a great sign.

6. Boone talked about the weather in New York impacting the offense. I guess the A’s were playing in different weather when they were batting. While the A’s may have not been lighting up the scoreboard with runs, they were still able to generate hits. They outhit the Yankees 17-5 in the last two games of the series and 16-2 from the second inning of Wednesday through the end of Thursday.

7. “I can’t feel my hands right now,” Chisholm said. “And when you can’t feel your hands, it’s hard to swing.”

Chisholm also talked about how he told the media last year he isn’t good until the weather warms up.

“I’m not using that as an excuse,” Chisholm said.

Sounds like an excuse to me.

“I said the same thing last year,” Chisholm said. “As soon as the weather heats up, I heat up. That’s what it is.”

The Yankees play half of their games in New York and New York weather is typically cold for all of April and sometimes most of May. They plan to play games in October when it’s also very cold. So Chisholm is saying he’s worthless for at least the first month of the season at home and also in the postseason since it’s cold during both months. Yes, please give him a long-term contract after this season.

8. Ryan Weathers (8 IP, 7 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 0 BB, 7 K) was great for the first time as a Yankee, but his superb outing was wasted by the offense. At least he was able to give the bullpen a break since no starter had given any real length over the last week and the bullpen is fatigued and showing it.

9. The loss on Thursday moved the Yankees to 0-4 in one-run games this season and 8-0 in all other games. I’m sure it’s just a coincidence that this team, which lacks smart, situational hitters, has a shaky bullpen and has a manager in his ninth season of having in-game difficulties is 0-4 in one-run games. Just bad luck!

10. The Yankees head to Tampa where the games are played inside in a controlled environment. So the “Boohoo, it’s cold!” excuse is gone for the next three days. If the Yankees’ bats can’t wake up at Tropicana Field, they won’t have Mother Nature to blame.

The Rays are starting Steven Matz on Friday and Shane McClanahan on Sunday, so that’s two more lefties for the Yankees’ righty-heavy lineup to show they can actually hit left-handed pitching. Luis Gil will make his season debut on Friday after being left out of the rotation and off the Opening Day roster. If he wants to remain in the rotation ahead of Weathers and Will Warren when Carlos Rodon and Gerrit Cole are healthy (and if everyone else remains healthy) then pitching well immediately would be a good idea.

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Yankees Thoughts: Roster Deficiencies on Display of Late

The Yankees gave a complete losing effort on Wednesday and lost 3-2 to the A’s. Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. The Yankees had a 1-0 lead with the bases loaded and one out against former Yankee Luis Severino (who they have destroyed twice in two starts since leaving the organization) in the first inning on Wednesday night. It looked like the game could quickly become a laugher. It didn’t. The Yankees scored one more run in the inning and then only produced one more hit for the rest of the game in an eventual 3-2 loss to the Athletics.

2. It was a dismal offensive performance, but nothing uncommon to this team this season. Yes, the Yankees are 8-3 with the best record in the American League and tied for the best record in baseball, but as I have written many times in these Thoughts, when I write about the Yankees, it’s not simply based on the last game or the last week, it’s with the big picture in mind. And right now, the big-picture perspective for this offense is why the ‘Run It Back’ lineup construction kept me up many nights this offseason.

3. It’s not good that Amed Rosario hit as many home runs in three at-bats on Tuesday as Trent Grisham, Cody Bellinger, Giancarlo Stanton, Jazz Chisholm, Austin Wells, Ryan McMahon and Jose Caballero have combined for this season. I’m not worried about Bellinger or Stanton finding their power. I’m very worried about Chisholm’s mental state as an impending free agent and a player who says he’s chasing a 50/50 season. I’m very worried about Grisham who was paid $22 million because of one outlier season. I’m worried that the Yankees’ plan to hope Wells (and Anthony Volpe when he returns) could take the next step offensively isn’t working out and that the team’s internal belief they could be the ones to unlock McMahon as a hitter was a foolish task to take on.

