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Yankees Thoughts: Fundamental Flaws

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The Yankees lost to the Red Sox for the fourth time in five games this season. Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. Carlos Rodon was bad, the offense was worse, the Yankees once again lacked any semblance of fundamentals under Aaron Boone and they lost 4-3 to the Red Sox. The loss dropped them to 1-4 against their storied rival this season.

Not everyone thought was Rodon was bad. His manager didn’t think he was bad despite lasting only five innings and allowing nine baserunners, four runs and three earned runs in those five innings.

“I actually thought he was pretty sharp,” Boone said.

2. Rodon’s last two starts have come against the Red Sox, the Yankees have lost both and he has allowed eight earned runs in 10 innings. In the first of the two, he blew two different leads.

“It seemed like they had a team approach today,” Rodon said. “They were a little more aggressive than last time.”

Rodon went on to say that he would try to have better location with his pitches the next time he faces the Red Sox instead of trying to overpower them. The idea Rodon and the Yankees thought a good game plan would to be to not locate pitches and try to overpower the Red Sox is unbelievable (but actually very believable with this organization).

We’ll always have those few weeks when Rodon dominated the Rays, Guardians, Orioles, Padres, Rangers and Angels and people were fooled into thinking he figured it out and could be trusted. As I wrote multiple times during that stretch, I still didn’t trust Rodon and never will.

3. Is it possible the Yankees have gotten worse with fundamentals and details under Boone? I didn’t think it was possible given the last seven years, culminating in the World Series Game 5 disaster, but it just may be.

In the first inning, the Red Sox had a runner on second with two outs (Rob Refsnyder doubled on a middle-middle fastball on Rodon’s first pitch). Carlos Narvaez hit a ground ball to Anthony Volpe in the hole at short and after recently making two successful Derek Jeter-esque jump-throws, Volpe attempted it again and wildly threw the ball nowhere near the bag. Narvaez was safe at first and Refsnyder came around to score to give the Red Sox an early lead. Not only was Volpe’s throw poor, but Paul Goldschmidt played the throw like he had never received an errant throw before. He played it like he had never played first base before.

“I feel like that one was on me,” Goldschmidt said. “He should have the freedom to throw that ball across the diamond like he did.”

4. A day after foolishly attempting to steal third with no outs in the 10th inning, Volpe tried to a be a first-inning hero rather than put the ball in his pocket and let Rodon face the left-handed Jarren Duran with two on and two outs. Duran popped out to third. Complete unawareness from Volpe.

His unawareness didn’t end there. In the fourth inning, Trevor Story drove in Narvaez with a base hit to center field. With Volpe’s back to second waiting for the throw in, Story took off for second and turned a single into a double. Volpe turned around stunned to see Story sliding safely into second.

5. A night after it took the Yankees until the ninth inning to get on the board, it took until the seventh inning on Saturday. Trailing 4-2 with two runs in and still two on with two outs, Jasson Dominguez was inexplicably picked off of second to end the inning.

The following inning with the Yankees desperate for a baserunner to bring the tying run to the plate, Ben Rice was given an automatic strike for a pitch clock violation to start his at-bat 0-1. He would go on to strike out.

At this point, I’m waiting for the day the Boone Yankees bat out of order.

6. If Boone thought Rodon was “sharp” in his inadequate performance, I wonder what Boone thought about Hunter Dobbins’ performance. Dobbins shut out the Yankees for six innings, allowing just two hits. In two starts over the last week against the Yankees, Dobbins allowed three earned runs over 11 innings and won both starts.

7. It was more of the same from the ex-Yankees on the Red Sox playing well at the Yankees’ expense. Refsnyder went 2-for-3; Narvaez did the same and added a walk; Justin Wilson faced six Yankees, struck out three and put an end to their eighth-inning rally and Greg Weissert pitched the ninth to earn the save. All that was missing was another pair of dominant outings from Garrett Whitlock and Aroldis Chapman.

8. The Yankees 1 through 3 hitters went 0-for-12 with six strikeouts. Everyone has been so worried and concerned about what will happen with the lineup when Giancarlo Stanton returns, but Rice and Trent Grisham seem to have resolved the issue on their own. Since May 13, Rice has a .527 OPS and Grisham has a .552 OPS.

9. I have written this before, but I would have Judge lead off. I don’t care that he will bat with no one on base in his first at-bat of the game. He’s the best player in baseball at getting on base given his majors-leading .479 on-base percentage and no pitcher is going to pitch around the first batter of the game. If Shohei Ohtani can lead off for the infinitely smarter Dodgers who do everything better than the Yankees then Judge can lead off for the Yankees. Give me Judge, Cody Bellinger and Stanton at 1 through 3 when Stanton returns this week. (It will never happen.)

10. Max Fried gets the ball on Sunday to try to salvage the series. The Yankees offense scored one run in 10 innings on Friday and two runs on Saturday. My expectation for “the best offense in baseball” which has scored four runs in its last three games isn’t high for Sunday . But maybe the bats will show up in the series finale to support their ace and keep their performance against the Red Sox this season to just embarrassing and not allow it to progress to humiliating.

Last modified: Jun 15, 2025