1. It’s about that time of year. The time of year when the Aaron Boone Yankees begin their annual midseason free fall that leaves the team in disarray, the fan base calling for the jobs of the manager and general manager and the season in peril.
Last year it began this same exact weekend when the Yankees lost two of three to the Red Sox at Fenway Park and then lost 22 of their next 33 games, leaving Boone to say, “It’s all right in front of us,” on July 7. In 2023, Boone said, “It’s all there right in front of us,” on July 15, and in 2022, he said, “It’s right in front of us,” on August 20. Each year it’s come a little earlier, but it always come.
2. It takes about a month of poor play from the Yankees for Boone to explode and go deep into his bag of bullshit to pull out a version of “It’s right in front of us.” This team has all of the necessary qualities and traits to extend the annual midseason meltdown to a fourth straight season: poor fundamentals, a general lack of awareness, inept situational hitting, sloppy defense, a shaky bullpen, underperformance from the majority of the lineup for a lengthy period and a manager who may be the very worst at in-game decisions in the league.
3. The Yankees showed the world their flaws this weekend against the Red Sox and were swept for the first time in 2025 and had their worst offensive output as a franchise at Fenway Park in more than 100 years. The Yankees scored four runs in 28 innings, hit one home run and were stifled by two starting pitchers and a bullpen that have been lit up by the league this season.
4. If Aaron Judge’s historical season spirals out of control and his 2025 season turns out to be amazing and not legendary, we’ll know exactly when it turned. As of now that moment is June 12 in Kansas City when Boone didn’t start Judge for the first time all season. Since then Judge is 1-for-13 with 10 strikeouts and looks like his 2016 late-season call-up self than anything he has been over the last eight-and-a-half seasons. The Yankees go as Judge goes and Judge did nothing this weekend, and to no surprise, the Yankees were humiliated, falling to 1-5 on the season against a team that is 32-35 against the rest of the majors.
5. It was frustrating to watch Jasson Dominguez get picked off of second base to end the seventh inning on Saturday. It was comical to watch Ben Rice do the same on Sunday. In both instances the Yankees had two runners on, had the potential tying run on base and the go-ahead run at the plate. The characteristics of the team the Dodgers exposed in the World Series and then spent the offseason laughing about publicly in every opportunity they got are still present. They’re still present because their manager is the same manager and for as long as Boone is at the helm of the Yankees, fundamentals will be held in no regard and accountability won’t exist.
6. The Yankees were 8-0 this season following a loss with Max Fried starting, but that streak came to an end. Fried did his part to be a stopper by allowing two earned runs over seven innings, but sloppy defense and a no-show performance from the offense led to the loss. It’s not wise to waste Fried starts when the rest of the rotation remains a coin flip in terms of performance every time out.
7. There’s an old adage that any time you watch a baseball game you may see something you have never seen before, and on Sunday, I saw something I had never seen before. Trent Grisham led off the third inning and got ahead in the count 3-0. He took the next pitch and it barely grazed the bottom of the strike zone to make it 3-1. Grisham could hunt a fastball on 3-1 or pick a small part of the zone to look for a pitch and drive it for a hit, an extra-base hit or a home run to tie the game, or he could take the next pitch if it wasn’t in that small part of the zone he wanted it to be in and possibly walk since Brayan Bello is among the league leaders in walks per nine innings. Grisham did neither. He squared up to bunt and laid a bunt down the third-base line foul to run the count to 3-2. On the next pitch he popped out to third for the first out of the inning. Outside of a hitter trying to sacrifice a runner over in the ninth inning or extras innings at all costs or a pitcher trying to sacrifice a runner over when pitchers had to hit, I’m going to say no batter in history has ever laid down a bunt attempt on a 3-1 pitch as the leadoff hitter in the third inning of a game. The Yankees aren’t just sloppy, they’re unintelligent. In a weekend in which their shortstop threw a ball away he didn’t have to throw, two players got picked off of second base in the late innings of a close game, a strike was given to a batter for not getting in the batter’s box in time and a runner was caught stealing third with no outs in extra innings, Grisham’s 3-1 bunt attempt was the dumbest decision of the weekend. Well-earned, Trent.
8. After Saturday’s loss I wrote about how bad Grisham and Ben Rice have been for more than a month now, so what does Boone do? Bats them first and second in the lineup. Let’s give the two worst hitters on the team since the middle of the May the most plate appearances on the team! Let’s give them more plate appearances than Judge and Cody Bellinger!
9. I want to like Anthony Volpe. I really do. But he makes it so hard. On Friday, he got caught stealing third with no outs in the 10th. On Saturday, he gifted the Red Sox their first run with an ill-advised throw. On Sunday, he booted the first ball of the game for yet another error and threw up an 0-for-4 at the plate for good measure. I don’t know how anyone can watch Volpe play every day since being called up at the start of 2023 and think he’s a winning player. What exactly does he do well other than commit an error in every big moment and hit mostly weak ground balls? His fielding is overrated. His arm is below average. His Baseball IQ isn’t exactly glowing. His power is limited to the short porch at home and he doesn’t even attempt to steal anymore. He may as well be Giancarlo Stanton once he reaches first base. He has stolen seven bases in 12 attempts (58 percent), which proves he has no instinct on the basepaths and his last stolen base was back on May 13. I’m not sure why a faction of the fan base loves Volpe other than that he was born in New York, grew up in New Jersey as a Yankees fan and is a homegrown product. In terms of what matters, which is performance on the field, he’s lacking in every aspect.
10. The Yankees may not have the roster to avoid a fourth straight midseason meltdown and it may be inevitable, but they at least have the schedule to avoid it. They have the lowly Angels at home the next four days and then a weekend series against the even lowlier Orioles. After that it’s three in Cincinnati and three back home against the A’s. When the best team you will play in a 13-game stretch is the Reds, you’re in a great position. Coming off the embarrassment and humiliation of the weekend, if the Yankees don’t have an impressive homestand against two shitty teams then get ready for a rocky summer because it will be right in front of them.