4. McMahon isn’t just bad, he’s pretty much the worst hitter in baseball right now. There are 256 players in the majors with at least 30 plate appearances this season and McMahon ranks 255th in batting average, 255th in slugging percentage, 251st in OPS and 250th in strikeout percentage. (Stat provided by Katie Sharp.) McMahon is 2-for-the-season. Two! It’s not much better for the other guys at the bottom of the order either: Chisholm has eight hits, Caballero has six, Wells has five and J.C. Escarra has zero. ZERO! And yet, in the Yankees’ last two losses (on Sunday and Wednesday), Escarra was allowed to hit in the bottom of the ninth in one-run games. But Escarra aside, of all the automatic outs in the Yankees’ lineup, right now McMahon is the most automatic.

“If I knew, I don’t think I’d be in the slow start,” McMahon said after he went 0-for-2 with a walk and two strikeouts on Wednesday. “I’m grinding. I’m not happy about it.”

I’m not mad at McMahon for being unable to hit because that’s who he has always been. He didn’t ask to be traded to the Yankees. He doesn’t put himself in the lineup every day. He has come to the plate 4,042 times in the regular season over his decade-long career and is a .238 hitter, who has been nine percent worse than league average during that time. He’s never been able to hit, so while he’s been worse this season than at any other point in his career, he’s not going to suddenly figure it out and become even an average hitter. At some point he will do better than he is now as the worst hitter in baseball, but his ceiling is that of a below-league-average hitter.

What I am mad about is that he will be given a frustratingly-long leash because he’s a veteran, he’s making $16 million this season and the Yankees are stubborn about personnel choices that make their trade and free-agent choices look bad. Rosario could start hitting like Judge when he plays (the MVP version of Judge, not the version of Judge we have seen this year) and it wouldn’t matter. McMahon is going to play. Even though I thought Boone would bench Rosario after his two-homer game for McMahon on Wednesday, even Boone knew he couldn’t do that. So instead, he benched Caballero and put McMahon right back in there to do nothing.

This isn’t an “It’s early!” or “It’s only been 11 games!” case either. You can use that for explaining why Judge hasn’t looked like himself or why Stanton only has one home run. It’s not a valid reason for McMahon or the rest of the bottom of the order sucking. They have always sucked! This isn’t small-sample-size noise. This is who they are. The Yankees believed they could be better, and they aren’t.

5. The Yankees losing two of their last three and needing late-game rallies to avoid additional losses on Friday and Tuesday isn’t all on the offense. It’s on the starting pitching too. Ryan Weathers was bad (for the second time in as many Yankees starts) on Friday, Max Fried struggled against a weak Marlins offense on Sunday, Will Warren once again couldn’t give length on Wednesday and it took Cam Schlittler 84 pitches to get through five innings on Tuesday. The starters need to be better because over the last week their lack of length is forcing the Bullpen of Question Marks to be overworked and it’s showing. After pitching in multiple games in the World Baseball Classic and then being needed for nearly two 40-pitch saves in the last week, David Bednar is struggling to put away hitters. He’s been shaky this season and on Wednesday he allowed the A’s to break the 2-2 tie in the ninth.

“I was able to get ahead of guys, but I wasn’t able to put them away,” Bednar said. “It can’t happen.”

6. There is very little trust in the bullpen right now. I don’t trust Bednar because he’s been overworked over the last month. I don’t trust Camilo Doval because he’s been untrustworthy since the moment he became a Yankee. I don’t trust Fernando Cruz because he could strike out the side on nine pitches or walk the bases loaded on 12. I trust Tim Hill the most and Brent Headrick the second most. That’s not a great place to be.

7. It’s also on the defense. The Yankees will tell you Escarra could start for a lot of other teams in the league even though he can’t. Yes, he’s so good that the Yankees were OK with sending him down for a lot of last season and going with Rice as their backup catcher. He’s so good that he’s hitless this season and takes swings like he’s blindfolded. On Wednesday, not only did he put another 0-for, but he was unable to block a Warren breaking ball in the dirt that led to the A’s tying the game.

