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Yankees Podcast: Free Fallin’

The Yankees are in a free fall for the third straight season. They have lost 17 of 23, are fading in the division race and are dangerously close to beginning to drop in the wild-card

The Yankees are in a free fall for the third straight season. They have lost 17 of 23, are fading in the division race and are dangerously close to beginning to drop in the wild-card standings. Despite all of this, Brian Cashman and Aaron Boone are showing no signs of urgency and are admittedly relying on “hope” to save the season.

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Yankees Thoughts: Brian Cashman Leaving Season Up to “Hope”

The Yankees played on Tuesday and that means their season loss total increased by one. Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees. 1. It takes a lot for Brian Cashman to join the Yankees on

The Yankees played on Tuesday and that means their season loss total increased by one.

Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. It takes a lot for Brian Cashman to join the Yankees on the road, and losing 16 of their last 22 games entering Tuesday certainly constitutes as a lot.

“Thankfully, we got out of the gates really strong,” Cashman said at Tropicana Field before Tuesday’s game. “Hopefully that cushion will allow us to work through this. Hopefully sooner than later because it’s gone on long enough.”

Whenever you’re using the word “hopefully” to discuss your baseball season, you’re screwed, and Cashman used the word twice in 11 words. You would think more than $300 million in salaries could buy you more than hope, but that’s all it has gotten Cashman. It’s all he has gotten after incorrectly spending more than $3 billion in salaries since the Yankees’ last World Series appearance.

2. Cashman could do something other than “hope” the season will turn around. He could replace his manager and try to remove the comfortable-with-losing stench Aaron Boone has covered the Yankees’ winning tradition with. But he won’t. That would go against “the process” Cashman has frequently mentioned in recent years as an excuse for his team’s shortcomings. It would go against his belief that the process is more important than the results, which he said at his end-of-the-season press conference in 2022.

“It’s been a tough stretch for us,” Cashman added.

If by “stretch” Cashman means the entirety of the Boone era, then yes, it’s been a tough “stretch.” Unfortunately, that’s not what Cashman meant. He was referring to just the last month. In fact, he didn’t hesitate to praise the work Boone has done this season, saying his manager has navigated this collapse “as well as he possibly can.”

3. Not only did Cashman defend his handpicked manager’s leadership during a third straight disastrous mid-June collapse, he doesn’t think this season is any way like the last two.

“I think every year is different,” Cashman said. “I think those teams are different and some of the issues are different.”

What? WHAT? WHAT?! Like Mugatu yelling about Zoolander’s faces, THEY’RE THE SAME THING! Blue Steel? Ferrari? Le Tigre? 2022? 2023? 2024? THEY’RE THE SAME THING!

Each Yankees season is a continuation of the previous season. This season is a continuation of 2023 and 2023 was a continuation of 2022 and so on. The collapses have been the same. The offensive issues have been the same. The oft-injured players inevitably getting injured are the same. The underperforming players are the same. When you run it back with the same front office, same manager and essentially the same roster over and over, you get the same result. This collapse isn’t an anomaly. It’s not part of the ebb and flow of the baseball season like Boone likes to say. It’s expected. It’s part of who these Yankees are.

4. Cashman’s presence at the Trop on Tuesday did nothing to stop the Yankees from free falling into nothing as they lost again. After they scored a first-inning run on a Gleyber Torres RBI single, the thought the game may play out differently than nearly every game for the past month may have entered your mind. Then Carlos Rodon walked to the mound.

Two batters and seven pitches into Rodon’s night, the Yankees lead was gone and the game was tied at 1. Two batters and seven more pitches from Rodon, and the Yankees trailed by three runs and the remaining eight-plus innings were just a formality in leading the Yankees to their 17th loss in their last 23 games.

5. “It has not been fun, that’s for sure,” Rodon said. “I’m just not really giving my team a chance to win, giving up runs early.”

