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Yankees Thoughts: Home Win on the Road

At their spring training home, the Yankees beat the Rays 6-3. Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. When the Yankees led off Thursday’s home game on the road against the Rays with three straight singles to take a 1-0 lead, I was feeling great about where the game was headed. When only one of those three baserunners came around to score, that great feeling quickly turned ominous.

The Yankees have struggled in the past against Taj Bradley (one run in 13 innings) and with runners on first and third with no outs and one run already in and the 4-5-6 hitters in the lineup due up, they had the opportunity to break the game open and didn’t. After Aaron Judge’s single scored Paul Goldschmidt, Bradley faced one batter over the minimum for the next 4 1/3 innings.

2. During those 4 1/3 innings, Will Warren gave a reminder to anyone who thought he may have turned the corner last Saturday against the Giants that he hasn’t. With Marcus Stroman on the injured list, Warren paid tribute to his teammate by putting up a Stroman-like line: 1.2 IP, 4 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 2 BB, 1 K. Warren couldn’t get through the second inning, needed 53 pitches to get five outs and got one swing-and-miss on those 53 pitches. When he was removed from the game, he left the bullpen needing to get 22 outs in the middle of a 13-game-in-13-days stretch, and he left with the bases loaded.

3. It’s rare for Aaron Boone to make a wise in-game pitching decision, considering his lack of feel for what’s unfolding on the field in front of him. But his decision to remove Warren in the second inning and turn the ball over to the bullpen saved the game, and helped lead the Yankees to a win. Had Warren stayed in with two outs and the bases loaded, he was either going to walk in a run or allow the bases to clear. Boone got in front of it for the first of only a handful of times in his seven-plus years as manager.

Ryan Yarbrough (2.2 IP, 6 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 1 BB, 1 K) managed to keep the damage to a minimum in relief of Warren, despite putting seven baserunners on in 2 2/3 innings, and Tim Hill (2 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 2 K) put up a couple of zeros following Yarbrough.

4. The Yankees trailed 3-1 with one in the fifth until Oswaldo Cabrera hit his first home run of the season off of Bradley. I keep writing it in each of these Thoughts, but let Cabrera play every day at third. He had three hits in the game and his average is up to .308 and his OPS up to .757. PLAY HIM EVERY DAY until he gives you a reason not to.

5. After Cabrera homered, Goldschmidt singled and Ben Rice doubled. Judge walked and Cody Bellinger — with the bases loaded — hit the ball on the ground to score Goldschmidt and tie the game at 3. (That’s about all anyone can expect or ask of Bellinger at the moment: put the ball in play. He did his best to end the rally and inning with a double play, but managed to beat it out.)

6. The Yankees added a run in the sixth on a Jasson Dominguez groundout, and later in the inning, with the bases loaded and two outs, Rice singled in two more to give the Yankees a 6-3 lead, which is how it would stay.

Rice finished the game with a career-high four hits. He has a .317 average and 1.064 OPS and with each passing game he looks more and more like this is for real at the plate. He’s doing in front of Judge what Juan Soto did last year.

7. Jazz Chisholm has gone out of his way to complain about the weather since the start of the season as the Yankees have only played in frigid New York, Pittsburgh and Detroit. But now they’re in Tampa and Chisholm still went 0-for-3 with a walk. He was a pitch away from having a second walk, but the umpire called a 3-2 pitch low and away for a strike and Chisholm went wild, getting himself tossed in the process. Minutes after getting tossed he took to social media to voice his displeasure with the call only to later delete the message. Keep it together. One missed strike call isn’t why you’re hitting .169 with a .723 OPS. Having one non-home run hit in your last 11 games is why. Maybe try an approach that isn’t think every pitch thrown is going to be the equivalent of a middle-middle, 3-0 fastball and not take your “A” swing with every swing?