Rice, who has looked much better in the field this season, looked like his old self on Wednesday. He booted a routine ground ball, couldn’t pick a ball that any major-league first baseman should be able to pick and also dropped a pickoff throw with the runner caught leaving early.

Add in the couple of miscues from Caballero at short so far, McMahon’s new habit of throwing every ball in the dirt to first and Chisholm’s nonchalant play last Friday (which he negated with his amazing diving catch on Wednesday) and you have the type of defensive baseball the Yankees have always played during the Boone era.

8. Yes, the Yankees are 8-3. Yes, they are still waiting for Judge to really get going and for Stanton to start hitting the ball over the wall. Yes, they are getting closer to having Carlos Rodon and Gerrit Cole in the rotation. But there are still a lot of flaws on this team. Flaws that existed last season, weren’t addressed in the offseason and haven’t gotten better this season. Even when Judge and Stanton get going (and hopefully Grisham and Chisholm too), the bottom of the order is still going to be a problem. Even when Rodon and Cole come back, the trustworthy options in the bullpen still won’t exist. Again, it’s not early and it’s not only 11 games because when you run it back with the same team from one year to the next, one year to the next becomes a continuation, not something new.

9. The Yankees will face their first left-handed starter on Thursday since last Tuesday in Seattle. That means the righty-heavy lineup will be used. Boone didn’t come close to using the best possible lineup I provided on Wednesday to face Severino, but here’s the best possible lineup to go against Jeffery Springs on Thursday.

Amed Rosario, 3B
Aaron Judge, RF
Cody Bellinger, CF
Giancarlo Stanton, DH
Paul Goldschmidt, 1B
Randal Grichuk, LF
Jazz Chisholm, 2B
Jose Caballero, SS
Austin Wells, C

(In reality, Boone will use Goldschmidt to lead off instead of Rosario.)

10. Weathers gets the ball for the third time as a Yankee. He has done nothing to prove he should keep his rotation spot once Rodon is ready, and I don’t have high expectations for him on Thursday. I don’t have any expectations for him as a hard-thrower who has no idea where the ball is going when it leaves his hand. It’s going to be cold again like it was in his start on Friday, which clearly rattled him, and the A’s have a lineup that can make you pay if you’re not careful. It’s going to be a tough rubber game to win before the Yankees head to Tampa.

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Yankees Thoughts: A New Third Baseman?

The Yankees beat the A’s 5-3 because of two Amed Rosario home runs. Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. Through 10 games this season, Aaron Boone has pushed the right offensive lineup change button twice, which I think equals his total from his first eight seasons as manager.

In the fifth game of the season, Boone gave Giancarlo Stanton the day off against George Kirby in Seattle despite Stanton being 10-for-20 at the time. Boone played Paul Goldschmidt and hit him fifth in the lineup even though one of the best right-handed starters in the game was on the mound. It was an odd decision since Goldschmidt has been bad against righties for a long time now and because Boone chose not to play Goldschmidt against Tyler Mahle four days earlier, a lesser right-hander than Kirby and one Goldschmidt has absolutely owned in his career. Goldschmidt looked overmatched against Kirby in his first two at-bats — striking out both times — before hitting a long, three-run home run in his third at-bat, which was the difference in a Yankees win.

On Tuesday against the Athletics, Boone started Amed Rosario over Ryan McMahon at third base despite the right-handed Aaron Civale starting. Rosario hit a solo home run in his first at-bat to give the Yankees a 1-0 lead and hit a go-ahead, three-run home run in the eighth inning to carry the Yankees to a 5-3 win.

2. The three-run blast came against former Yankee Mark Leiter Jr. who owed the Yankees a meltdown like that (and a few more) for his performance as a Yankee over the last two seasons. It felt really good to be on the positive end of a Leiter Jr. appearance, especially one that decided the game.

“Although I’m not playing every day, I try to not let that affect me mentally,” Rosario said. “Over the years, I’ve been able to create a routine to help me do my job.”

