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Yankees Thoughts: Aaron Boone Managed to Lose Before Walk-Off Win

Aaron Boone did everything he could to lose Wednesday’s game, but the Yankees walked off the Rangers with a 4-3 win. Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. The Yankees played a one-run game against the Rangers on Wednesday and … WON! Yes, the Yankees won a game decided by one run, beating the Rangers 4-3. 

A night after Will Warren pitched the best game of his career against Patrick Corbin, Ryan Yarbrough followed it up by matching Jacob deGrom through five strong innings. Before the game, I wrote:

You have to think two runs is the ceiling of what the Yankees can expect as long as deGrom is in the game. Yarbrough needs to match him until the bullpens get involved.

deGrom allowed two runs in the seven innings he pitched and Yarbrough matched him for the five innings he was in the game. Once the bullpens got involved the Yankees came back and won.

2. It was a win that almost wasn’t. Aaron Boone did everything he possibly could with his bullpen management to lead the Yankees to a loss, but the Yankees’ offense over the final three innings was too much for Boone’s incompetence to overcome.

Boone’s nonsense began in the seventh inning. Yarbrough gave the Yankees five innings off one-run ball and Boone went to Jonathan Loaisiga for the sixth. Loaisiga got two quick outs before loading the bases, which led to Boone to ask Tim Hill to get out of the jam and get the final out of the sixth. Hill did his job and the game remained tied at 1 through six.

In the seventh, Boone sent Hill back out despite lefty mashers Jake Burger and Kyle Higashioka due up. If there’s one thing that duo does well, it’s hit left-handed pitching. If there’s one thing Hill doesn’t do well, it’s face right-handed hitting. Lefties are hitting .086/.158/.086 against Hill this year. Righties are hitting .311/.354/.578 against him. Sure enough, Boone’s stupidity backfired and Burger hunted a first-pitch fastball from Hill and hit it into the seats in right-center to give the Rangers a 2-1 lead.

Even though Hill finished the sixth, because he started the seventh, he had to face three batters. After the Burger home run Hill bounced back to retire Higashioka and Josh Smith. The Rangers’ lineup was going to turn over with Sam Haggerty, so who did Boone think was best suited to get the Rangers’ leadoff man? Ian Hamilton, of course! The same Ian Hamilton who couldn’t close out a five-run ninth the night before was now going to face the top of the Rangers’ lineup in a one-run game. Like Burger, Haggerty hunted a first-pitch fastball, got it, and hit it into the second deck in right field. 3-1 Rangers. After allowing another base hit, Hamilton finally got the last out of the seventh.

3. The Yankees got a run back in the bottom of the seventh when Cody Bellinger destroyed a deGrom middle-middle fastball for his eighth home run. The game was back to being a one-run game, and who better to keep the deficit right where it was than Yerry De los Santos, the last man in the bullpen who, in his last appearance, couldn’t close out a six-run lead in the ninth inning against the Mets on Friday. De los Santos allowed two singles, a stolen base and a walk in the inning, but managed to escape his own mess without giving up a run.

In the bottom of the eighth, Bruce Bochy went to left-hander Robert Garcia. Garcia got DJ LeMahieu to ground out before Paul Goldschmidt drew a one-out, pinch-hit walk, Trent Grisham followed Goldschmidt with a walk of his own to put two on with one out. Boone idiotically had Aaron Judge batting third instead of second, so instead of forcing Bochy to go to a righty to face Judge and then the righty would also have to face Ben Rice and Bellinger, Bochy was able to leave his lefty in to face Rice, who hit a weak fly ball for the second out. Bochy then went to his closer Luke Jackson, who got ahead of Judge before throwing a middle-middle fastball Judge smoked to left for a base hit. Goldschmidt raced home to tie the game, but right after he touched the plate, Grisham was thrown out trying to advance to third to end the inning, meeting the Yankees’ quota of at least one fundamental breakdown per game. It would have been nice to have Bellinger up with the go-ahead run on second base, but instead, Grisham thought it would be better if he could get into betting scoring position.

The game was tied at 3 through eight and then Boone showed the world why he can’t be trusted under any circumstance.

4. The old adage is you use your closer in the ninth inning of a tie game at home because there won’t be a save opportunity (though anyone still managing to a statistic in 2025, like Boone, is a complete idiot). Here was Luke Weaver’s recent workload entering Wednesday:

Thursday: No game
Friday: 2 pitches
Saturday: 0 pitches
Sunday: 0 pitches
Monday: 2 pitches

Weaver had thrown four pitches over the last five days. Remember when Boone didn’t use him in the ninth inning of a tie game at home on Saturday against the Mets (and the Yankees lost) because he had pitched on three of the last four days, even though he had only thrown two pitches on Friday? Well, Weaver then wasn’t needed for anything other than two pitches over the next three days.

