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Yankees Thoughts: A New Third Baseman?

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The Yankees beat the A’s 5-3 because of two Amed Rosario home runs. Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. Through 10 games this season, Aaron Boone has pushed the right offensive lineup change button twice, which I think equals his total from his first eight seasons as manager.

In the fifth game of the season, Boone gave Giancarlo Stanton the day off against George Kirby in Seattle despite Stanton being 10-for-20 at the time. Boone played Paul Goldschmidt and hit him fifth in the lineup even though one of the best right-handed starters in the game was on the mound. It was an odd decision since Goldschmidt has been bad against righties for a long time now and because Boone chose not to play Goldschmidt against Tyler Mahle four days earlier, a lesser right-hander than Kirby and one Goldschmidt has absolutely owned in his career. Goldschmidt looked overmatched against Kirby in his first two at-bats — striking out both times — before hitting a long, three-run home run in his third at-bat, which was the difference in a Yankees win.

On Tuesday against the Athletics, Boone started Amed Rosario over Ryan McMahon at third base despite the right-handed Aaron Civale starting. Rosario hit a solo home run in his first at-bat to give the Yankees a 1-0 lead and hit a go-ahead, three-run home run in the eighth inning to carry the Yankees to a 5-3 win.

2. The three-run blast came against former Yankee Mark Leiter Jr. who owed the Yankees a meltdown like that (and a few more) for his performance as a Yankee over the last two seasons. It felt really good to be on the positive end of a Leiter Jr. appearance, especially one that decided the game.

“Although I’m not playing every day, I try to not let that affect me mentally,” Rosario said. “Over the years, I’ve been able to create a routine to help me do my job.”

3. McMahon was on the bench because he has been atrocious this season, going 2-for-23 with 11 strikeouts. He drove in two runs on Opening Day with a seeing-eye single and hasn’t done anything since. Even his defense has been shaky with nearly every throw of his across the infield bouncing in the dirt. But all Yankees fans know how Boone and the team operates and you can bet McMahon will be back in the lineup on Wednesday and Rosario — the hero from Tuesday — will be back on the bench.

4. Rosario should continue to play until he stops playing well because that’s how playing time should work and be earned. Boone mentioned “competition” being “a good thing” after the win, but we all know it’s bullshit. He said the same thing last September about shortstop and then Jose Caballero doubled Anthony Volpe’s OPS for the month and still found himself on the bench for the entire postseason. The Yankees think they can be the ones to fix McMahon at the plate (they aren’t) like they always think they can fix everyone and McMahon makes $16 million this season and Rosario makes $2.5 million. That’s why Rosario will go back to not playing and McMahon will go right back into the lineup as if he isn’t one of the worst everyday bats in the majors.

5. Cam Schlittler allowed his first runs of the season in what was his shortest start of the season: 5 IP, 5 H, 3 R, 3 ER, 0 BB, 7 K. (Still no walks this year.) Schlittler retired the first six A’s of the game with three strikeouts, but ran into trouble in the third after a leadoff, swinging-bunt single, a line-drive single and a two-strike sacrifice bunt put runners on second and third with one out. The A’s then went double, strikeout, double against Schlittler and took a 3-1 lead. Schlittler kept the damage there and retired six of the next seven batters to end his night with a season-high 84 pitches. The combination of Jake Bird, Brent Headrick, Fernando Cruz and David Bednar threw four scoreless innings in relief and the Yankees improved to 8-2 on the season.

6. Rosario had the two home runs, Aaron Judge had a walk, Cody Bellinger had a hit, Ben Rice was on base three times, Giancarlo Stanton had a big line-drive single in the eighth, Jazz Chisholm had a hit and Austin Wells and Jose Caballero both had doubles. Trent Grisham (0-for-5 with a now-.561 OPS) was the only Yankees starter to not reach base.

7. Grisham is the next guy that I want to see take a seat on the bench. Even the biggest Grisham fan (if those exist?) knew he wouldn’t hit 34 home runs again, but many were upset by the qualifying offer to him, which would cost $22 million, prevent the team from spending the money elsewhere and block a non-injury path to the majors for Jasson Dominguez and Spencer Jones. Grisham is hitting .147/.326/.235 with no home runs, and while the on-base percentage isn’t the worst at .326, it needs to be much better for the hitter being given the most at-bats on the team, and for the hitter who bats in front of Aaron Judge. It’s time for Grisham to take a seat for at least a game.

8. Old favorite (of mine) Luis Severino will start against the Yankees on Wednesday. Severino has made two starts against the Yankees since leaving as a free agent after the 2023 season and they have both been disasters. Here are his lines from those two starts:

May 11, 2025: 4 IP, 9 H, 8 R, 8 ER, 2 BB, 2 K

June 29, 2025: 3.2 IP, 5 H, 7 R, 5 ER, 3 BB, 3 K, 2 HR

Put them together and you get: 7.2 IP, 14 H, 15 R, 13 ER, 5 BB, 5 K, 2 HR

9. Based on matchups and success against Severino, this is the best possible lineup for Wednesday with each player’s career numbers against Severino in parentheses:

Jazz Chisholm, 2B (5-for-11, 2B, 2 HR, BB)
Aaron Judge, RF (3-for-5, 2B, HR, BB)
Cody Bellinger, CF (3-for-9, 2B)
Paul Goldschmidt, 1B (2-for-5, 2B, HR, 3 BB)
Ben Rice, DH (0-for-3)
Randal Grichuk, LF (2-for-6, HR)
Austin Wells, C (1-for-2)
Amed Rosario, 3B (2-for-11, HR)
Jose Caballero, SS (0-for-1, 2 BB)

That puts Grisham on the bench and keeps McMahon on the bench. Again, this is the best possible lineup the Yankees could have on Wednesday, so the lineup Boone will construct will look nothing like this.

10. Will Warren gets the ball for his third start of the season. It’s funny because I would classify his first two starts as just OK, and yet, he has a 2.70 ERA and 1.100 WHIP. (Max Fried and Schlittler set the bar so high for what is considered “good.”) Warren faced the A’s twice last year and put together this line: 12.1 IP, 6 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 5 BB, 14 K. He may not need to pitch that well if the Yankees continue their dominance over Severino, but if he does, the Yankees should have their fourth straight series win to begin the season.

Last modified: Apr 8, 2026