3. McMahon was on the bench because he has been atrocious this season, going 2-for-23 with 11 strikeouts. He drove in two runs on Opening Day with a seeing-eye single and hasn’t done anything since. Even his defense has been shaky with nearly every throw of his across the infield bouncing in the dirt. But all Yankees fans know how Boone and the team operates and you can bet McMahon will be back in the lineup on Wednesday and Rosario — the hero from Tuesday — will be back on the bench.

4. Rosario should continue to play until he stops playing well because that’s how playing time should work and be earned. Boone mentioned “competition” being “a good thing” after the win, but we all know it’s bullshit. He said the same thing last September about shortstop and then Jose Caballero doubled Anthony Volpe’s OPS for the month and still found himself on the bench for the entire postseason. The Yankees think they can be the ones to fix McMahon at the plate (they aren’t) like they always think they can fix everyone and McMahon makes $16 million this season and Rosario makes $2.5 million. That’s why Rosario will go back to not playing and McMahon will go right back into the lineup as if he isn’t one of the worst everyday bats in the majors.

5. Cam Schlittler allowed his first runs of the season in what was his shortest start of the season: 5 IP, 5 H, 3 R, 3 ER, 0 BB, 7 K. (Still no walks this year.) Schlittler retired the first six A’s of the game with three strikeouts, but ran into trouble in the third after a leadoff, swinging-bunt single, a line-drive single and a two-strike sacrifice bunt put runners on second and third with one out. The A’s then went double, strikeout, double against Schlittler and took a 3-1 lead. Schlittler kept the damage there and retired six of the next seven batters to end his night with a season-high 84 pitches. The combination of Jake Bird, Brent Headrick, Fernando Cruz and David Bednar threw four scoreless innings in relief and the Yankees improved to 8-2 on the season.

6. Rosario had the two home runs, Aaron Judge had a walk, Cody Bellinger had a hit, Ben Rice was on base three times, Giancarlo Stanton had a big line-drive single in the eighth, Jazz Chisholm had a hit and Austin Wells and Jose Caballero both had doubles. Trent Grisham (0-for-5 with a now-.561 OPS) was the only Yankees starter to not reach base.

7. Grisham is the next guy that I want to see take a seat on the bench. Even the biggest Grisham fan (if those exist?) knew he wouldn’t hit 34 home runs again, but many were upset by the qualifying offer to him, which would cost $22 million, prevent the team from spending the money elsewhere and block a non-injury path to the majors for Jasson Dominguez and Spencer Jones. Grisham is hitting .147/.326/.235 with no home runs, and while the on-base percentage isn’t the worst at .326, it needs to be much better for the hitter being given the most at-bats on the team, and for the hitter who bats in front of Aaron Judge. It’s time for Grisham to take a seat for at least a game.

8. Old favorite (of mine) Luis Severino will start against the Yankees on Wednesday. Severino has made two starts against the Yankees since leaving as a free agent after the 2023 season and they have both been disasters. Here are his lines from those two starts:

May 11, 2025: 4 IP, 9 H, 8 R, 8 ER, 2 BB, 2 K

June 29, 2025: 3.2 IP, 5 H, 7 R, 5 ER, 3 BB, 3 K, 2 HR

Put them together and you get: 7.2 IP, 14 H, 15 R, 13 ER, 5 BB, 5 K, 2 HR

9. Based on matchups and success against Severino, this is the best possible lineup for Wednesday with each player’s career numbers against Severino in parentheses:

Jazz Chisholm, 2B (5-for-11, 2B, 2 HR, BB)
Aaron Judge, RF (3-for-5, 2B, HR, BB)
Cody Bellinger, CF (3-for-9, 2B)
Paul Goldschmidt, 1B (2-for-5, 2B, HR, 3 BB)
Ben Rice, DH (0-for-3)
Randal Grichuk, LF (2-for-6, HR)
Austin Wells, C (1-for-2)
Amed Rosario, 3B (2-for-11, HR)
Jose Caballero, SS (0-for-1, 2 BB)

That puts Grisham on the bench and keeps McMahon on the bench. Again, this is the best possible lineup the Yankees could have on Wednesday, so the lineup Boone will construct will look nothing like this.

