1. The Yankees played a one-run game against the Rangers on Wednesday and … WON! Yes, the Yankees won a game decided by one run, beating the Rangers 4-3.
A night after Will Warren pitched the best game of his career against Patrick Corbin, Ryan Yarbrough followed it up by matching Jacob deGrom through five strong innings. Before the game, I wrote:
You have to think two runs is the ceiling of what the Yankees can expect as long as deGrom is in the game. Yarbrough needs to match him until the bullpens get involved.
deGrom allowed two runs in the seven innings he pitched and Yarbrough matched him for the five innings he was in the game. Once the bullpens got involved the Yankees came back and won.
2. It was a win that almost wasn’t. Aaron Boone did everything he possibly could with his bullpen management to lead the Yankees to a loss, but the Yankees’ offense over the final three innings was too much for Boone’s incompetence to overcome.
Boone’s nonsense began in the seventh inning. Yarbrough gave the Yankees five innings off one-run ball and Boone went to Jonathan Loaisiga for the sixth. Loaisiga got two quick outs before loading the bases, which led to Boone to ask Tim Hill to get out of the jam and get the final out of the sixth. Hill did his job and the game remained tied at 1 through six.
In the seventh, Boone sent Hill back out despite lefty mashers Jake Burger and Kyle Higashioka due up. If there’s one thing that duo does well, it’s hit left-handed pitching. If there’s one thing Hill doesn’t do well, it’s face right-handed hitting. Lefties are hitting .086/.158/.086 against Hill this year. Righties are hitting .311/.354/.578 against him. Sure enough, Boone’s stupidity backfired and Burger hunted a first-pitch fastball from Hill and hit it into the seats in right-center to give the Rangers a 2-1 lead.
Even though Hill finished the sixth, because he started the seventh, he had to face three batters. After the Burger home run Hill bounced back to retire Higashioka and Josh Smith. The Rangers’ lineup was going to turn over with Sam Haggerty, so who did Boone think was best suited to get the Rangers’ leadoff man? Ian Hamilton, of course! The same Ian Hamilton who couldn’t close out a five-run ninth the night before was now going to face the top of the Rangers’ lineup in a one-run game. Like Burger, Haggerty hunted a first-pitch fastball, got it, and hit it into the second deck in right field. 3-1 Rangers. After allowing another base hit, Hamilton finally got the last out of the seventh.
3. The Yankees got a run back in the bottom of the seventh when Cody Bellinger destroyed a deGrom middle-middle fastball for his eighth home run. The game was back to being a one-run game, and who better to keep the deficit right where it was than Yerry De los Santos, the last man in the bullpen who, in his last appearance, couldn’t close out a six-run lead in the ninth inning against the Mets on Friday. De los Santos allowed two singles, a stolen base and a walk in the inning, but managed to escape his own mess without giving up a run.
In the bottom of the eighth, Bruce Bochy went to left-hander Robert Garcia. Garcia got DJ LeMahieu to ground out before Paul Goldschmidt drew a one-out, pinch-hit walk, Trent Grisham followed Goldschmidt with a walk of his own to put two on with one out. Boone idiotically had Aaron Judge batting third instead of second, so instead of forcing Bochy to go to a righty to face Judge and then the righty would also have to face Ben Rice and Bellinger, Bochy was able to leave his lefty in to face Rice, who hit a weak fly ball for the second out. Bochy then went to his closer Luke Jackson, who got ahead of Judge before throwing a middle-middle fastball Judge smoked to left for a base hit. Goldschmidt raced home to tie the game, but right after he touched the plate, Grisham was thrown out trying to advance to third to end the inning, meeting the Yankees’ quota of at least one fundamental breakdown per game. It would have been nice to have Bellinger up with the go-ahead run on second base, but instead, Grisham thought it would be better if he could get into betting scoring position.
The game was tied at 3 through eight and then Boone showed the world why he can’t be trusted under any circumstance.
4. The old adage is you use your closer in the ninth inning of a tie game at home because there won’t be a save opportunity (though anyone still managing to a statistic in 2025, like Boone, is a complete idiot). Here was Luke Weaver’s recent workload entering Wednesday:
Thursday: No game
Friday: 2 pitches
Saturday: 0 pitches
Sunday: 0 pitches
Monday: 2 pitches
Weaver had thrown four pitches over the last five days. Remember when Boone didn’t use him in the ninth inning of a tie game at home on Saturday against the Mets (and the Yankees lost) because he had pitched on three of the last four days, even though he had only thrown two pitches on Friday? Well, Weaver then wasn’t needed for anything other than two pitches over the next three days.
