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.
Last modified: Apr 15, 2025