As rested as Weaver will ever be, it was easy to see Boone pitching him in the ninth and then again in the 10th if the game went to extra innings. But there was Del los Santos standing on the Yankee Stadium mound with Haggerty and the top of the Rangers’ lineup due up in the ninth.

I have documented every nonsensical decision Boone has made since becoming Yankees manager in 2018, and of the thousands of examples, the decision to let Del los Santos start the ninth inning on Wednesday is easily in the Top 10. It may be in the Top 5.

There were two possibilities for Boone’s decision:

1. He was trying to steal outs in the ninth inning of a tie game with the last man in the bullpen against the top of the opposing lineup.

2. He didn’t call down to the bullpen in time to get Weaver ready to start the ninth.

Either Boone was incompetent in that he didn’t have Weaver ready or he was incompetent for trying to steal outs with De los Santos. Either way, he showed he’s incompetent.

YES had shown Weaver warming up earlier, so it couldn’t be the second possibility, which means Boone felt the last man in his bullpen had a better chance of retiring Haggerty than his all-world closer. Haggerty singled to lead off the ninth. It was the best-case outcome. De los Santos wasn’t going to retire Haggerty, but at least he held him to one base. What if Haggerty had put one in the seats like he had against Hamilton and the Rangers took the lead?

Once Haggerty reached base, Boone called for Weaver. It took Weaver six pitches to get three outs against the top of the Rangers’ lineup.

In the bottom of the ninth, with one out, Jasson Dominguez hit the Yankees’ first walk-off home run since 2022 and saved all Yankees fans from having to watch Boone screw up another extra-inning game.

5. I used to joke that Boone as Yankees manager was a social experiment, but now I believe it. There’s no logical reason for his decision to have Del los Santos start the ninth other than he’s fucking with everyone. If you can’t see how in over his head Boone continues to be, I don’t know what you’re watching. The closer the score and the more involved he becomes, the worse off the Yankees are. And his choices aren’t resigned to only the regular season. We have mountains of poor moves in the postseason when the stakes are the highest to evaluate him on, including 2018 ALDS Games 3 and 4, 2019 ALCS Game 2, 2020 ALDS Game 2, 2021 wild-card game, 2022 ALDS Games 2 and 3, 2022 ALCS Games 2, 3 and 4, 2023 … oh that’s right he missed the postseason completely despite 40 percent of the league getting in and 2024 World Series Game 1. Boone is a professional idiot.

6. Judge needs to bat second every game. It doesn’t matter what hand the pitcher throws with: Judge bats second. Boone continues to screw with Judge in the 2- or 3-hole depending on the day’s starter rather than leaving him in the spot that will get him more plate appearances. Grisham and Rice aren’t exactly Johnny Damon and Derek Jeter at the top of the lineup. The place of Judge shouldn’t be impacted by either being in the lineup. (The duo went 0-for-7 with a walk and four strikeouts on Wednesday.)

7. Another two-hit game for Bellinger to extend his hitting streak to 15 games. He’s hitting .377/.441/1.130 over his last 68 plate appearances. This is the guy I used to watch hit at 11:30 p.m. for the Dodgers. The guy that played himself out of the Dodgers’ future plans. I don’t know how long this will last, but it’s a lot more fun to watch this Bellinger than whatever he was from Opening Day through April.

8. Austin Wells went 0-for-2 with a walk and two strikeouts on Tuesday and 0-for-3 with three strikeouts on Wednesday. Over the last two weeks, he’s hitting .129/.256/.290. He has one multi-hit game since April 27 and is down to .200/.269/.443 on the year.

9. Hamilton may want to throw some scoreless innings soon before he finds himself as the odd man out in the bullpen. Here is his line over his last six games: 4.1 IP, 5 H, 8 R, 8 ER, 5 BB, 6 K, 2 HR, 16.62 ERA, 2.309 WHIP. He’s pitching himself off the team.

10. The win on Wednesday clinched the series for the Yankees for their fifth straight series win. They are now 10-3 over their last 13 games and have opened up a five-game loss column lead in the AL East.

If the weather allows for the series finale on Thursday, it will be Carlos Rodon against Nathan Eovaldi. Eovaldi remains my most hated pitcher in all of baseball for what he was a Yankee and what he became with the Red Sox. He has been exceptional this season with a 1.61 ERA, a league-leading 2.18 FIP and a league-leading 0.766 WHIP. He has only allowed 39 hits, eight walks and three home runs over 61 1/3 innings. If the Yankees are going to beat him and sweep the Rangers, they’re going to need Rodon to match him the way Warren and Yarbrough matched Corbin and deGrom. They’re going to need the offense to do just enough and their manager to not screw it all up.

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Yankees Thoughts: So That’s the Will Warren the Organization Believes In

The Yankees beat the Rangers 5-2 behind the best start of Will Warren’s career. Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. On paper, the Yankees went into this three-game series with the Rangers with a distinct starting pitching disadvantage for all three matchups. But so far, through one game, it hasn’t played out that way.