10. Will Warren gets the ball for his third start of the season. It’s funny because I would classify his first two starts as just OK, and yet, he has a 2.70 ERA and 1.100 WHIP. (Max Fried and Schlittler set the bar so high for what is considered “good.”) Warren faced the A’s twice last year and put together this line: 12.1 IP, 6 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 5 BB, 14 K. He may not need to pitch that well if the Yankees continue their dominance over Severino, but if he does, the Yankees should have their fourth straight series win to begin the season.

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Yankees’ Top-Heavy Offense Has Them 7-2

Yankees will play 13 games in 13 days beginning on Tuesday against Athletics

Monday was the Yankees’ fourth day off in 13 days to begin the season. It’s a lot of time off, but it has given them the chance to only need five starters (even if one of their best five starters has been in Triple-A), give their current rotation extra rest and keep their relievers somewhat available. On Tuesday, though, the Yankees will play 13 games in 13 days and 22 games in 23 days. Get ready for a lot of “personal” and “maintenance” days.

With the Yankees set to begin the true, everyday grind of the season, let’s go through some questions and comments from readers.

Why waste the Lagrange bullets in Scranton? Bring him up now and let him go to the pen. – Chris

Lagrange opened the season in Triple-A as a starter and has pitched 7 1/3 innings across two starts with five walks and five strikeouts. It’s his first time pitching in Triple-A and so far it’s what you would expect from a 22-year-old pitching at that level for the first time. I do believe there are only so many “bullets” in a pitcher’s arm and that wasting them in the minors is wasting them. But there’s also the issue of calling someone up who is walking Triple-A hitters and expecting him to get out major-league hitters.

It’s nice that Lagrange blew away hitters in spring training, but spring training results are completely meaningless. He will figure out Triple-A, just like he has every other level of the minors and be in the majors soon enough.

How soon? Well, that depends on how poorly parts of the Bullpen of Question Marks continues to pitch and how quickly Lagrange can figure out how to get out hitters one step away from the majors. If Camilo Doval and Jake Bird continue to pitch like relievers the Giants and Rockies were willing to give away it could be much sooner than the Yankees likely want. I think it’s a guarantee he’s in the bullpen at some point this season because it would take a lot of injuries to the starting pitching depth for him to get called up as a starter.

What’s the over/under on how many games Boone costs us? – James

This is hard to answer, but I think the number is much higher than you would like it to be. The Yankees have two losses so far and it’s hard to say either is on Aaron Boone since the Yankees scored one run in their loss in Seattle and because Max Fried was off and their entire bullpen was bad in their loss on Sunday. That’s not to say Boone didn’t have a hand in those losses. He didn’t need to go to Blackburn for a second inning in Seattle and he never should have used J.C. Escarra as a pinch-hitter in the ninth inning against the Marlins. Boone will eventually have games where he is unanimously the reason the team lost because that’s what he does, and when he does, I will be sure to write about it.

All we hear about is how good the offense is because they scored the most runs last year. Is it though? Are their numbers skewed? How did they go against good pitching? How was their record against playoff teams and teams .500 or better? Can we expect the same .220 or below hitters from last year to suddenly become superstars? Should a 30-year-old Uber driver be the backup catcher? Should we be carrying two lefty catchers when neither of them can hit? – David

There’s a lot here from David, so let’s go through it question by question.

All we hear about is how good the offense is because they scored the most runs last year. Is it though? Are their numbers skewed?

No, it’s not that good, and yes, the numbers are skewed. The Yankees are built to win in the regular season, which is obviously important because you need to win in the regular season to reach the postseason, but their offense is built to beat the crap out of bad teams, back-end starters and bad relievers. Their AL-best run differential last season was a mirage. They had an abundance of blowout wins that propped up their offensive output, including the last four-plus weeks of the season when they faced a bad team nearly every day. Through nine games, they have the statistically worst bottom-third of any lineup in the majors.

How did they go against good pitching? How was their record against playoff teams and teams .500 or better?