The Yankees have lost each of Rodon’s last four starts, and in those games, he has put 41 baserunners on in 19 innings, pitching to a 10.89 ERA and 2.053 WHIP. Opposing hitters are batting .356/.423/.713 against him for a 1.135 OPS. For reference, Aaron Judge has the highest OPS in the majors at 1.103, so opposing hitters are collectively the best hitter in the game against Rodon.

6. It was always going to be extremely difficult to like Rodon as a Yankee after his first season with the team when he came to spring training unfocused and possibly out of shape, got hurt before Opening Day and said he would be pitching if it were the playoffs then missed the first half of the season, pitched to a 6.85 ERA over 14 starts, blew a kiss to heckling fans, turned his back on the pitching coach and gave up eight runs without recording an out in his final start of the season. With what has gone on with him this season, I can’t envision ever being a fan of his as a Yankee.

7. Rodon allowed four runs on Tuesday before recording an out didn’t stop his manager from supporting the lefty (who makes roughly $800,000 per start).

“Once he gets settled he’s got a lot of ways of getting you out,” Boone said.

Rodon has a 9.00 ERA on the season in the first inning. He loses each game for the Yankees before they have a chance to bat at home or before they have a chance to bat for a second time on the road. But hey, once he gets settled, watch out!

8. Rodon’s next start will come on Sunday in Baltimore in the final game before the All-Star break. He faced the Orioles in Baltimore on May 2 and allowed six earned runs on eight hits, including three home runs and the Yankees lost 7-2. You can put the Yankees down for a loss this Sunday in Baltimore.

Since the Yankees already lost on Tuesday and are likely to lose on Sunday with Rodon pitching again, that means they would have to win the next four games to post a winning road trip. The last time the Yankees won two games in a row was June 11 and June 12. Today is July 10.

9. With “hope” being Cashman’s solution to the season, the best the Yankees can “hope” for on this six-game trip to Tampa and Baltimore is to go 3-3, and even then it’s not exactly promising. A 3-3 trip would keep them running in place while the Red Sox keep winning and the Orioles gradually increase their separation. On June 12, the Yankees had a 2 1/2-game lead over the Orioles and a 14-game lead over the Red Sox. Today, the Yankees trail the Orioles by four games in the loss column and their 14-game lead over the Red Sox is down to two games in the loss column.

10. The stuffing in the “cushion” Cashman spoke about is bursting at the seams. The Yankees are a bad rest of this road trip from being buried in the division race and from hanging on to a postseason berth. The team Cashman said is “pretty fucking good” during his unhinged tirade over the winter is anything but. For the last month, they’ve been pretty fucking bad, and the “hope” they will magically turn it around is fading by the day.

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Yankees Thoughts: ‘It’s All Right There in Front of Us’

The Yankees lost another game and another series and their season is collapsing. Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees. 1. “We had chances to grab that game, take that game. We didn’t,” Aaron Boone

The Yankees lost another game and another series and their season is collapsing.

Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. “We had chances to grab that game, take that game. We didn’t,” Aaron Boone said. “And that’s where we are right now, and it’s really difficult right now.”

“We gotta play better period,” Boone continued. “And the great thing is it’s right in front of us. It’s right here and we can fix it. It’s right here. It’s there and we can run away with this thing. And we got the dudes in there to do it.”

“If we don’t score,” Boone added, “tough to win.”

Boone said none of that after Sunday night’s 3-0 loss to the Red Sox. He did say all of that on Aug. 20, 2022 with the Yankees’ season in the type of free fall Tom Petty sang about. But you wouldn’t know Boone said that nearly two years ago and not this weekend because his summarization of the Yankees’ situation is the same today as it was then.

2. What Boone did say after losing yet another series was, “It’s all right there in front of us.” It was the same line he used in that Aug. 20, 2022 meltdown when he slammed the table with his right hand while saying it. It’s not the only other time he said it.

Aug. 20, 2022: “It’s right in front of us.”

July 15, 2023: “It’s all there right in front of us.”

July 7, 2024: “It’s all right there in front of us.”

For three straight seasons the Yankees have endured a mid-June collapse, and for three straight seasons, the man leading the team has regurgitated the same tired line.