Will Warren had the best start of his career two weekends ago in Sacramento. He followed that up with a career-high nine strikeouts in Seattle. Then on Tuesday, he struck out a career-high 10 in the Bronx with 5 2/3 scoreless innings against the Rangers.

2. “Be aggressive in the zone, I guess,” Warren said. “Like I’ve said, if we execute our pitches, I think we’re going to have success.”

“Like you’ve said?” You mean like I’ve said. Here is what I wrote after his putrid start in Baltimore on April 28:

He needs to attack the strike zone, believe in his stuff and let the ball get put in play. He can’t be afraid to pitch in the zone and he can’t nibble around the edges, which how he gets in trouble with deep counts and walks.

Warren has finally stopped nibbling (three walks in his last three starts combined) and is attacking hitter and trusting the defense behind him. He’s learning he doesn’t have to strike out every hitter he faces, even if he did strike out 10 Rangers on Tuesday.

3. “It’s been fun to watch him grow and develop, especially this season,” Aaron Judge said. “He’s a big piece for us now.”

It wasn’t even three weeks ago when it looked like Warren was no longer going to be a piece and may be on his way out of the rotation. He couldn’t give the Yankees length, the innings he did give provide were rarely ever good and the team was 2-5 in his seven starts. But since getting pulled in the fifth inning against the Rays on May 4, Warren has allowed three earned runs over his last three starts and 18 innings with 26 strikeouts, and the Yankees have won all three starts.

4. His performance against the Rangers convinced Boone to stay with him in the sixth inning with the bases loaded and one out and the Yankees clinging to a 2-0 lead. A walk and a pair of bloop singles had put the tying and go-ahead runs on, but Boone let the rookie face Marcus Semien, and Warren struck him out with a two-seam fastball on his 101st pitch. It was Warren’s 60th strikeout of the season, which is 17 more than any other rookie (stat from Katie Sharp).

“That was awesome,” Warren said. “I’m glad he left me in that situation.”

Mark Leiter Jr. came in for the final out of the sixth, and went on to pitch a scoreless seventh as well.

5. Devin Williams threw another scoreless inning, pitching around a one-out double with two strikeouts in the eighth. Williams has now had six straight scoreless appearances and nine of his last 10 have been scoreless. (The one outlier was the meltdown against the Padres.) The trust level continues to improve as his fastball command has improved. I still don’t trust him with anything less than a three-run lead, but a few weeks ago I didn’t trust him with anything less than a five-run lead, so yes, there’s improvement.

6. The combination of Warren and the long ball led the Yankees to their ninth win in their last 12 games. Ben Rice (getting the start against a lefty) hit a second-inning solo home run into the second deck in right field. The Yankees added a run in the fourth when Rice drove in Judge with a sacrifice fly and added a third run in the sixth on an Anthony Volpe RBI double. In the eighth, Judge broke the game open with a two-run home run to the short porch in right.

7. Those two runs from Judge ended up being needed. Boone sent Ian Hamilton out to get the last three outs of the game with a five-run lead, and just like Yerry De los Santos on Friday against the Mets, Boone ended up needing to go to Luke Weaver to get the final out of the game. And just like Friday, Weaver got the final out with two pitches.

8. The top two-thirds of the lineup went 9-for-22 with all five runs, all five RBIs, a walk and two strikeouts. The 7-8-9 hitters (DJ LeMahieu, Austin Wells and Oswald Peraza) went 0-for-8 with two walks and three strikeouts. Peraza was the only Yankee to not reach base in the game, and the 9-hole, whether it’s Peraza or Jorbit Vivas continues to be the only real hole in the lineup. Once Jazz Chisholm returns, though, that would no longer be the case.

9. Jasson Dominguez didn’t play against the left-handed Corbin, which was odd as Boone elected to go with the three lefties of Rice, Trent Grisham and Cody Bellinger over Dominguez’s right-handed bat. That likely means Dominguez will play against both Jacob deGrom and Nathan Eovaldi. I could see Boone sitting Grisham on Wednesday against deGrom and then sitting Paul Goldschmidt on Thursday against Eovaldi in the day game after a night game.

10. Ryan Yarbrough against deGrom is about as lopsided of a starting pitching matchup as you can have in the majors. deGrom has allowed three runs over his last four starts, and you have to think two runs is the ceiling of what the Yankees can expect as long as he is in the game. Yarbrough needs to match him until the bullpens get involved.

The Yankees have had a tendency this season of getting traffic on the bases early against some of the league’s best starters, but not taking advantage of it and then getting shut down. If they’re able to get early baserunners against deGrom and they don’t take advantage of it, they may not have a chance to score until he’s out of the game.

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Yankees Thoughts: Juan Soto Replacements Win First Subway Series

The Yankees beat the Mets 8-2 and clinched the Yankee Stadium portion of the 2025 Subway Series. Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. When the Yankees lost out on Juan Soto to the Mets, they signed signed Max Fried and Paul Goldschmidt and traded for Cody Bellinger. On Sunday, the Soto replacements trio led the Yankees to a rubber game win to win the Yankee Stadium portion of the 2025 Subway Series.