Let’s take Trent Grisham, for instance. Grisham hit a career-high 34 home runs last season. (He has zero this season to no surprise.) Of Grisham’s 34 home runs, none came against a pitcher who started a postseason game. Do you think it’s a small sample issue or coincidence that Grisham went 4-for-29 in the postseason with 10 strikeouts and no home runs? Watch any Grisham at-bat and see how tentative he is to swing. He wants to walk and will take middle-middle fastballs because of it. He lives off pitchers who get behind in the count and have to come over the plate with a fastball, and during the regular season, he sees more pitchers like that than pitchers who get to pitch in the postseason. This isn’t only on Grisham, I’m just using him as an example. This has been a Yankees problem for a long time now, dating back to the 2017 ALCS when they couldn’t score any runs in Houston. It’s hard to hit in the postseason, and outside of Giancarlo Stanton, no Yankee has done it consistently for nearly a decade.

The Yankees went 9-17 against the Blue Jays and Red Sox last season. (The Red Sox have the worst record in baseball right now and the Blue Jays have lost five straight, including two to the Rockies, being swept by the White Sox and a 14-2 drubbing by the Dodgers.) They went 3-6 against the Tigers, Phillies and Dodgers. The Yankees didn’t play well against the league’s best last year.

Can we expect the same .220 or below hitters from last year to suddenly become superstars?

No, we can’t and we’re seeing why. Austin Wells, Jose Caballero and Ryan McMahon have been a collective disaster, and I would be fine if you wanted to lump Jazz Chisholm in there too, both offensively and defensively. Wells is two percent worse than league average for his career, McMahon nine percent worse and Caballero 15 percent worse. So while the trio isn’t as bad as they have been playing, it’s unlikely any of them becomes even league-average hitters given what they have been in their careers.

Should a 30-year-old Uber driver be the backup catcher? Should we be carrying two lefty catchers when neither of them can hit?

I’m fine with Escarra being the backup catcher. I’m not fine with him pinch-hitting with the options that were on the bench on Sunday and I don’t care what hand anyone hits with in that situation. Ideally, no, the Yankees wouldn’t have two left-handed-hitting catchers on the roster, but when you look at the roster construction history of the Brian Cashman Yankees, very rarely are logical choices made. Think about how right-handed heavy they were for years and Cashman told everyone it didn’t matter. Then when the front office realized it did matter, they overcorrected and now they’re too left-handed heavy. It would seem impossible to build the flawed rosters the Yankees do every year with $300 million-plus, but they continue to do it.

You glossed over it, but man, Boone’s consistent ability to cool off hot hitters with misguided days off remains supernatural. He always knows just what to do to end a good streak! – Thunder

The only reason I “glossed” over Stanton sitting the series finale in Seattle is because his replacement in the lineup in Paul Goldschmidt hit a three-run home run that was the difference in the game. I don’t agree with scheduled days off, let alone for someone who was 10-for-20 on the season at the time. There’s no scientific way to keep players healthy, especially Stanton. The only way to keep him healthy is to have him not play baseball. Whether he plays every other day or has day games after night games off or any other personal scheduling, it’s all nonsense. Stanton could get hurt on Tuesday after having Monday off, or he could play every game from now until Memorial Day Weekend and never get hurt.

If they are 24-1 when Volpe returns, does Boone immediately make him the everyday shortstop? – Tyler

This was asked before Sunday’s loss, but yes, if the Yankees are now 24-2 when Anthony Volpe returns, he goes right into the lineup every day. Boone was asked similar variations of that question during spring training and essentially said there’s no level of production from the shortstop position while Volpe is out that could take his job away from him.

Look at last September when the Yankees tried to act as if shortstop was an open competition down the stretch. Caballero played 18 games in September and had an .845 OPS and Volpe played 18 games and had a .534 OPS and Volpe still started every postseason game. He started every game of the ALDS despite going 1-for-15 with 11 strikeouts before mercifully being pinch-hit for in the ninth inning of Game 4, so he wouldn’t have to endure being booed off his home field again. Caballero is a placeholder until Volpe is ready and nothing more no matter how well he hits or plays. And right now, Caballero is hitting as poorly as anyone in the majors, so we won’t have to worry about who the starting shortstop is when Volpe returns.

