1. There’s a pretty simply flowchart you can use to determine if the Yankees won or lost on a given night.
Did Ben Rice or Aaron Judge hit a home run?
If yes, the Yankees won. If no, continue.
Did the starting pitcher pitch into the seventh inning and allow two runs or fewer?
If yes, the Yankees won. If no, the Yankees lost.
That’s it. That’s all you need to determine if the Yankees won. On Friday against the Orioles, Rice hit a three-run home run in the second inning and Will Warren gave them 6 1/3 innings of one-run ball. So yes, the Yankees won, beating the Orioles 7-2.
2. “The stuff has been excellent,” Aaron Boone said of Warren. “The strike-throwing is there … You see all the swings and misses.”
Warren struck out nine Orioles and walked one. The only run he allowed came on a Pete Alonso solo home run in the second inning. In terms of American League ranks, Warren is now seventh in ERA (2.39), 17th in innings pitched (37.2), 22nd in hits (32), 17th in home runs (4), sixth in walks (8) and fourth in strikeouts (46). Not bad for a “third” starter who is about to become the team’s “fifth” starter and is still battling for that role every time he takes the mound.
3. “I think we are going to have the best staff in all of baseball,” Warren said about the return of Carlos Rodon and Gerrit Cole. “When they come back, the best pitchers are going to pitch the majority of the innings. I have to make sure I can go out there and do my job.”
The Yankees already have the best staff in all of baseball, 1 through 4. Cam Schlittler, Max Fried and Warren are all in the top 7 in the majors in ERA. Schlittler, Warren and Ryan Weathers are all in the top 9 in the majors in strikeouts. The Yankees have the lowest team ERA in the majors.
4. Again, the Yankees continue to stack wins and have an AL-best record of 21-11 because of their starting pitching. The offense remains the Rice and Judge show with some Jose Caballero and Amed Rosario mixed in and moments from Cody Bellinger. On Friday, it was Rice’s latest blast off a lefty that carried the offense, while Judge reached base four times, Caballero had a solo home run, Rosario had an RBI single and Bellinger added a pair of doubles. Paul Goldschmidt, Jazz Chisholm, Austin Wells and Trent Grisham combined to go 3-for-15 with two walks. The evaluation of the offense checks out.
5. There is this narrative that the Yankees are operating with urgency this season compared to past seasons. The examples being used are the quick benching of Ryan McMahon, the increased playing time for Rosario and the recent DFA of Randal Grichuk. I don’t believe any of those moves represent urgency. McMahon looked like a random fan picked out of the stands swinging a bat against major-league pitching in the first two weeks of the season and could no longer be played with regularity. Rosario earned his playing time with timely hits and home runs in place of McMahon. Grichuk was always going to be the odd man out unless he went completely off against lefties and he didn’t. I don’t think this is urgency; it’s more of favoritism. The reason the Yankees delayed a benching of Josh Donaldson a couple years ago and were quick to bench McMahon is because they loved Donaldson and because this time they had a worthy option in Rosario. The reason Grichuk was DFA’d instead of Goldschmidt, who provides no value, is because Goldschmidt was a Yankee last season and despite proving to be washed since the start of May last year through the start of May this year, the Yankees clearly value his veteran presence, and it’s possible he’s a Judge guy the way Anthony Rizzo, Alex Verdugo and DJ LeMahieu were.
6. We’ll find out just how much urgency the Yankees are operating with on Monday when Anthony Volpe’s rehab is over and the Yankees have to choose between bringing him up or sending him now. If the Yankees bring him up, we’ll know there’s no urgency and they’re operating the same as they ever have. If they send him down, we’ll know the Yankees are finally willing to make a decision they failed to make in 2023, 2024 and 2025.
Caballero leads all shortstops in defensive runs saved. He makes throws from the deepest part of the position effortlessly and doesn’t need to put his whole body into every throw just to get it across the infield. He leads the league in steals and has been an above-league-average hitter with a 102 OPS+. If Volpe had the kind of late-March, April and early-May start that Caballero had, we would be hearing about nine-year extension talks.
7. Meanwhile, Volpe has a .733 OPS at Triple-A and a .646 OPS at Double-A during his rehab games. He has one extra-base hit in 40 plate appearances. This isn’t a proven major leaguer working on things to get ready for his activation. This is a failed major leaguer trying to figure things out because he still needs to figure things out. Not only is Volpe not hitting in the minors, but video of his defense is startling and the video of him getting picked off at first base by a catcher is disturbing.
There will be plenty to write about what could be a disastrous and detrimental decision to the 2026 Yankees depending on what is actually decided on Monday. But there’s only two days left between now and then and I’m already preparing myself to accept that nothing has changed with Volpe and how the Yankees treat him compared to every other player in the organization.
8. Jasson Dominguez — who has had to earn every second he has been a part of the major-league roster — appears to have avoided injury after the inconclusive X-rays taken in Texas were followed by a conclusive CT scan in New York. Boone said Dominguez was available off the bench on Friday, so I’m thinking he’s going to start against the right-handed Ryan Bradish on Saturday.
9. Bradish is a good pitcher and has always been tough against the Yankees. Look at last September when the Orioles had nothing to play for and the Yankees were trying to win the division. He threw six scoreless innings with nine strikeouts against them on September 21 and then a week later struck out eight Yankees in four innings with them clearly unable to make an adjustment despite having seen the same pitcher twice in seven days. Bradish has been OK in six starts this season, but he did get roughed up a little by the abysmal Red Sox offense in his last start and allowed 13 baserunners in 5 1/3 innings to the also-abysmal Royals offense in the start before that. (That likely means he’s going seven scoreless against the Yankees on Saturday.)
10. Ryan Weathers gets the ball for the Yankees. Weathers has been very good and is still likely to lose his rotation spot soon, unless someone else gets injured or the Yankees decide to use a six-man rotation to keep everyone as fresh as possible. Weathers’ job on Saturday will be to keep Alonso and Tyler O’Neill in the park, and if he can do that and either Rice or Judge go deep, I like the Yankees’ chances.