Once again, Fried didn’t have his best stuff, and once again, without it, he only allowed two earned runs over six innings: 6 IP, 3 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 2 BB, 8 K. It was Fried’s 10th start of the season and the Yankees are 9-1 in those starts, having only lost his last start in Seattle 2-1 in extra innings.

“It was intense,” Fried said. “Series that feel like playoff series are always good, especially early in the year. It preps you for the kind of baseball you want to play towards the end.”

Goldschmidt led off in the series finale against the left-handed David Peterson and reached in the first inning on a Mark Vientos error. He came around to score on Bellinger’s two-run double and with the Yankees leading by one run in the eighth, he made it two runs with a crucial two-out RBI single.

That hit kept the inning going for Bellinger to eventually come up and break the game open with a grand slam. Bellinger went 3-for-3 with two walks, the double, the slam and six RBIs.

“I feel like his approach is a little better,” Aaron Judge said of Bellinger. “When he gets what he’s looking for, he’s not missing.”

I would say his approach is more than just “a little better.” Since May 3, Bellinger is hitting .377/.450/1.129 with four doubles, four home runs and 12 RBIs in 13 games. Prior to May 3, Bellinger had hit .190/.263/.340 in the first 28 games of the season.

2. If Soto had signed with the Yankees, Fried would be elsewhere and Bellinger would still be a Cub or something else. It’s likely Goldschmidt is the only one of three that would have still become a Yankee and that’s not a certainty, considering after the Yankees signed Carlos Rodon two years ago they did nothing else to improve the roster and after they traded for Soto last year they did nothing else to improve the roster.

Soto went 1-for-10 at the Stadium with three strikeouts and four walks. He was taunted for the entirety of the series as he will be for the duration of his 15-year contract. He failed to drive in a run over the weekend, came up in big spots several times and did nothing and declined being an in-game interview for ESPN after initially excepting.

3. Soto finally met up with Judge before the series finale in the outfield after the two went all of Friday and Saturday without a greeting. Like Soto, Judge contributed little offensively over the weekend. He had had his worst game of the season on Saturday and was unable to come through in a few big moments like Soto. With all of the players mentioning how the atmosphere over the weekend felt like the postseason, I guess it’s no surprise Judge gave us a postseason performance.

4. The Yankees may have won by six runs and the Soto replacements all did their part in winning a fourth straight series for the Yankees, but it wasn’t as easy the final score indicates. For most of Sunday’s 8-2 win, it felt a little too much like Saturday’s disappointing 3-2 loss in that the Yankees blew an early lead and then failed time and time again to come up with a tie-breaking hit.

5. I’m sorry I wrote something nice about Anthony Volpe last week when I wrote how good he looked at the plate of late. I did provide caution though, writing:

Am I ready to believe he is the player the Yankees promised? No. He’s done this before. He has fooled us all into believing he has figured it out several times in his first two-plus seasons in the league.

If you were on the latest Volpe Has Figured It Out train, it came to a stop on Sunday. Volpe was so bad offensively on Sunday he nearly cost the Yankees the game all by himself. Volpe grounded out in the first to strand Bellinger and struck out in the third to strand Bellinger again. In the fifth, Volpe came up with the gamed tied at 2 and the bases loaded with two outs. Peterson had just walked Bellinger four straight pitches. So what does Volpe do? He swings at a first-pitch curveball at the bottom of the zone and hits a weak ground ball to short to end the inning. If your plan is to attack on the first pitch with the belief you’re going to see a fastball with the bases loaded following a four-pitch walk then you better get that fastball and do damage with it. You better not swing at a bottom-of-the-zone curveball like you’re down 0-2 in the count and hit a 66-mph grounder to leave three on.

6. With an 0-for-3 night and five left on already to his name, Volpe came up in the seventh in the same situation: score tied at 2, bases loaded and two outs. Huascar Brazoban had thrown 21 pitches in the inning and was clearly fatigued when he started Volpe out with three straight balls, none of which were close to the zone. David Cone opined on the broadcast that Volpe shouldn’t just take one strike, but take all three since it was doubtful Brazoban would throw three strikes before another ball.

Volpe had other plans. He took a fastball down the middle for strike 1. Then he swung at ball 4 in on his hands and fouled it away to create a full count. Then he swung at ball 5, which was the same pitch and result as the previous pitch to keep the count full. Then he swung at ball 6 and missed it to strike out, end the inning and leave the bases loaded again.

7. Had Volpe gone to the plate for his plate appearance without his bat, the Yankees would have led 3-2 after Brazoban walked him to score a run and the bases would have remained loaded for the Yankees to potentially add to their lead. Instead, Volpe moved to 0-of-4 on the night with eight left on and the score remained tied at 2.

