1. I can confirm Trey Yesavage is a problem. I thought maybe there was this small chance his performance in Game 2 of the ALDS last October was just a pitcher having the best game possible against the Yankees at the worst time possible and that it wouldn’t equate to future performance. Unfortunately, that’s not the case.
2. Yesavage dominated the Yankees on Wednesday in the same way he did seven months ago. He shut them out for six innings, allowing just two hits with one of those two hits being the result of a miscommunication from the Blue Jays defense when they let a routine out fall in for a fake double. Yesavage didn’t walk a batter and struck out eight
“More of the same,” Aaron Boone said. “He was, for the most part, filling up the strike zone tonight.”
To make matters worse, he outpitched Cam Schlittler. Schlittler was very good once again, but allowed two earned runs in the seventh inning after walking in the game’s first run with the bases loaded.
3. I think we can safely assume any game the Yankees play against the Blue Jays with Yesavage starting will be a loss. The Yankees have beaten Kevin Gausman before, they got to Dylan Cease on Tuesday and it’s been seven years since Patrick Corbin was a name worth worrying about, but Yesavage has now thoroughly dominated them twice. The Yankees had their best on the mound against Yesavage and they still lost. That doesn’t give me a lot of confidence with three more series between the teams in the regular season and the possibility of a postseason matchup. Yesavage is my most feared pitcher in the league.
4. Again, Schlittler was very good. He had a shutout going into the seventh before an infield single, walk and misplayed bunt loaded the bases with no outs. Schlittler walked in a run with the bases loaded and then was pulled for Jake Bird, who did a nice job limiting the damage to just one more run. Without the infield single and the misplayed bunt, at worst the Blue Jays would have had a runner on second with two outs. Instead they had the bases loaded with no outs.
“Just unacceptable,” Schlittler said of his performance in the seventh inning. “I walked two guys … You can’t walk the bottom of the order. Just unfortunate I couldn’t close that out.”
5. The misplayed bunt is what changed the inning. The Blue Jays were willing to give up an out to move the runners into scoring position. Prior to the misplayed bunt, the Yankees had a mound meeting, led by Paul Goldschmidt, who likely said he was going to come in and be the one to field the bunt. But when the play unfolded, Austin Wells also tried to field the bunt and no outs were recorded. At some point Wells is going to add positive value to the team, right?
6. Trailing 2-0 in the ninth, the Yankees nearly pulled off an unexpected comeback, but left the tying tun on second in the 2-1 loss. The loss dropped the Yankees to 5-11 in one-run games this season. The offense produced one non-defense-aided hit in the first eight innings. Ben Rice went 0-for-4 and has a .654 OPS since hurting his wrist on May 3. Aaron Judge went 0-for-4 with four strikeouts and has a .646 OPS since May 7. Ryan McMahon, Anthony Volpe and Wells combined to go 0-for-9 with four strikeouts. Volpe wrongly challenged a strike call that showed the entire ball inside the strike zone. If you challenge a pitch that shows the ball in the zone, you should automatically be out regardless of the count.
7. Yovanny Cruz made his major-league debut and was electric. Cruz went six-up, six-down with three strikeouts against the Blue Jays’ 4-through-9 hitters. He reached triple digits several times. Is it too early to make Cruz the closer? In that one outing he showed more ability than just about every reliever on the team.
“It was a long road to get here,” Cruz said. “A lot of injuries, a lot of things that I had to overcome.”
8. The Blue Jays will use Braydon Fisher as an opener in the series finale on Thursday. Carlos Rodon goes for the Yankees. Rodon was dreadful in his first two starts and I have zero expectations for him in this one. I don’t trust Rodon. Never have, never will, and after what he showed in Milwaukee and Queens, it’s hard to envision him pitching well against a team that lit him up in three starts last season, including the postseason: 12.1 IP, 17 H, 12 R, 10 ER, 10 BB, 10 K, 1 HR.
9. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. has done nothing in this series. Guerrero Jr. remains at three home runs, which is how many home runs Wells has this year. But Guerrero Jr. has hit .588 with a 1.608 OPS against Rodon in his 21 regular-season plate appearances and hit a two-run home run and walked against him in the postseason. I can’t believe there’s a chance Guerrero Jr. could come to the Bronx for a four-game series and not hit a home run, and it’s going to take a lot from Rodon to that make that scenario come true.
10. Judge hasn’t done much of late. He’s 2-for-11 with seven strikeouts in this series and has one home run and two doubles since May 6. The Yankees are 5-9 since May 6. I find it hard to believe Thursday’s game is anything like the low-scoring pitcher’s duel from Wednesday, and because of that, it would be nice if the Yankees’ biggest bat returned.