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Yankees Thoughts: Can’t Win ‘Em All

The Yankees took two of three from the Marlins and have the best record in the AL. Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. The Yankees erased a four-run deficit to beat the Marlins 9-7 on Saturday and then blew a three-run lead to lose to the Marlins 7-6 on Sunday. The Yankees won the series, have won all three series to start the season and are an AL-best 7-2. Their two losses were both one-run losses: one in which they were walked off with their second-to-last reliever on the mound in Seattle and one (on Sunday) in which they had the tying run on second and the winning run on first when the game ended. The Yankees have either won or nearly won all nine games this season. You can’t ask for much more than that.

2. What you can ask for though is for Aaron Boone to not use J.C. Escarra as his pinch-hit option like he did on Sunday with two outs in the ninth inning of a one-run game with the tying run on second and the winning run on first. I don’t care about lefty-righty in that spot. There’s no way Escarra was a better option than Jose Caballero (who he hit for) or Paul Goldschmidt (who hit a three-run home run off one of the best right-handed pitchers in the majors four days earlier) or Randal Grichuk or Amed Rosario. Escarra wasn’t good enough to be a Yankee for a lot of last season when the Yankees sent him down to use Ben Rice as the backup catcher. He’s only on the team now because Rice is the everyday first baseman. He is the last position player on the roster and the worst offensive player on the roster. And yet, Boone decided he was better than the starting shortstop, a borderline Hall of Famer and two other veteran bats because of what hand he hits with. Escarra struck out on three pitches against Anthony Bender and the swinging strike to end the game was a tier below Todd Frazier’s famous swing from the 2017 ALCS.

“Our lefties put some tough at-bats on Bender,” Boone said.

That’s why Boone used Escarra, because he watched other lefties have good at-bats against Bender. Here are the lefties that had good at-bats against him: Cody Bellinger, Ben Rice and Jazz Chisholm. Now which one of these things is unlike the others: Bellinger, Rice, Chisholm, Escarra. Three middle-of-the-order, major-league bats and a guy who is barely on the roster.

3. Chisholm hit a two-run double off Bender for his second hit of the series and his second and third RBIs of the season. Chisholm is now hitting .194/.237/.278 on the year as an impending free agent looking to get paid and someone who claimed he was going for a 50/50 season.

“We don’t think the game is over until the last out,” Jazz Chisholm said. “We always go out there battling until the last minute.”

Odd quote there from Chisholm, who the night before took his sweet time on a ground ball in the ninth inning that led to an infield “single” and nearly cost the Yankees the game. (Also, there are no “minutes” in baseball, Jazz.)

“He just kind of laid back on it,” Boone said of Chisholm’s lackadaisical effort. “When he’s got to close on it, we’ve got to make that one.” (It was about as critical as it gets for Boone, considering he first “credited” the runner for running hard instead of saying anything negative about his second baseman’s effort.

4. The Yankees trailed in the ninth because Max Fried had his worst start of the season following a three-hour-and-35-minute rain delay. He couldn’t throw strikes, walked three and allowed three earned runs in 6 2/3 innings. Following Fried, Fernando Cruz also couldn’t throw strikes and then Jake Bird couldn’t throw the ball anywhere near home plate.

“I gave them freebies,” Jake Bird said. “That’s not big league baseball. It’s not good.”

After the Yankees traded for Bird and he was awful, he was sent to Triple-A for the remainder of last season. After the Yankees traded for Camilo Doval, he was awful and was knocked way down the bullpen pecking order. Both guys went into this season with advanced roles and so far they have both been the same disappointments they were last season. Bird ruined Sunday’s game and Doval has allowed four earned runs on five hits and a walk over his last two outings and one inning total.