8. On a night when Boone needed to go to his bullpen in the second inning and clearly made Luke Weaver unavailable, he was able to piece together 22 outs between Yarbrough (8), Hill (6), Ian Hamilton (5) and Devin Williams (3). Williams had the easiest outing of his Yankees tenure with a six-pitch ninth. Williams, Weaver and Fernando Cruz will all be available on Friday.

9. They’ll only be needed on Friday if Carlos Rodon doesn’t suck the way he has in three of his four starts this season, and the way he has so many times as a Yankee. Rodon has allowed five home runs in 23 innings this season, and his ability combined with Steinbrenner Field isn’t ideal with the way the ball has been flying out of there.

10. The Yankees will need their offense to show up with Rodon on the mound, and unfortunately, they’re going against Drew Rasmussen, who has allowed one earned run and no home runs this season across three starts. It’s never been easy for the Yankees against the Rays in the Boone era and it won’t be for the rest of the weekend.

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Yankees Thoughts: ‘Best Player on This Planet’

The Yankees beat the Royals 4-3 to sweep the three-game series. Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. Earlier this week, Juan Soto went out of his way to call Aaron Judge “the best hitter in baseball” and essentially told the world he misses being a Yankee.

During the three-game series against the Royals, Judge went out of his way to make his former teammate’s claim stand up. Judge went 2-for-4 on Monday, 2-for-3 with a walk on Tuesday and then 3-for-3 with a double, home run and walk on Wednesday. That home run (Judge’s first in 10 games) was a go-ahead shot to lead off the seventh. It gave the Yankees a 4-3 lead and was enough to carry them to a series sweep.

“I just feel like, in any situation, he’s going to come out on top,” Cody Bellinger said. “He’s the best player on this planet.”

2. Judge also scored 25 percent of the Yankees’ runs in the series and is now hitting .409/.519/.803 on the season. He joins Lou Gehrig, Mickey Mantle and Paul O’Neill as the only other Yankees to have a .400 batting average, .800 slugging percentage, 20 RBIs and 10 walks through the team’s first 18 games of the season (per Katie Sharp).

“I want to get on base. That’s the biggest thing, hitting in the middle of the order and hitting second a lot,” Judge said. “I’ve got to touch first base. That’s my job.”

3. Judge touched ‘em all with his seventh-inning shot off of John Schreiber. His late-game heroics were made possible because of another solid pitching performance from the Yankees staff. Clarke Schmidt made his season debut and wasn’t as good as Carlos Carrasco was on Monday or Max Fried was on Tuesday, but he was good enough (5.2 IP, 4 H, 3 R, 3 ER, 2 BB, 2 K) to get into the sixth inning on a night when the bullpen was shorthanded.

“The whole rotation has to step up,” Schmidt said. “I know that my job is to go out there and be as consistent as possible every five days and give my team a chance to win.”

4. Going into the game without Luke Weaver and Devin Williams (to a lesser degree) meant a close game may get tense and trusting Aaron Boone to push the right buttons without his best arms available would likely prove challenging. Boone went to Mark Leiter Jr. for four outs and Fernando Cruz for a two-inning save, and it all worked out.

5. It all worked out thanks to Cody Bellinger’s lead-saving catch with two outs in the ninth when he laid out in right field to prevent a game-tying extra-base hit.

“That’s the reason he’s got gold on his glove,” Judge said. “Very few people make that catch, especially in a big moment like that with the game on the line.”

Bellinger has been atrocious at the plate (.538 OPS), but managed to sneak a hard-hit ground ball inside of first base for an RBI double in the fourth and let his defense make up for his bat with the spectacular grab in the ninth.

“That might be my first game-saving catch,” Bellinger said. “I was just glad I was able to catch it and get the win.”

6. Anthony Volpe had a big, two-run double in the third to cap off a two-out rally. There’s nothing better than a two-out rally. Nothing. Judge doubled, Jazz Chisholm walked and then Volpe crushed a ball to left to score both runners. The Yankees managed to score three runs (on seven hits and four walks) off of Kris Bubic after he had allowed just two earned runs in his first three starts and 18 2/3 innings.