The 2022 Yankees were 61-23 and then went 38-40.

The 2023 Yankees were 36-25 and then went 46-55.

The 2024 Yankees were 50-22. They are now 55-37, having gone 5-15 in their last 20 games.

When Brian Cashman gave up on Sonny Gray after 2018 and traded him away for nothing, he said, “I don’t feel like we can go through the same exercise and expect different results.” But when it comes to the person responsible for in-game management and creating a winning culture, Cashman is completely fine with living the same season over and over.

3. This week will be a month since the Yankees last won a series. It’s now been more than a month since they won a home series. And after this 1-5 homestand against the Reds and Red Sox, Boone has added some more glowing accomplishments to his impressive resume:

– Only Yankees manager to get a fifth season on the job without a championship (and now a sixth and seventh season)

– Manager for the most lopsided home postseason loss in franchise history (Game 3 of the 2018 ALDS)

– Manager for the worst single-month record in 33 years

– Manager for the worst season record in 31 years

– Manager for the most steals allowed in a single game by franchise in 109 years

– Manager for the first three-plus-game-series sweep by NL team at Yankee Stadium in franchise history

– Manager for the first Yankees team to lose five straight home series in 34 years

– Manager for the first time in Yankees history the team allowed 35-plus home runs and had a losing record over any 16-game span

– Manager for the first Yankees team to not steal a base over 20 consecutive games in 61 years

4. This can’t go on. It couldn’t go on after Boone’s decision-making in the 2018 ALDS, but it did. It couldn’t go on after his decision-making in the 2020 ALDS, but it did. It couldn’t go on after the disgraceful 2021 season, but it did. It couldn’t go on after the second-half collapse, use of the 2004 ALCS at motivation and embarrassment in the ALCS in 2022, but it did. It couldn’t go on after the worst Yankees season in 30 years with the team missing the postseason in a format in which 40 percent of the league makes the postseason in 2023, but it did. It can’t continue for the rest of 2024. But it will.

5. It will because Cashman is in charge, and he’s invincible as general manager of the Yankees. He’s as close to being a member of the Steinbrenner family as one could be without having their last name. Cashman built a roster in which the Yankees are heavily relying on a 25-year-old rookie to be the third-most important bat in the lineup after Aaron Judge and Juan Soto. He’s the one who thought Anthony Rizzo coming off a lost season would stay healthy at almost 35 years of age. He’s the one who thought relying on Giancarlo Stanton to be available all season despite a lost tenure as a Yankee would suffice. He’s the one who thought DJ LeMahieu would turn back the clock five years. He’s the one who has held on to Gleyber Torres to the point where he has no value and will leave the Yankees for nothing in return in three months. He’s the one who thought Alex Verdugo’s contact ability would help a strikeout-heavy lineup, despite all of his contact being ground balls to second base. He’s the one who hung his hat on Anthony Volpe as the shortstop of the future and passed over every big-name free-agent shortstop available. He’s the one who gave Carlos Rodon $162 million to be a fifth starter at best. He’s the one who built this bullpen that has one trustworthy option in it (Luke Weaver), and it’s a stretch to call that one option trustworthy.

6. Unfortunately, Cashman isn’t going anywhere. Despite being unable to build a core of his own since being named general manager 26 years ago, there’s a better chance the Yankees remove the interlocking NY from their hat and stop wearing pinstripes than there is Cashman is removed from his position. He will remain in his position for as long as he wants, and when he no longer wants to be in the position, he will handpick the next person to do the job so Hal Steinbrenner doesn’t have to.

Cashman created this mess of a roster, though he likely doesn’t see it as that considering over the winter he said his team coming off an 82-win season is “pretty fucking good.” But he also created this culture of losing by installing a manager who is accepting and comfortable with losing. A manager who calls extending losing streaks “bumps in the road” and refers to historic collapses as “the ebbs and flows of a baseball season” and considers catastrophic, avoidable losses to be “just part of 162” all while telling everyone at the end of each disappointing season how “sweet” it will be when the Yankees finally “climb the mountain” and win a championship under his watch.