8. It’s hard to believe you can blow a chance like Volpe got in the fifth and get another chance, but he did in the seventh and blew that one too. It’s hard to believe the Yankees would find a way to win after the missed opportunity like the one in the seventh, but in the eighth, Pete Alonso gave them the help they needed.

Jasson Dominguez worked a leadoff walk against Ryne Stanek to begin the eighth and after DJ LeMahieu struck out, Austin Wells doubled to right field. Dominguez didn’t try to steal with either LeMahieu or Wells at the plate and was never even in motion, and and just like the day before, he was unable to score from first on a late-inning double to right field because of it.

9. The Yankees had second and third with one out and Jorbit Vivas at the plate. The Mets brought the infield in and Vivas would need to hit a ball through the drawn-in infield or a fly ball to score the speedy Dominguez and give the Yankees a lead. Vivas battled Stanek, fouling away 100- and 101-mph fastballs before finally hitting the 11th pitch he saw on the ground to first. The Yankees had the contact play on because that’s what they do under Aaron Boone and the only way for the contact play to work when the ball is hit to a corner infielder is for the infielder to bobble the ball or throw it away. And that’s what Alonso did as his throw sailed over the head of Francisco Alvarez allowing Dominguez to score. A god throw wouldn’t have just beat Dominguez to home, it would have been there waiting for him for a couple of seconds as Dominguez was barely in the picture when the ball was approaching Alvarez. The throwing error gave the Yankees a 3-2 lead, and then Goldschmidt provided his RBI single and Bellinger his blast.

10. The Subway Series is stressful. It’s very much like a postseason series and there’s a heightened sense of concern when the Mets get a baserunner and a heightened sense of importance when the Yankees score a run. I wish the Yankees were about to play the Rockies during the week rather than next weekend after the last three games against the Mets. Instead, the stressfulness of the Subway Series will remain as the Yankees host the Rangers on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday at the Stadium and will face a renewed Patrick Corbin (3.35 ERA this season after after a 5.62 the over the last five seasons), Jacob deGrom (1.49 ERA over his last six starts) and Nathan Eovaldi (1.61 ERA this season). The Yankees won’t have Fried for the season and will counter with Will Warren, Ryan Yarbrough and Carlos Rodon. The offense that took down the Mets in the eighth inning on Sunday will need to be present this week against the Rangers.

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Yankees Thoughts: Aaron Boone Blows Second Game of Subway Series

The Yankees lost another one-run game, this time to the Mets 3-2. Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. If you didn’t watch Saturday’s Subway Series game, the only information you need to know the outcome is that it was a one-run game. Knowing that, you can safely assume the Yankees lost. And they did.

The level of ineptitude displayed by Aaron Boone in every close game somehow grows. Now in his eighth season as Yankees manager, for a man who was born into baseball, it continues to be startling how bad he is at everything involved with in-game strategy. It’s disturbing really.

Boone’s entire in-game job description is to put his players in the best possible position to succeed, and the times he does so each season can be counted with your fingers and you’ll likely have a few unused fingers. He has not improved in this aspect of his role since become manager. At best, he’s the same in 2025 as he was in 2018, though, in actuality, he may be worse.

Boone’s lack of common sense and creativity is the reason the team has the worst extra-inning road record in the majors since the automatic runner was implemented, but his inability to make simple choices that nearly everyone in attendance and watching at home can identify is why the team is 7-15 in one- and two-run games this season (and 19-4 in games decided by three runs or more). The closer the score, the more important every managerial decision becomes. The Yankees’ expected record based off of their run differential is 30-15 and their actual record is 26-19. It’s not a coincidence they are playing four games worse than their run differential when you factor in who is managing the team.

2. Boone had it easy on Friday night. The Yankees scored six runs and Carlos Rodon allowed one run over five innings. By the time Boone had to make a bullpen decision the Yankees had a five-run lead and it wasn’t exactly difficult to call on Jonathan Loaisiga, Mark Leiter Jr. and Devin Williams, who combined to throw three scoreless innings. With a five-run lead in the ninth, Boone decided to go with the last man in the bullpen in Yerry De los Santos. (Tyler Matzek had arguably been the last man in the bullpen, but was designated for assignment by the Yankees on Friday. He was good enough to be pitch in a one-run game in Seattle on Wednesday, but then not good enough to be a Yankee on Friday.) Yes, De los Santos should be able to get three outs with a five-run lead, but there’s a reason he was in Triple-A before injuries led to his call up, and he created a mess in the ninth. Boone ended up needing to use Luke Weaver to get the final out on Friday with two pitches. Those two pitches meant Weaver had pitched three of the last four days and that would make him unavailable on Saturday by the Yankees’ self-created pitching rules. (A little bit of foreshadowing for you.)

3. The Yankees offense wasn’t as good on Saturday as it was on Friday. They only managed to score on a pair of solo home runs in their 3-2 loss, but that doesn’t mean the opportunities weren’t there for them to score more. Their manager prevented them from doing so.