7. Chisholm had that third-inning walk to go along with a single to center off the end of his bat in the first. (He was also hit by a pitch in the seventh.) The first-inning single was the first non-home run hit for Chisholm since the series finale in Pittsburgh 10 days prior.

8. A night after going 3-for-3 with the game-changing, three-run double, Jasson Dominguez went 0-for-3 with a walk, but he did get to play all nine innings of the game with Judge as the designated hitter. No balls were to hit to Dominguez in the eighth or ninth after Judge made it a one-run game.

9. The Yankees have been playing with three near-automatic outs in their lineup in Bellinger, Chisholm and Austin Wells, and yet, they lead the American League in runs scored with 107 and a plus-24 run differential. (Thanks, Brewers.) The lineup has been heavily reliant on Judge, Ben Rice, Paul Goldschmidt and Trent Grisham (when he plays) and some timely hitting from Volpe and Dominguez. The Yankees need their three “everyday” left-handed bats to contribute, especially this weekend in Tampa.

10. It’s off to Steinbrenner Field where the Yankees will be visitors at their own place. (Maybe a trip back to spring training is what Bellinger needs to get going after he had a 1.214 OPS in 19 games during spring training.) It will be Will Warren against Taj Bradley. Now in his third season, Bradley has made two starts against the Yankees over the last two years, holding them to one run over 13 innings and a .331 OPS. But he has never faced the Yankees at their spring training home in real game where they are accustomed to playing and where the ball has been flying out of this season.

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Yankees Thoughts: The Jasson Dominguez Double

The Yankees left fielder delivered a go-ahead three-run double to lead the team to a 4-2 win. Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. Over the last two nights at Yankee Stadium, the Yankees won a game in which Max Fried didn’t start and the offense didn’t score at least eight runs and won another game in which they trailed in the bottom of the sixth inning. Who are these Yankees?!

These are the Yankees I like. The Yankees that get good starting pitching, timely hitting and have a dominant backend in the bullpen. The Yankees won a low-scoring, 4-1 game on Monday and then a low-scoring, 4-2 game on Tuesday.

2. Max Fried was really, really good once again (though not as good as he was in Detroit last week): 6.2 IP, 5 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 2 BB, 7 K, 1 HR. He’s the only Yankees starter this season to gets out in the seventh inning of a game, having done so in his last two starts. When the rest of the rotation starts, you pray you can get five innings out of them (and sometimes four). With Fried it’s different. He has been a real ace to this point with a 1.88 ERA through 24 innings.

3. It looked like Michael Wacha was going to outpitch Fried and lead the Royals to a win as he baffled the Yankees through five innings. But with two outs in the sixth inning, whether fatigue or pitch selection or a combination of the two, Wacha fell apart.

Aaron Judge singled to lead off the sixth, but Wacha struck out Cody Bellinger and Paul Goldschmidt to calm the rally. (Goldschmidt took two middle-middle 94-mph fastballs in a row before swinging at a fastball at his eyes, clearly waiting for more offspeed from Wacha.) Jazz Chisholm miraculously managed to work a walk to keep the inning alive and Anthony Volpe followed with a walk to load the bases. When you get walks from Chisholm and Volpe in back-to-back plate appearances, you better take advantage of. Wacha was removed from the game for the left-handed Angel Zerpa.

4. Zerpa couldn’t find the plate and threw four straight balls to Austin Wells to walk in a run. The bases remained loaded for Jasson Dominguez, who would have to bat from his weaker side on the right.

Zerpa got ahead of Dominguez 1-2 and then ran a 96-mph fastball in on Dominguez that Dominguez was able to turn on to drill down the left-field line. The follow-through of his swing knocked him in the back of the head, dislodged his helmet and when he could see again, he could see the bases being cleared by his three-run double.