7. It would take an incredible amount of good fortune and luck for the Yankees to win a championship with Boone as their manager. I’m not talking about a few bounces going their way or an unlikely bat getting hot in October. I’m talking about the kind of good fortune and luck needed to win the lottery and then win it again two days later.

If you’re one of the few lunatics who feels Boone is undeserving of losing his job, then you must be of the idea that no manager should ever lose their job because there’s no one more deserving of losing their managerial job than Boone. Boone isn’t the problem, but he is a problem, and he’s certainly not part of the solution.

8. If you listened to Anthony Volpe speak with the media after his lack of hustle led to the Yankees not scoring a run that would have won them the game on Friday night, it was as if Boone scripted Volpe’s responses for him. Judge frequently talks about “getting them tomorrow.” Last year, Rodon said, “It’s in front of us” as the season fell part, and a week after that, Harrison Bader responded, “No concern” when asked about the Yankees being 4 1/2 games out of a playoff spot. One of the reasons Joe Girardi was let go was because Cashman feared the young core of players would take on the tense characteristics of their manager. That young core under Boone didn’t grow up by taking on the characteristics of their happy-go-lucky, Pollyanna manager, they have become him.

9. With Gray, Cashman eventually said enough is enough. With tens of millions of dollars owed to pitchers and players like A.J. Burnett, Alex Rodriguez, Jacoby Ellsbury and Aaron Hicks, he thought paying them to not play or to play against the Yankees was better than paying them to play for the Yankees. When it came to his belief that winning with an all-right-handed lineup was possible while completely disregarding lineup balance, he finally gave in and traded for and signed left-handed bats. But for some reason, when it comes to Boone, he can’t make a change. He won’t make a change.

10. There’s 70 games left in the season. Seventy games to try to save a season that is taking on water at a faster rate than the previous two. Seventy games to not waste another season of the primes of Judge and Gerrit Cole, and not waste possibly the only season of Soto as a Yankee.

Coming off a season in which the Yankees were one win away from the World Series, Cashman handed the team over to someone with no managerial or coaching experience at any level. There’s no fixing or making up the last six lost seasons, but by finally ending this experiment Cashman can do something his manager has rarely ever done: put the team in the best possible position to succeed.

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Yankees Thoughts: Meet the Mess

The Yankees and their two-man offense were no match for the mediocre Mets as Gerrit Cole got rocked in a 9-7 loss. Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees. 1. When the Yankees posted their

The Yankees and their two-man offense were no match for the mediocre Mets as Gerrit Cole got rocked in a 9-7 loss.

Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. When the Yankees posted their lineup on Tuesday for this season’s Subway Series opener, all I could do was laugh. I challenge any team in the majors to put together a worse 4 through 9 this season:

Gleyber Torres
Alex Verdugo
J.D. Davis
DJ LeMahieu
Jahmai Jones
Jose Trevino

I feared if the first three hitters in the lineup didn’t put the Yankees on the board, the Yankees weren’t going to get on the board even against a starter as mediocre as David Peterson. My fear came to fruition in the top of the first inning.

2. Anthony Volpe singled on the first pitch of the game and Juan Soto and Aaron Judge followed with walks. The Yankees had the bases loaded and no outs. They had a chance to win the game in the very first inning and potentially destroy the Mets’ bullpen for the next night as well.

None of that happened.

    Gleyber Torres struck out. Alex Verdugo struck out. J.D. Davis struck out. Peterson struck out the side, stranded the top third of the lineup and the Yankees never recovered.

    3. They never recovered because Gerrit Cole turned in his worst start as a Yankee. Cole allowed a run in the first (could have been more if not for Verdugo throwing out Pete Alonso at home to end the inning), two runs in the second and three more in the third. Cole lasted just four innings in his second start of the season, gave up six earned runs on seven hits and four walks, allowed four home runs and didn’t strike out a batter.

    “This was a pretty tough night,” Cole said, “and I didn’t really give us a chance to win.”