The Yankees didn’t get their first baserunner until the third inning and that runner touched them all. DJ LeMahieu hit a home run to the short porch in right to five the Yankees a 1-0 lead.

“It just felt good to play at Yankee Stadium again and in front of these fans,” LeMahieu said. “It’s obviously a big series. I’m just excited to be out there.”

4. To keep with the Yankees’ ongoing lack of shutdown innings, Clarke Schmidt immediately gave the run back and more in the very next inning. Schmidt walked Francisco Lindor and allowed back-to-back singles to Juan Soto and Pete Alonso. After Brandon Nimmo struck out, the Mets didn’t wait around for another base hit to score a second run. With Soto on second, Schmidt paid no attention to him and Soto took off to easily steal third as Yankees pitching continues to think stealing bases against them isn’t allowed. Mark Vientos hit a fly ball and Soto scored to give the Mets a 2-1 lead.

5. The Yankees had an opportunity to tie the game in the fifth and squandered it in an unbelievable (but very believable with Boone at the helm) way. J.C. Escarra led off with a walk and LeMahieu singled. The Yankees had first and second with no outs and 9-hitter Jorbit Vivas up. Vivas has been 60 percent worse than league average in 34 career plate appearances, so everyone knew he was going to bunt. Everyone except Boone. Vientos was drawn in at third anticipating the bunt, but Boone had Vivas swing away, and swing away he did, all the way to a strikeout to keep the runners where they were for an unproductive out. The Yankees could no longer tie the game with back-to-back productive outs and when Ben Rice followed with a deep fly ball that would have scored the tying run, it made the decision to not bunt hurt that much more. Aaron Judge followed with a groundout. Rally extinguished.

6. The Yankees did tie the game in the sixth with the only way they know how to score in close games: a home run. Cody Bellinger led off the inning with a long solo home run. After a Paul Goldschmidt groundout, Jasson Dominguez and Anthony Volpe hit back-to-back singles with Dominguez going to third on Volpe’s. The Yankees had first and third with one out and Escarra due up. It was too early in Boone’s mind to hit for Escarra with Austin Wells since Boone only hits for his catcher if the team trails in the ninth inning (a scenario that was created for him in this game). He bypassed hitting for Vivas in the fifth and bypassed hitting for Escarra in the sixth. Escarra hit the first pitch from Huascar Brazoban weakly to Pete Alonso at first. Holding true to his managerial deficiencies, Boone had the contact play on and Dominguez was easily thrown out at home. (I can think of one time the contact play worked for the Boone Yankees and it worked because of a throwing error.) The Yankees failed to score in the inning.

Schmidt had given the Yankees six innings of two-run ball and when he reached the dugout after the sixth it looked like his day was over. Not for Boone. Boone sent Schmidt back out for the seventh and he allowed a 105-mph single on the first pitch. Then Boone took him out. Was that really Boone trying to steal outs in the seventh inning of a game in which he already failed to bunt runners over to tie the game didn’t pinch hitter for his backup catchers with a chance to take the lead? You bet it was.

The Yankees caught an enormous break in the inning when Leiter Jr. allowed a double in the gap to 9-hitter Tyrone Taylor. There was only one out in the inning, but that didn’t stop the Mets from sending Brett Baty home in a move I thought only the Yankees were dumb enough to make. A perfect Yankees relay ended with Baty being thrown out at the plate to keep the game tied. Instead of having second and third with one out and Lindor and Soto due up, the Mets ran themselves out of the inning.

The Yankees would certainly make the Mets pay for their mistake, right? With Trent Grisham pinch hitting for Vivas (two innings two late) and Rice and Judge due up the Yankees had a chance to take a late lead. The trio went down in order.

7. In the eighth, with the game still tied at 2, the Yankees were in a prime position to take the lead. The effective-but-wild Reed Garrett came in for the Mets and walked Bellinger to start the inning. Unfortunately, Goldschmidt banged into a first-pitch double play to erase Bellinger.  Dominguez battled for a seven-pitch walk to extend the inning and with the slow-to-the-plate Garrett on the mound it was likely he could take second and get into scoring position. But Dominguez never took off for second. Not even when Volpe got into a 2-2 count did Dominguez get out in motion. So when Volpe doubled down the right-field line, Dominguez was unable to score. Escarra walked to load the bases for LeMahieu who crushed a first-pitch fastball at 107 mph (an exit velocity we haven’t seen from LeMahieu in years), but it was hit right at Soto in right. Instead of scoring a run or two or clearing the bases with a smoked line drive, LeMahieu and the Yankees had nothing to show for it. Only the Yankees could draw two walks and produce a single, double and a 107-mph line drive in a single inning and not score.

The old adage that you use your closer in the ninth inning of a tie game at home meant Weaver would pitch the ninth. Except he didn’t. Remember the two-pitch outing from the night before? That was enough to keep Weaver out of the game. So Boone sent Fernando Cruz back to the mound after he had gotten the last out of the eighth. Cruz allowed a walk, single, hit a batter and gave up a sacrifice fly and the Mets took a 3-2 lead.