“I’ve been having a little bit of struggle from the right side, but lately I feel like I’ve made some adjustments,” Dominguez said. “I’m getting more reps and being on time.”

5. Dominguez was 3-for-3 in the game, had given the Yankees a 4-2 lead and was rewarded by being removed from the game as a defensive replacement in Trent Grisham. Or so I thought and was upset about. Aaron Boone said after the game Dominguez’s contact lenses had come out and that’s why he removed and that the plan was for him to stay in. I’m sure his contacts did come out after he knocked himself in the head with his own bat, but I’m not sure Boone was really not going to go to an all-defense outfield for the final innings.

6. Fried to Luke Weaver to Devin Williams was the formula for success against the Tigers and it was again against the Royals. When you can take wild cards like Mark Leiter Jr., Tim Hill, Ian Hamilton and Fernando Cruz out of the relief equation, you’re in a good place. Weaver went four up, four down across the seventh and eigthth and Williams (who has been a wild card himself) closed out the ninth without allowing a baserunner.

“I thought it was a really great team effort,” Fried said. “A really good win.”

7. An odd 0-for-5 night for Ben Rice. With a left-hander pitching on Wednesday, it will be interesting to see if Rice stays atop the order. In my opinion, he should.

8. Another rough night for Bellinger as he went 0-for-3 with a walk. Michael Kay mentioned that it’s hard to judge Bellinger to this point because of the back issue and food poisoning incident, but I disagree. As Derek Jeter would say, if you’re in the lineup, no excuses. Bellinger has been atrocious. Easily, the worst bat of the Yankees’ everyday regulars and hasn’t homered since the second game of the season (neither has Goldschmidt, but at least he’s hitting .349 with an .867 OPS). In no way should Bellinger continue to hit third in the lineup, but he will.

9. Oswald Peraza for the start at third, played great defense, but went 0-for-4 with two strikeouts. He started because of Wacha’s supposed “reverse splits” which Boone lives by. With a lefty going on Wednesday, that would mean Peraza would play again? (Or maybe they can finally make Oswaldo Cabrera the everyday third baseman for an extended period of time regardless of who the opposing starter is?)

10. That lefty is Kris Bubic, who has a 0.96 ERA through three starts. Clarke Schmidt gets the ball for the Yankees in his season debut. Weaver and Williams will be down after pitching the last two nights, so the Yankees are likely going to have to get somewhere between 12 to 15 outs from the bullpen depending how economical Schmidt can be on a decreased pitch count in his first start back.

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Yankees Thoughts: Carlos Carrasco?!

The Yankees got five innings of one-hit, one-run ball from their No. 5 starter to beat the Royals 4-1. Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. For the first time since Opening Day the Yankees won a game in which Max Fried didn’t start and the offense didn’t score at least eight runs. It took 15 games, but the Yankees finally proved they can win if their ace isn’t on the mound or if the offense doesn’t go completely off. They have Carlos Carrasco and solo home runs to thank for that.

2. Carrasco was outstanding in the Yankees’ 4-1 win over the Royals on Monday (5 IP, 1 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 2 BB, 4 K, 1 HR). One hit allowed in five innings? Sure, it was the Royals’ who are averaging 3.1 runs per game, but one hit allowed in five innings is one hit allowed in five innings.

3. After Carrasco walked two of the the first three batters of the game, I figured it was only a matter of pitches until the game would be out of hand and out of reach, especially with Seth Lugo starting for the Royals. But Carrasco managed to get out of the jam, pitched a perfect second, allowed a solo home run to Bobby Witt Jr. in the third and went six up, six down in the fourth and fifth.

“Everything we did before the game was working,” Carrasco said. “In the first inning, we got two walks and I was able to hold it right there.”

4. Six days after getting blasted for four home runs by the Tigers while Casey Mize shut down the Yankees, this time Carrasco shut down the Royals while the Yankees blasted four home runs against Lugo, all from left-handed hitters.

