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Yankees Thoughts: Rocked the Rangers

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The Yankees won their sixth straight series with a 7-2 win over the Rangers. Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. After Paul Blackburn “opened” Thursday’s series/season finale with the Rangers with a scoreless first inning, the Yankees hit two “triples” in the span of three batters to take a 1-0. lead Paul Goldschmidt hit a defense-aided triple in the leadoff spot, and after an Aaron Judge lineout to third, Cody Bellinger hit a defense-aided triple to right field.

Amed Rosario and Jazz Chisholm both struck out to strand Bellinger at third and from innings 2 through 5 it seemed like the Yankees may have missed their opportunity to get to MacKenzie Gore and take a sizable lead. The Yankees stranded a leadoff double in the second and two runners in the fourth. The Yankees trailed 2-1 in the sixth before Trent Grisham hit a bases-clearing, three-run double off Gore to take a 4-2 lead. They would add three more in the sixth, and another in both the seventh and eighth on their way to a 9-2 win. The Yankees finished the season 4-2 against the Rangers with all six games oddly coming in a 10-day span. The only two losses were in games started by Nathan Eovaldi.

2. It was the Yankees’ sixth straight series win, and because the Rays never lose, the win kept the Yankees a half-game ahead in the division. On a day when the Yankees won once again, it wasn’t all good as Ben Rice was kept out of the lineup for a third straight game, Jose Caballero was held out after getting hit by a pitch on Wednesday and Jasson Dominguez crashed into the left-field wall making a catch to lead off the game. Dominguez suffered a sprained AC joint that will put him on the injured list for some time, but he seems fortunate to have avoided a concussion.

3. Suddenly, the healthy-to-begin-the-season lineup is now without Giancarlo Stanton, Rice has missed three-and-a-half games, Caballero missed a game and Dominguez is headed to the IL. One-third of the Yankees’ Opening Day lineup is injured to some degree and the Yankees’ cleanup hitter throughout this week is now out as well.

4. All of this means Spencer Jones is headed to the majors. The left-handed body double of Judge, Jones has been the minors’ best power hitter for a second straight season, but his power is accompanied by an extreme strikeout rate. I don’t know if Jones will come up and hit a flurry of home runs this weekend in Milwaukee or if he will look like Todd Frazier swinging against Justin Verlander in the 2017 ALCS. All I know is Jones will provide more entertainment and a much higher potential ceiling than if Anthony Volpe or Oswaldo Cabrera — the only other two 40-man position players available — were called up instead of Jones.

5. It’s not ideal that Jones’ major-league debut will come with Jacob Misiorowski on the mound for the Brewers. Given Jones’ biggest flaw (striking out) and Misiorowski’s biggest strength (striking batters out), it’s as bad as a debut matchup as you could ask for. Misiorowski leads the majors with 14 strikeouts per nine innings and 59 in 38 innings this season). Maybe Jones gets missed-spot fastball and puts one in the seats.

6. If I know Aaron Boone, and I think I do as good as any Yankees fan, he will give Jones a soft landing spot in the lineup for his debut. I wouldn’t. I would put him right in the middle of the order. I would bat him cleanup and play him in the outfield.

Ben Rice, 1B
Aaron Judge, DH
Cody Bellinger, LF/RF
Spencer Jones, RF/LF
Trent Grisham, CF
Jazz Chisholm, 2B
Austin Wells, C
Ryan McMahon, 3B
Jose Caballero, SS

That’s the lineup I would use. But we all know there’s no possibility of that happening. It’s probably more likely that Jones hits cleanup than it is that Boone removes Grisham from the leadoff spot.

7. Grisham had a big day yesterday after I wrote the following about him:

I don’t know what it’s going to take for the Yankees to remove Trent Grisham from the leadoff spot, but with each 0-for-4, I would like to think it’s drawing closer. Grisham is hitting .164/.298/.353 on the season, and always seems to do just enough to reset his place atop the order. After a bad week, he’ll hit a ball out or pick up a pair of doubles to maintain his place in the lineup and then suck for the next week and then do something positive, over and over.

Grisham loves to beat up on bad pitching. He had a career year doing it last season, hitting 34 home runs. But none of those 34 home runs came against a pitcher who started a postseason game. He had a big weekend against a bunch of bad Orioles pitchers (5-for-15 with four doubles, a home run and three walks) and then in two games started by Jacob deGrom and Eovaldi, he went 0-for-8. Grisham will always hit bad pitching and then be an automatic out against elite starters, the kind of starters you see in October.

One day doesn’t change how I feel. Grisham did what Grisham does in the series: he went 0-for-8 against deGrom and Eovaldi and then hit the inferior Gore, who entered the game with 4.67 ERA and left with a 5.18 ERA. I want Rice or Judge getting the most possible plate appearances on the team. Not Grisham.

8. For the next three days, not only do Yankees fans need the Yankees to win, they also need the Red Sox to win. It’s a dirty, disgusting place to be, but that’s what’s needed with the Rays hotter than the Yankees. The Red Sox suck. They’re going nowhere. There’s no fear in them winning a couple or a few games against the Rays. The Rays are the real threat and they need to be stopped. After the weekend, Yankees fans can go back to laughing at a team batting Trevor Story’s .528 OPS in the cleanup spot and having Brayan Bello and his 7.44 ERA in the rotation. For now, the Rays need to lose.

9. Ezequiel Duran had a monster series against his former team (5-for-10 with a double, home run, five RBIs, four walks and a steal) because why wouldn’t he? That’s the Law of Ex-Yankees. Oswald Peraza did it to them last month with the Angels. Carlos Narvaez hit the only home run against Cam Schlittler this season. Randal Grichuk will likely get a big hit against them when they play the White Sox. That’s how it goes. The Brewers employ both Gary Sanchez and Jake Bauers, so get ready for that duo to do something special this weekend.

10. There’s nothing like going into a weekend series with Max Fried and Schlittler getting the ball in the first two games. Then in the third game, Carlos Rodon will make his first start of the season. Rodon instead of Luis Gil or Elmer Rodriguez will be a welcome change. Last season the Yankees scored 36 runs in a three-game, season-opening sweep of the Brewers in the Bronx. The year before, the Yankees scored 36 runs in a three-game series in Milwaukee with their only loss coming via a walk-off in Michael Tonkin’s first game as a Yankee. Whenever the Yankees play the Brewers, the bats seem to show up.

Last modified: May 8, 2026