The Yankees went down without a fight in the ninth inning. Boone finally used Wells against Edwin Diaz and he struck out. Rice hit a little flare to third that was caught and Judge struck out for the game. Judge finished the game 0-for-5 with three strikeouts, and unsurprisingly, the Yankees played a close game and lost.

8. “It was a great baseball game,” Boone said. “It really was.”

Boone really said that. The manger of the losing team in a game he single-handedly lost thought it was a “great game.” It was a losing quote from a losing-minded manager. All I could think about after hearing it was the image YES showed during the game of Boone presenting Soto with his American League Championship ring before the game as if producing or wearing a ring celebrating winning the AL and getting pantsed in the World Series isn’t embarrassing. Soto already has a ring. A real ring from when he posted an 1.178 OPS and hit three home runs against the Astros in 2019 to beat the team the Boone Yankees have lost to in the postseason three times during his tenure. Soto doesn’t need some piece-of-shit pennant ring.

9. Sunday presents a rubber game in the Stadium version of the Subway Series. The Yankees will face the left-handed David Peterson. Maybe they can bring back Jahmai Jones and J.D. Davis, the duo Boone famously hit first and fourth against the Mets in last year’s Subway Series.

Would Boone dare to hit LeMahieu first against the lefty? Based on LeMahieu’s at bats in three games it wouldn’t be the worst thing. He did hit a home run on Saturday and hit a ball 107 mph. If you want to say it was a short-porch homer, too bad. I didn’t see anyone else on the Yankees using the short porch on Saturday. I think I would be inclined to use LeMahieu as the leadoff hitter against a lefty. He’s as healthy as he’s going to be and with the more games he plays you never know when he’s going to get hurt and no longer be available. You might as well use him while you still can. I wouldn’t use Trent Grisham or Rice. If anything, I would go with Volpe or Bellinger as both have crushed lefties.

In actuality, this is what Boone is likely to do on Sunday night:

1. Trent Grisham, CF
2. Aaron Judge, RF
3. Cody Bellinger, LF
4. Paul Goldschmidt, 1B
5. Jasson Dominguez, DH
6. Anthony Volpe, SS
7. Austin Wells, C
8. DJ LeMahieu, 2B
9. Oswald Peraza, 3B

10. It shouldn’t matter that much because Max Fried is starting and the offense doesn’t need to provide much when Fried starts. The Yankees lost the last time Fried started on Tuesday and it was the first time they have lost one of his starts, and they lost 2-1 (another one-run, extra-inning road loss). Fried didn’t have his best stuff and still only allowed one run over five innings. I don’t see him having to grind through a second straight start.

Fried is starting and the only relievers who should be needed when he starts are rested in Loaisiga and Weaver and the Yankees have a day off on Monday. The Yankees are set up to win the Stadium portion of this year’s Subway Series. Unless their manager screws it up.

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Yankees Thoughts: From Seattle to Subway Series

The Yankees finished their West Coast road trip with a 3-2 win over the Mariners. Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. It looked like the Yankees’ two-city, six-game road trip would end the same way their other two multi-series road trips had ended this season: with a letdown. After starting their Pittsburgh-Detroit trip in early April 2-1 , it ended 3-3. After starting their Tampa Bay-Cleveland trip in mid-April 3-1, it ended 4-3. After starting their Sacramento-Seattle trip this week 3-1, it was on the verge of ending 3-3.

The Yankees hit Luis Castillo as hard as they ever have (nine balls hit over 100 mph against Castillo) and had nothing to show for it through the first five innings. Trent Grisham hit a ball over the wall to lead off the game that Julio Rodriguez pulled back in to prevent a home run and Aaron Judge singled and Cody Bellinger doubled in the first, and the Yankees still didn’t score a run. In the third, the Yankees had two on with one out and couldn’t score, in the fourth they left a runner on and did so again in the fifth.

The Yankees trailed 2-0 with two outs and no one on in the sixth. Castillo was an out away from throwing six scoreless and turning it over to the strong Mariners bullpen before a two-out rally happened.

Anthony Volpe worked a six-pitch at-bat that ended with a double. With Castillo sitting at 91 pitches, Jasson Dominguez jumped on a first-pitch slider from Castillo and ripped it down the right-field line for an RBI double.

2. Now trailing by one run with three innings of outs to play with, Aaron Boone inexplicably went to Tyler Matzek for the bottom of the sixth to face the middle of the Mariners’ lineup as Boone tried his very best to make sure the Yankees would have a somber cross-country flight home. Matzek entered the game having allowed 14 baserunners in 5 2/3 innings this season, so why wouldn’t Boone go to him in a one-run game with a scheduled day off on Thursday?