Trailing 1-0 in the fourth, Jazz Chisholm tied the game with a shot to right-center. Then in the fifth, Trent Grisham led off the inning with a home run, followed by Ben Rice two batters later and Austin Wells two batters after that. The Yankees led 4-1 through five and that’s how it would end thanks to four scoreless innings from Fernando Cruz (three of four outs for strikeouts), Tim Hill (two outs), Luke Weaver (1-2-3 eighth) and Devin Williams (save).

5. I don’t know that there’s anyone who thought the tying run wouldn’t come to the plate with a three-run lead in the ninth against Williams. And sure enough, Williams gave the Royals two cracks at the tying the game with one swing before getting out of it. Williams has now allowed 13 baserunners in in five innings. He nearly blew a three-run lead on Opening Day, a four-run lead in Detroit, made everyone nervous with a four-run lead against the Giants and let the tying run come up against the Royals with a three-run lead. What’s going to happen when he enters a game with a one- or two-run lead? I don’t know want to find out. At least not until he gets himself right and who knows when that will be.

6. Jasson Dominguez had an awesome night in left field, but that didn’t stop Aaron Boone from removing him from the game for a defensive replacement (Cody Bellinger) in the eighth. Bellinger struck out in his only at-bat and his OPS is down to .539. Maybe Bellinger should be the fourth outfielder and late-game defensive replacement? Grisham (1.124 OPS) certainly doesn’t deserve to sit.

7. Wells hit his first home run since the second game of the season against the Brewers, Rice improved his slash line to .300/.417/.680), Aaron Judge (1.212 OPS) and Paul Goldschmidt (.909 OPS) each had two more hits and Oswaldo Cabrera bumped his average up to .278.

8. After going 0-for-24, Chisholm has homered in the last two games. He’s hitting .175 with a .246 on-base percentage, but his OPS (.738) is being propped up by his six home runs (not that a .738 OPS is anything to feel good about). Maybe sprinkle in a walk or a single with runners in scoring position here and there? That would be nice.

9. It’s getting more difficult with each game to not think Anthony Volpe’s hot start to the year was nothing more than what it was last year. Going back to the Sunday walk-off loss in Pittsburgh, Volpe is 2-for-24 (both singles) with six walks and eight strikeouts. He’s walking more than did in either of the last two seasons, but he also has one stolen base through 16 games since you need to get on base with some frequency to steal a base.

10. Michael Wacha gets the ball for the Royals on Tuesday night, and unfortunately for him, he’s going against the Yankees’ ace in Fried. If Carrasco could hold the Royals to one hit through five innings, it’s hard not to envision the possibilities for Fried against that lineup if he pitches the way he did last Wednesday in Detroit.

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Yankees Thoughts: Bad Pitching, Bad Situational Hitting, Bad Managing

The Yankees dropped two of three to the Giants and have now lost five of their last seven. Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. If you sat through the rain and through the Yankees’ 9-1, rain-shortened loss at Yankee Stadium on Friday night I feel sorry for you. The only way I was going to the Bronx on Friday night with the forecast being what it was would have been if the Yankees used me as the starting pitcher. They should have. Instead, Marcus Stroman started for the Yankees in what should be his last start as a Yankee. Unfortunately, it won’t be.

Stroman finished last season by allowing 131 baserunners in 75 innings and pitching to a 5.88 ERA. In those 16 games (15 starts), hitters had an .847 OPS against him. Francisco Lindor finished second in the National League MVP voting last year with an .844 OPS. So Stroman turned every hitter over the last three months of last season into a better hitter than the NL MVP runner-up.

Stroman went to spring training with a trade seemingly inevitable as the odd-man out in the rotation before three injuries made him the No. 3. In his first two starts, he was just plain bad, pitching 8 2/3 innings with a 7.27 ERA. but on Friday agains the Giants, he wasn’t just his usual bad self, he flat-out sucked.