5. Since the dominant showing in San Francisco, the Yankees’ Bullpen of Question Marks is starting to show why no Yankees fan had trust in them going into the season. Doval looks like the pitcher the Giants gave up on and Bird looks like the pitcher the Rockies gave up on. David Bednar is being forced to throw 40-pitch saves and then is shut down for multiple days because of it. Cruz looks unhittable one moment and then like the 36-year-old who didn’t break into the league until he was 32 the next. Nothing can be expected from Paul Blackburn and Ryan Yarbrough as veteran innings eaters. The trustworthy names in the bullpen are Bednar (until the World Baseball Classic and early-season workload catch up with him), Brent Headrick (who should be the eighth-inning guy moving forward since Boone needs set innings for his relievers) and Tim Hill. It’s not great.

6. But it could be better. At some point you have to think Carlos Lagrange will be added to the bullpen to solidify this messy corps. And if the starter who loses out on the fifth spot ends up there, then that’s another arm and right now that arm looks like Ryan Weathers.

On Saturday, Weathers showed how you can be a left-handed, 26-year-old, who throws 100 mph and be on your third team in four years. He lasted only 3 2/3 innings against the Marlins, giving up three earned runs and putting nine runners on. He has put 15 runners on in eight innings across two starts, and Brian Cashman’s 0-for-his career in trading for a young, controllable starting pitcher who pitches well will remain an 0-for.

“I was ahead in the counts and just couldn’t put guys away,” Weathers said, summing up his career.

7. Because of Weathers’ short start, the Yankees used six relievers to get them to a win. The Marlins greatly outhit the Yankees 15-6, but the Yankees drew 10 walks, a day after drawing 11 in the home opener. They drew another nine on Sunday for a series total of 30, the franchise’s most ever in a three-game series.

“It’s a scoring competition,” Boone said, “not a hit competition.”

8. The Yankees drew 30 walks and scored 23 runs in the series (and somehow didn’t sweep), but it wasn’t a total team effort offensively. The offense is still limited to the first five hitters in the lineup. Chisholm’s ninth-inning double on Sunday was nice and hopefully the start of him breaking out, but it was pretty much his offense for the season. As for 7 through 9 in the lineup, well, it’s the worst 7 through 9 in the entire majors. That’s not sarcasm. Statistically, it’s the worst bottom-third of any lineup in all of baseball.

Austin Wells has a .452 OPS, Ryan McMahon a .363 and Jose Caballero .335. Boone pretty much said in spring training that even if Caballero hit like Judge while Anthony Volpe was out, Volpe would still be the starting shortstop when he returned. With the offensive output Caballero has provided so far, unfortunately, it will be easy for him to return to the bench once Volpe is ready. Getting pinch hit for by Escarra was as bad as it gets.

As for McMahon, so much for the Yankees fixing his swing in the offseason and unlocking a player who has never finished as even a league-average hitter. It’s great that McMahon is great defensively (and so far he hasn’t even been that with every throw to first in the dirt), but at some point, defense isn’t enough. With each 0-for, “some point” draws closer.

9. I’m not worried about Wells because I don’t have any expectations for him. I figure he’ll end up with 20-ish home runs and will be a just-below-league-average hitter. So be it from your catcher in this era of baseball. But the Yankees can’t have three automatic outs in the lineup every game. At some point the top of the order will go cold and other parts of the lineup will need to carry the team offensively. As of now, no other part of the lineup other than the top half is capable of carrying the team, or even providing a big hit or RBI. McMahon had two RBIs on Opening Day and none since. Caballero drove in the first run of the season and none since. Wells hasn’t driven in a single run.

10. The Yankees won’t need to score more than a few runs if the starting rotation gets back to utterly dominating the opponent like they did in the first two series of the season. Who better to do that than Cam Schlittler? Schlittler will get the ball on Tuesday to open the series against the A’s and as enjoyable as it was watching Fried pitch when he’s at his best, watching Schlittler pitch is another level of enjoyment. The Giants had never seen him and he blew them away on a limited pitch count. The Mariners saw him in his first major-league start and he did the same to them on a limited pitch count. The A’s have never seen him, so I expect another masterpiece from him on what should be an 85-plus pitch limit.

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