As rested as Weaver will ever be, it was easy to see Boone pitching him in the ninth and then again in the 10th if the game went to extra innings. But there was Del los Santos standing on the Yankee Stadium mound with Haggerty and the top of the Rangers’ lineup due up in the ninth.
I have documented every nonsensical decision Boone has made since becoming Yankees manager in 2018, and of the thousands of examples, the decision to let Del los Santos start the ninth inning on Wednesday is easily in the Top 10. It may be in the Top 5.
There were two possibilities for Boone’s decision:
1. He was trying to steal outs in the ninth inning of a tie game with the last man in the bullpen against the top of the opposing lineup.
2. He didn’t call down to the bullpen in time to get Weaver ready to start the ninth.
Either Boone was incompetent in that he didn’t have Weaver ready or he was incompetent for trying to steal outs with De los Santos. Either way, he showed he’s incompetent.
YES had shown Weaver warming up earlier, so it couldn’t be the second possibility, which means Boone felt the last man in his bullpen had a better chance of retiring Haggerty than his all-world closer. Haggerty singled to lead off the ninth. It was the best-case outcome. De los Santos wasn’t going to retire Haggerty, but at least he held him to one base. What if Haggerty had put one in the seats like he had against Hamilton and the Rangers took the lead?
Once Haggerty reached base, Boone called for Weaver. It took Weaver six pitches to get three outs against the top of the Rangers’ lineup.
In the bottom of the ninth, with one out, Jasson Dominguez hit the Yankees’ first walk-off home run since 2022 and saved all Yankees fans from having to watch Boone screw up another extra-inning game.
5. I used to joke that Boone as Yankees manager was a social experiment, but now I believe it. There’s no logical reason for his decision to have Del los Santos start the ninth other than he’s fucking with everyone. If you can’t see how in over his head Boone continues to be, I don’t know what you’re watching. The closer the score and the more involved he becomes, the worse off the Yankees are. And his choices aren’t resigned to only the regular season. We have mountains of poor moves in the postseason when the stakes are the highest to evaluate him on, including 2018 ALDS Games 3 and 4, 2019 ALCS Game 2, 2020 ALDS Game 2, 2021 wild-card game, 2022 ALDS Games 2 and 3, 2022 ALCS Games 2, 3 and 4, 2023 … oh that’s right he missed the postseason completely despite 40 percent of the league getting in and 2024 World Series Game 1. Boone is a professional idiot.
6. Judge needs to bat second every game. It doesn’t matter what hand the pitcher throws with: Judge bats second. Boone continues to screw with Judge in the 2- or 3-hole depending on the day’s starter rather than leaving him in the spot that will get him more plate appearances. Grisham and Rice aren’t exactly Johnny Damon and Derek Jeter at the top of the lineup. The place of Judge shouldn’t be impacted by either being in the lineup. (The duo went 0-for-7 with a walk and four strikeouts on Wednesday.)
7. Another two-hit game for Bellinger to extend his hitting streak to 15 games. He’s hitting .377/.441/1.130 over his last 68 plate appearances. This is the guy I used to watch hit at 11:30 p.m. for the Dodgers. The guy that played himself out of the Dodgers’ future plans. I don’t know how long this will last, but it’s a lot more fun to watch this Bellinger than whatever he was from Opening Day through April.
8. Austin Wells went 0-for-2 with a walk and two strikeouts on Tuesday and 0-for-3 with three strikeouts on Wednesday. Over the last two weeks, he’s hitting .129/.256/.290. He has one multi-hit game since April 27 and is down to .200/.269/.443 on the year.
9. Hamilton may want to throw some scoreless innings soon before he finds himself as the odd man out in the bullpen. Here is his line over his last six games: 4.1 IP, 5 H, 8 R, 8 ER, 5 BB, 6 K, 2 HR, 16.62 ERA, 2.309 WHIP. He’s pitching himself off the team.
10. The win on Wednesday clinched the series for the Yankees for their fifth straight series win. They are now 10-3 over their last 13 games and have opened up a five-game loss column lead in the AL East.
If the weather allows for the series finale on Thursday, it will be Carlos Rodon against Nathan Eovaldi. Eovaldi remains my most hated pitcher in all of baseball for what he was a Yankee and what he became with the Red Sox. He has been exceptional this season with a 1.61 ERA, a league-leading 2.18 FIP and a league-leading 0.766 WHIP. He has only allowed 39 hits, eight walks and three home runs over 61 1/3 innings. If the Yankees are going to beat him and sweep the Rangers, they’re going to need Rodon to match him the way Warren and Yarbrough matched Corbin and deGrom. They’re going to need the offense to do just enough and their manager to not screw it all up.
Last modified: May 22, 2025