2. The first pitch of Stroman’s night was crushed into the right-center gap for a double. After nibbling around the strike zone for a walk, he allowed a three-run home run to Jung Hoo Lee. A couple of walks and another double later, and Stroman had the Yankees in a five-run hole with a runner on second and still no outs. Stroman didn’t make it through the first inning. He needed 46 pitches to get just two outs. With 13 games over the next 13 days, Stroman put the bullpen in a tough spot, needing to get 25 outs in the game. Fortunately, for the Yankees, the game was called during the top of the sixth inning with them trailing by eight runs, so they could preserve their bullpen for the rest of the night and the series.

3. On Saturday, it was Will Warren’s turn to provide something other than disaster from the four-fifths of the rotation not named Max Fried. Warren was given an early two-run lead to work with, but in the half-inning immediately following those runs, he gave them right back. Warren settled down after the two-run second to pitch three scoreless innings. His final line for the. day: 5 IP, 2 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 2 BB, 6 K 1 HR. If he can do that every five days, everyone would be happy.

4. The Yankees scored five runs in the fifth to break the 2-2 tie and take a 7-2 lead. Fernando Cruz gave two of the runs right back in typical Yankees fashion as he was allowed to face the heart of the Giants’ order with Aaron Boone treating a five-run lead in the sixth inning like a 10-run lead in the ninth. The Yankees got one back to take an 8-4 lead into the seventh.

Because Boone let Cruz unsuccessfully face the heart of the order, he had to lean on Luke Weaver for four outs before turning the ball over to Devin Williams in the ninth. Despite having a four-run cushion, Williams made it as hard as possible to close the game out, allowing a walk and double to begin his outing before finally retiring the side. Williams has now allowed 11 baserunners in four innings this season. My 1-to-10 confidence level with him is about a 1.2 through two-plus weeks. Right where Clay Holmes left off.

5. Then there was Sunday: the rubber game. A chance for the Yankees to win a series and move to three games over .500.

The Yankees were able to jump on Logan Webb early, plating one run in the first and two in the second. They held a 3-0 lead going in the fourth with Carlos Rodon having yet to give up a hit. But then Rodon gave up a solo home run to Lee (who hit the three-run, first-inning home run off Stroman on Friday) to get the Giants on the board. The Yankees’ 3-1 lead held up until the sixth when Rodon unraveled.

No. 9 hitter Christian Koss led off the sixth with an infield single to short. It was a tough play for Anthony Volpe, but one you would think a “Gold Glove” shortstop should make. With one out, Rodon walked Willy Adames, to put the tying run on base and to bring up Lee as the go-ahead run. When adversity hits Rodon on the mound, he tends to lose it all within seconds. Every Yankees fan knows this after watching him make 54 starts with the team. The only person who doesn’t know this is his manager.

I don’t fault Boone as much as normal for leaving Rodon in to face Lee, considering it was a left-on-left matchup. Pitch him away, keep him to the big part of the Stadium and you’ll be fine. But like clockwork, Rodon started unraveling after the infield single and never stopped until he was removed from the game.

Rodon got ahead of Lee 1-2 and then threw the equivalent of a get-me-over-curveball which hung in the middle of the plate for Lee to drive over the wall in right field. Before playing the Yankees this weekend, Lee had hit three home runs in 48 career games. He hit three against the Yankees in the series, and his second on Sunday gave the Giants a 4-3 lead.

Rodon allowed five earned runs in six innings in his last start and Boone said, “I thought he threw the ball great. I really did.” In this one, Rodon only allowed four earned runs in 5 2/3 innings. How did Boone think he pitched? “I thought he was excellent,” his manager said. Nothing exemplifies “excellence” like allowing four earned runs in 5 2/3 innings, including two home runs to the same player, while blowing a three-run lead.