Unsurprisingly, Matzek created a mess. He allowed a leadoff single to Cal Raleigh after Boone purposely put Matzek in to turn around Raleigh and have him hit from the right side. He got Randy Arozarena to fly out, but let Raleigh steal second and then walked pinch-hitter Dylan Moore. Matzek was able to strike out Leody Tavares (who was let go by the Rangers earlier this season and has a .554 OPS), and thankfully, Boone removed him from the game for Ian Hamilton.

3. Dan Wilson removed Castillo for the seventh at 93 pitches and went to his trusted lefty Gabe Speier, who had no problem shutting down the Yankees the night before. Boone went to his bench and used Paul Goldschmidt to pinch hit for J.C. Escarra and Goldschmidt blasted Speier’s first pitch into the left-field seats to tie the game at 2.

“It shows you the type of player he is and the knowledge he has,” Judge said of Goldschmidt. “His preparation to where he was ready to go from the very first pitch, and he put a great swing on it.”

After getting the last out of the seventh, Hamilton threw a perfect eighth, and just like Goldschmidt leading off the seventh with a home run, Judge did the same in the eighth to give the Yankees a 3-2 lead.

Fernando Cruz pitched around a couple of baserunners in the eighth and Luke Weaver struck out the side on 15 pitches in the ninth, and the Yankees were able to board their flight home in celebratory fashion.

4. Will Warren put together back-to-back good starts for the first time in his career. After going 7 1/3 innings last Friday against the A’s, he held the Mariners to two runs over five innings with a career-high nine strikeouts. He has brought his ERA down to a respectable 4.61 given where he was earlier this year. I still don’t trust him. I still need more than one of nine starts going more than five innings. But there is intrigue with him after this trip, and there is at least promise that maybe he can figure it out the way Clarke Schmidt kind of/sort of has.

5. DJ LeMahieu reached base with a walk and also hit a line-drive single up the middle in the game. As I wrote after the second game of the series, LeMahieu just needs to be average at the plate. That’s all anyone is asking: Be average.

6. Anthony Volpe has quietly been hitting well of late. For as critical I am of the Yankees’ Golden Boy, I will be fair when he’s going well. He hit .304/.448/.522 on the road trip, hit his first road home run of the season to prove he can hit the ball out away from the short porch at Yankee Stadium and his OPS for the season is back up to .770. He has a .900 OPS over the last three weeks and 17 games. Am I ready to believe he is the player the Yankees promised? No. He’s done this before. He has fooled us all into believing he has figured it out several times in his first two-plus seasons in the league. I’m going to need a much longer period of success than three weeks before I buy into Volpe again, but for the moment, my belief is trending in the right direction.

7. Cody Bellinger is riding a 10-game hit streak. Before the streak he had a .614 OPS. Now it’s all the way up to. 688. Wow! A .688 OPS for a $25 million player! What an accomplishment. I’m sure the trio of Bellinger, Grisham and Dominguez will all sit a game this weekend. That seems to be the way things are going. It’s going to take one of them turning into Aaron Hicks or Josh Donaldson to get something close to an everyday expected lineup, and even then, as you remember with Hicks and Donaldson, that still may not be enough. Even if Bellinger is the worst of the three (which he has been by a large margin), his defense, reputation and owed money will always keep him at the top of the pecking order.

8. The Yankees have already told us they don’t give a shit that Dominguez is destroying right-handed pitching with a .305/.383/.512 slash line against them and an .895 OPS since they continue to sit him against them. (For comparison, Bellinger has a .639 OPS against righties.) Grisham seems to need to homer twice a series to stay in the lineup, and Bellinger seems to be able to do whatever he wants to stay in the lineup. Throw in the extra-base hit machine in Ben Rice, who can’t get into the lineup daily and the Yankees have a problem in that they have too many hitters for not enough lineup spots. The problem derives from the fact that their best hitters don’t play positions of need. The Yankees need a second baseman and third baseman, and unfortunately, none of Dominguez, Grisham, Bellinger and Rice play those positions, so LeMahieu and Oswald Peraza/Jorbit Vivas get to play every day.

9. This is the best possible Yankees lineup against a right-handed starter at the moment:

1. Trent Grisham, CF
2. Aaron Judge, RF
3. Ben Rice, DH
4. Paul Goldschmidt, 1B
5. Jasson Dominguez, LF
6. Anthony Volpe, SS
7. Austin Wells, C
8. DJ LeMahieu, 2B
9. Oswald Peraza, 3B

10. The Yankees will see two right-handed starters this weekend against the Mets. Friday’s game is going to have a postseason feel to it in the first game of the 2025 Subway Series and the first game back in the Bronx for Juan Soto. I love the Subway Series, always have, even after all of these years. I don’t think the games have lost their luster, and this year’s (especially this weekend) will show that.

Carlos Rodon, Clarke Schmidt and Max Fried are lined up to go this weekend, so it’s the best possible three the Yankees could use going in the series. A night game on Friday, followed by a day game on Saturday and then another night game on Sunday leading into a day off on Monday. It’s going to be a loud weekend at the Stadium.

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