    No, you didn’t. The Yankees have now lost both of Cole’s starts and he has only recorded 12 outs in each. It’s nice that he, his manager and his teammates keep making excuses for him and referring to this time as his spring training, but it’s not spring training. It’s the end of June.

    4. The Yankees are spiraling at the exact time in the exact way they did two years ago: injuries, underachievers, bounceback candidates that haven’t bounced back and bad managing. The pitching staff’s health and early-season magic has worn off and nearly every hitter not named Soto or Judge might as well not bring a bat to the plate and hope the pitcher can throw four balls before three strikes.

    By the time the Yankees scored their first run in the fifth inning on Tuesday, it didn’t matter as they trailed 6-0. When they scored for a second time in the seventh, it didn’t matter because they trailed 9-1. When they scored five times in the eighth thanks to a Judge grand slam, it didn’t matter because Soto and Judge’s spots in the order weren’t going to come up again in the eighth or ninth.

    5. Soto and Judge finished the game 3-for-6 with a double, two home runs, six RBIs and three walks. The rest of the lineup went 4-for-28 (all singles) with 12 strikeouts and four walks. One of the four hits and the only run the rest of the lineup drove in was from Austin Wells, who didn’t even start the game.

    6. Cole was awful, Phil Bickford was bad (I can’t believe a guy who couldn’t crack the roster over Dennis Santana, Victor Gonzalez or Ron Marinaccio didn’t pitch well) and the Yankees lost … again. (Why did Boone go to Michael Tonkin at 7-1, but not 6-1? Why did Boone go to Tonkin at all? Why did Boone go Bickford then Tonkin then Tim Hill? Does anyone care to ask what he’s doing or how his lineup and in-game decisions are being made?) It was their eighth loss in their last 11 games.

    7. Torres batting cleanup was inexplicable. How could a guy with his slash line with no plan or discipline at the plate be considered an option to bat fourth? He went 0-for-4 with two strikeouts and a walk as his average inches closer to below .200 (.215) and his OPS to below .600 (.627). For the icing on the cake, Torres added an error to his American League-leading total (12) in the sixth and then decided to jog out a ground ball in the eighth. His manager was there to make excuses for a player he has started in all but one game this season by saying Torres is dealing with a “quad/groin” injury. Ah, yes the old quad/groin injury.

    “We need him to be a presence in the middle of our lineup. We’ve got to get that out of him.”

    That doesn’t exist. There’s nothing to get out of him.

    “It’s not easy,” Torres said. “I know I’m a guy that can do a better job right now.”

    No, you’re not. If you were you would already be doing a better job.

    8. Boone decided to sit Ben Rice against the left-handed Peterson and start the newly-acquired Davis. Rice started against Chris Sale on Friday and Max Fried on Sunday (arguably the best two lefties in the world), but Peterson presented too much of a challenge for Boone’s liking.

    Davis struck out with the bases loaded in the first inning. He led off the fourth with a strikeout. He hit into an inning-ending double play with two on in the fourth. Finally, he was removed from the game in the eighth for rice. Rice singled in another hard-fought, six-pitch at-bat.

    9. LeMahieu added another game without an extra-base hit, Verdugo continued his free fall (now four percent worse than league average), and Jones went 0-for-the night. Trevino did have a hit in the game and managed to hold the Mets to only two stolen bases on two attempts.

    10. Luis Gil, coming off the worst start of his young career (and unlikely to have a start as poor for the rest of his career) will try to prevent a Citi Field sweep. The Mets will counter with the mediocre Sean Manaea. Unfortunately, mediocre starting pitching and mediocre offenses are more than enough to the beat the Yankees in their current state.

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    Yankees Thoughts: Luis Gil Handed Career-Worst Loss

    The Yankees suffered their most lopsided loss of the season and it came in the most important game of the season to date. Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees. 1. The Yankees couldn’t have

    The Yankees suffered their most lopsided loss of the season and it came in the most important game of the season to date.

    Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

    1. The Yankees couldn’t have been set up better for their three-game series at home against the Orioles. They had Monday completely off. Their elite relievers were well rested after having not been needed on Saturday and Sunday in two losses against the Red Sox. They had the advantage in every starting pitching matchup with Nestor Cortes and his 1.57 ERA going against journeyman Albert Suarez (who hadn’t pitched in the majors in seven years before this season), Gerrit Cole making his season debut against Cade Povich in his third career start and American League Cy Young favorite Luis Gil against Cole Irvin and his weak 6.5 strikeouts per nine innings. The Yankees wasted all of their advantages and lost two of three to their direct competition for the division.

    2. The Yankees held on to win the series opener 4-2, were managed to a 7-6 extra-inning loss in the middle game and then were humiliated in a 17-5 loss in the rubber game.

    “They are a good club. We saw that last year,” Aaron Judge said. “They play hard. They play fast.”

    3. Gil picked a bad day to have the worst start of his career (1.1 IP, 8 H, 7 R, 7 ER, 2 BB, 1 K, 1 HR). After dominating the Orioles in Baltimore on May 1, Gil couldn’t get out of the second inning on Thursday and provided the Yankees with their first start of less than four innings of the season.

    “It happens. That’s baseball,” Judge said. “You are going to have those outings like that.”

    4. Gil had been so good overall before being embarrassed by the Orioles, but his disastrous start was kind of foreshadowed in his previous two starts. Two starts ago, the Dodgers tagged Gil for the most runs he allowed since April and it was the first time since April he didn’t complete six innings. Then in his last start, he gave the Yankees five innings of one-run ball, but walked four and put eight on in a grind-it-out effort.

    5. The Orioles didn’t sit back and let Gil get ahead to blow them away with his riding fastball or low-‘90s changeup. They swung early in the count and attacked Gil before he could attack them. Gil faced 15 batters and 11 of them reached base.

    “Today I missed pitches,” Gil said. “They took advantage of it, but it’s definitely a learning experience.”

    6. The inconsistent Yankees offense can’t be trusted, but they have never had a chance on Thursday, considering they trailed 7-0 in the top of the second. Every Orioles starter had a hit in the game. The 4 through 7 hitters each had two hits and the 1 through 3 hitters each had three. The Orioles’ 17 runs were the most against the Yankees in five years.

    “They came out swinging early on,” Judge said. “We really couldn’t answer back after that.”

    7. Gleyber Torres hit his seventh home run of the season, a meaningless solo shot with the Yankees down seven, and Judge hit his league-leading 27th home run. (I’m glad Judge was healthy enough in the Yankees’ eyes to play on Thursday and hit a home run, but couldn’t have pinch hit 19 hours earlier in a game the Yankees could have won.)

    8. The defense was sloppy with three errors, and the bullpen gave up 10 runs in 7 2/3 innings. Newest Yankee Tim Hill showed why the White Sox gave up on him as he allowed a three-run home run in his only inning of work. Caleb Ferguson and Victor Gonzalez provided their latest examples of why the Dodgers were willing to trade them, and Ron Marinaccio, who was good enough to relieve Cole in a tie game the previous day, is no longer good enough to be a Yankee and was sent down after the 12-run loss.

    9. The Yankees are 6-7 in their last 13 games, dating back to the first game of the Dodgers series. They are 2-5 against the Orioles with six games left against them (and will need to win five of six to hold the head-to-head tiebreaker over them). They are 10-12 against the AL East. Their issues have been glaring over the last two weeks: lack of lineup depth, untrustworthy bullpen, a starting catcher who can’t throw, a pitching staff that can’t hold runners and a manager who continues to be a liability in close games.

    10. It’s not going to get any easier. The Yankees were fortunate to get the Orioles’ worst three starters over the last three days, and now they will unfortunately get the Braves’ best three starters over the next three days: Chris Sale, Charlie Morton and Max Fried. The Braves have been playing much better of late (6-1 in their last seven games) after their slide following Ronald Acuna’s season-ending injury. They aren’t playing the way they played for all of last season, but the ability to is still in there (minus Acuna) and they are showing it. The next three days at the Stadium will be another tough three days.

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