1. I was worried about this home-opening series with the Marlins because everything has been going a little too well for the Yankees and because the Marlins have been as good as any team in the majors since last September. Add in the trauma from last August’s disastrous sweep in Miami and my concern seemed valid. It took a Trent Grisham walk and an Aaron Judge two-run home run to quell those fears. After Will Warren allowed the first home run against Yankees pitching in 2026 with one out in the first, the Yankees answered right back with Judge’s third of the season to take a 2-1 lead and never looked back.
2. The Yankees loaded the bases from walks in the second and scored twice to increase their lead to 4-1 without putting the ball in play as Grisham drew a bases-loaded walk and Judge was hit by a pitch with the bases loaded. The Marlins got a run back in the fifth with another solo home run off Warren, but the Yankees responded with a run on a wild pitch in the sixth, a Ben Rice solo home run in the seventh and a Rice two-run double in the eighth to carry them to an 8-2 win. The Yankees’ cleanup hitter has lived up to expectations through the first week-plus of the season.
3. “Benny can really hit,” Boone said. “I think he’s a middle-of-the-order hitter and is going to be for a long time.”
Well, I’d hope you think he’s a “middle-of-the-order hitter” since you hit him fourth in the lineup.
Rice is hitting .409/500/.864 through six games with four doubles, two home runs and a league-leading eight RBIs. The Yankees went into this season believing he could be the second-best hitter on the team and he has been that. His defense also appears to be much improved from where it was last year. He has already made a handful of plays I was stunned to see him complete after watching his defense in the past.
4. Tim Hill, Jake Bird, Brent Headrick and Ryan Yarbrough closed out the game with 3 1/3 hitless innings as the bullpen full of question marks continues to impress. Hill only threw two pitches to end the sixth in what was still a two-run game at the time. Three games ago, Camilo Doval only threw two pitches in what was a tie game at the time.
5. Grisham drew three walks, Judge had a single, home run and walk, Cody Bellinger had a double, Rice had the big day with the home run and double, Jazz Chisholm had a double and a walk and Austin Wells, Jose Caballero and Ryan McMahon combined for five walks. The only Yankee to not reach base was Giancarlo Stanton, which was inevitable after he was cooled off with a day off on Wednesday in Seattle. The Yankees had only six hits in the game but a ridiculous 11 walks (and a hit by pitch). They went 1-for-13 with runners in scoring position and still managed to score eight runs.
7. The Yankees are now 6-1, and with the Blue Jays losing to the White Sox (they are 1-3 against the Rockies and White Sox), the Yankees have a two-game lead in the division with the best run differential in the AL at plus-24. The next-best run differential in the AL is the Astros at plus-6. I would like for the team to run away and hide with the division and make this summer as easy and enjoyable as possible. (Unlike last summer when they blew an eight-game lead over the Blue Jays.)
“It’s early, but you love the fact that you get off to this kind of start,” Aaron Boone said after another easy day of managing. “Wins are precious. The guys are obviously pitching as well as they are, but I think they’re also playing well, the all-around game.”
8. Warren was pretty good: 5.2 IP, 4 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 0 BB, 6 K, 2 HR. As David Cone said during the broadcast, “You want to have a Catfish Hunter mentality pitching in the Bronx where solo home runs won’t beat you,” and Warren followed that.
“Solo homers aren’t going to beat us,” Warren said.” If we attack early, the odds are in our favor.”
Warren limited the damage to a pair of solo home runs, which wasn’t nearly enough to beat the Yankees. Here is Warren’s line through two starts: 10 IP, 9 H, 3 R, 3 ER, 2 BB, 9 K, 2 HR, 2.70 ERA, 1.100 WHIP.
9. When Carlos Rodon is healthy, someone is coming out of the rotation — if everyone else is also healthy. At the moment that someone is Luis Gil, considering the Yankees didn’t think enough of him to have him in the rotation out of spring training. But when Gerrit Cole returns, someone else will come out of the rotation — if everyone else is also healthy. That someone will be Warren of Weathers.
10. I would think Warren is the front-runner to keep his spot because the Yankees pitched him in the third game of the season ahead of Ryan Weathers. But Brian Cashman has never successfully traded for a young, controllable starting pitcher in his career and desperately wants Weathers to end that narrative instead of being the latest in the long list that includes Jeff Weaver, Javier Vazquez, Michael Pineda, Nathan Eovaldi, Sonny Gray, James Paxton and Jameson Taillon. Weathers will have his second opportunity to showcase his ability on Saturday against his former team in his first start wearing pinstripes.