6. If Rodon reminds you of a former Yankee who seemed to always have “great stuff” but frequently imploded, couldn’t control his emotions on the mound and could unravel in the span of a few pitches, it’s because you’re thinking of A.J. Burnett. As Katie Sharp posted on social media, Rodon has pitched 36 games in the regular season since the start of last year and has allowed 36 home runs, 69 walks and 10 hit batters. The last Yankee to do that was Burnett. At least Burnett gave us a World Series-saving gem. In Rodon’s only World Series start with the Yankees, he got blasted for three home runs and four earned runs in only 3 1/3 innings.

7. Combine the Yankees’ knack for rolling over and dying when trailing late in games with the Giants’ bullpen depth and once the Giants had the lead the remainder of the game became a formality.

Hayden Birdsong pitched a 1-2-3 sixth on eight pitches, came back out for the seventh, drilled Aaron Judge and threw up another zero.

The Giants led 5-3 in the eighth when Jazz Chisholm led off with a short-porch home run to break an 0-for-24 slump, but Volpe, Jasson Dominguez and J.C. Escarra followed by lying down for Tyler Rogers.

In the ninth, after Austin Wells pinch hit for Oswaldo Cabrera and flew out, Ben Rice grounded out and Judge kept the bat on his shoulder to go down looking to end the game for a 5-4 loss. A nice, solid 1-for-13 with four strikeouts and a hit by pitch for the Yankees against the Giants’ bullpen.

It was a bad loss, the Yankees’ third of the season, along with the April 1 loss to the Diamondbacks (when they blew a two-run lead in the eighth) and the April 6 loss to the Pirates (when they overcame a three-run deficit in the ninth only to lose in the 11th).

8. The Yankees could have scored more early on on Sunday, just like they had their chances to get back in the game on Friday, but in both games, they left runners on all over the place.

On Friday, they stranded one in the first, two in the second, two more in the third and another in the fifth before the game was called.

On Sunday, they left one on in the first and another in the second. In the fourth, they had runners on first and second with no outs, but Boone let Escarra hit rather than sacrifice bunt, and the runners never advanced in the inning. (Not only did Boone let Escarra hit there, but he also let him swing away on 3-0 in the eighth trailing by a run.) They left two more on in the fifth when they had first and second and one out, and then after that, the Giants’ bullpen put them to sleep.

9. When the going gets tough, these Yankees get going. They aren’t about to rally late to win a game. In Pittsburgh, they rallied only for their lack of situational hitting to doom them in extras. At best, they put together enough of a rally to make you think they may come back and win, only to fall short.

The Yankees are now 8-7. They are 2-3 in their five series. They are 5-7 since the season-opening Brewers series. They lost five of seven this past week to the Pirates, Tigers and Giants. On days when Fried doesn’t pitch, they need the offense to score eight-plus runs to have a chance, and it’s hard to do that when you have an inconsistent bat hitting third (Cody Bellinger) and a blackhole in the middle of the lineup in Chisholm. There is one truly trustworthy arm in the bullpen (Luke Weaver) and the manager doesn’t seem to know when to best use him and is mostly too scared to use him.

10. Through 13 games the Yankees have received at least six innings from a starter TWO times. TWO! I’m not sure how the team thinks it can keep that up, but they are going to keep it up as long as Rodon continues to implode and Stroman and Carlos Carrasco keep getting the ball. And they are going to keep getting the ball. At least Carrasco is since Stroman is now suddenly “injured” with knee inflammation. (Yeah, knee inflammation is the cause of him nibbling around the strike zone with 90-mph sinkers dating back nearly a full calendar year.)

10. If Fried starts or the offense scores eight-plus runs, the Yankees win. If neither of those things happen, they lose. When Fried starts, they’re 3-0. When Fried doesn’t start, but the Yankees score eight-plus runs, they’re 4-0. When Fried doesn’t start, but the Yankees don’t score at least eight runs, they’re 1-7. Thankfully, it’s Fried’s turn to pitch on Tuesday.

But before Tuesday, Carrasco will get the ball on Monday. We know how the game will go: the Yankees will score at least eight runs and they’ll win, or they won’t, and they’ll lose.

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