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Yankees Thoughts: No Runs in 29 Innings

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The Yankees were shut out for a third consecutive game. Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. I thought Sunday would be the low point of the season. The Yankees were shut out at Fenway Park and swept by the Red Sox, falling to 1-5 against their storied rival on the season. They finished the weekend having scored just three runs in 28 innings for their worst offensive showing at the hitter-friendly park in more than 100 years. But then Monday happened.

I thought Monday’s loss to the Angels would be the low point of the season. The Yankees left 12 runners on base, couldn’t score in multiple leadoff-runner-in-scoring-position situations and lost in 11 innings to the lowly Angels. But then Tuesday happened.

On Tuesday, the Yankees were shut out again and again by the Angels, tying a franchise record with three consecutive shutouts against. They didn’t face a capable starter like they had on Sunday or Monday, instead they faced Kyle Hendricks, who entered the game with a 5.20 ERA, good enough for second worst in the majors. Hendricks had averaged 5.6 strikeouts per nine innings with his mid-80s repertoire this season, but he struck out nine Yankees over six innings, his most strikeouts in a single game in nearly five years.

The Yankees haven’t scored a run in their last 29 innings. They have scored five runs in their last 63 innings. They have scored in five of their last 69 innings.

2. Cody Bellinger called the Yankees’ offensive performance over the last six games “a little rut” after Tuesday’s loss. On Monday, Boone had called it a “few-game tough stretch.” Six games isn’t “little” and it’s certainly more than a “few.” If it weren’t such a big deal then why did the Yankees need to hold a team meeting after being blanked by the-hanging-on-to-a-career Hendricks to “remember who they are” like they’re Mufasa talking down from heaven to Simba.

3. On Tuesday, Boone attributed the Yankees’ embarrassing six-game run to “baseball” and with a straight face said, “We are one of the best offenses in the league.”

“Hendricks, I thought, was good,” Boone said, “rocking us back and forth.”

You want to tip your cap to Garrett Crochet? Sure, he’s one of the best in the game. Jose Soriano? OK. Hendricks? No. Absolutely not. Tipping your cap ends with Hendricks.

“We gotta go up and really focus on having quality at-bats,” Boone said. “And that will happen and hopefully tomorrow’s the day.”

“Hopefully!” That’s where the state of the offense is now: relying on hope.

4. Aaron Judge went 0-for-4 with three strikeouts. After the Yankees’ win last Wednesday, Judge had homered four times in four games and was hitting .394/.490/.779 on the season. Aaron Boone didn’t start him for the first time in 2025 the next day, and since then, Judge is 2-for-20 with 13 strikeouts and two walks. He has lost 22 points on his batting average, 21 points on his on-base percentage and 39 points on his slugging percentage.

5. Paul Goldschmidt went 0-for-4 with two strikeouts. Goldschmidt is hitting .161/.230/.232 over the last three weeks. He has one multi-hit game in June and two extra-base hits in the month.

6. Austin Wells went 0-for-3 with two strikeouts. Despite his impressive three-run home runs against Crochet and Noah Cameron over the last two weeks, Wells has a .680 OPS over the last five weeks. He has struck out multiple times in three of his last four games and has struck out 31 times in his last 90 plate appearances.

7. Anthony Volpe went 0-for-3. The Golden Boy was finally moved all the way to eighth in the batting order ahead of the only hitter worse than him in the “everyday” lineup. Volpe’s slash line is down to .238/.311/.426. His OPS+ has fallen to 106+. The faction of fans that defend him with the argument that he has been above league average this season are watching their argument dissolve with each game. Volpe is another week like this past one from being right where he has been since his debut: below league average.

8. DJ LeMahieu went 0-for-3 with three strikeouts. A few days ago he couldn’t go first to third on an obvious first-to-third base hit because of his legs. On Monday, he couldn’t get a bunt down that would have possibly led to a Yankees win and instead struck out because of his abilities. On Tuesday, he couldn’t keep a ground ball to second from reaching the outfield and it led to the Angels’ first run because of his age. LeMahieu is down to .244/.333/.341 with a 92 OPS+. He’s 2-for-17 over the last week. He has no power, no legs, no range.

LeMahieu has become the Yankees’ family dog who wanders around aimlessly and goes to the bathroom all over the place and lies around and sleeps all day. You try to pretend like the end isn’t near and you try to remember the good times to get through the bad times. Once in a while the dog will do something to remind you of what it used to be, but it’s just a momentary tease.

LeMahieu is being paid $15 million this season and next. He’s going to continue to get opportunities because of that. And there will be days a ground ball of his finds a hole or he inside-outs a pitch to right field. But those will be the momentary teases. I will remember his 2019 and 2020 seasons. I will always defend him for how good he was in trying to single-handedly bring the Yankees to the 2019 World Series while the rest of the team no-showed like it does every October. But he’s as washed up as it gets for someone still being given playing time.

9. Boone moved Volpe down and benched Trent Grisham and Ben Rice, while batting Jasson Dominguez leadoff. I liked it. I would do it again on Wednesday. I have seen enough Grisham and Rice over the last month to think Grisham is anything more than a fourth outfielder and it’s hard to keep harping on Rice’s all-red Statcast metrics when it’s not translating into actual results. Keep Dominguez at the top of the lineup for an extended period and see what he gives you there. On Tuesday, he provided a base hit and a stolen base, which is a lot more than anyone else is doing.

10. The Yankees’ franchise record for consecutive shutouts against is three (stat from Katie Sharp), so they are one away from the record. The franchise record for consecutive scoreless innings by the offense is 37 (stat from Katie Sharp), so they are eight scoreless innings away from that record. The Yankees could break both records on Wednesday night. Will Michael Kay exclaim, “History with an exclamation point!” if they do?

Last modified: Jun 18, 2025