1. The Yankees led the Rangers 5-4 with one out and no one on the ninth inning on Monday night.
“And here is Joc Pederson, who has really struggled,” Ryan Ruocco said on YES as the Rangers pinch hit for Ezequiel Duran.
YES displayed a graphic with Pederson’s season stats showing a .126 batting average, two home runs, six RBIs and a .473 OPS on the season.
“Stunning,” David Cone replied. “Those numbers are absolutely stunning from Joc Pederson, who signed a two-year, $20 million deal to come over here. Hitting a-buck-twenty-six.”
Four pitches later Pederson destroyed a 2-1 changeup off Devin Williams to tie the game.
The moment Pederson’s blast landed, the Yankees lost. Yes, technically, there was still baseball to be played, but either the Yankees were going to get walked off on in the bottom of the ninth, or they were going to get walked off on in extra innings. Every Yankees fan knew the game was over. The worst extra-inning road team since the automatic runner was implemented was only going to provide one result.
2. And lose they did. After failing to score in the top of the 10th, the Yankees lost, as expected, in the bottom of the 10th.
In the top of the 10th with Jasson Dominguez as the automatic runner, Jazz Chisholm moved him over to third with a groundout. Anthony Volpe walked to set up runners on first and third with one out, but Austin Wells failed miserably (as he always does) and hit a weak grounder back to the mound to start an inning-ending double play. The Yankees 0-for in the 10th has them now at 1-for-33 (the one was a single) with no RBIs in six extra-inning road games this season. The only run they have scored in extras on the road this season was on a wild pitch.
Aaron Boone had already used Luke Weaver, Camilo Doval, David Bednar and Williams, so he went with Jake Bird for the 10th.
Bird got the hardest out of the inning — striking out Marcus Semien to prevent the automatic runner from advancing to third — and got Adolis Garcia to ground out to keep the automatic runner at second. Bird was one out away from sending the game to an 11th inning.
Boone decided to intentionally walk Wyatt Langford, choosing instead to pitch to Josh Jung. Jung went on to hit a 1-1 sinker 401 feet for a game-winning, three-run home run to drop the Yankees to 0-6 on the season in extra-inning road games and extend their losing streak to four straight.
3. Brian Cashman was praised for bringing in Bird, Bednar and Doval at the trade deadline, but we’re quickly seeing why he was able to hold on to his top prospects to acquire the three. The games Bird and Bednar have appeared in have been the biggest of their careers as Bird had only ever pitched for the Rockies and Bednar had spent the last five seasons in Pittsburgh after throwing 17 1/3 innings for the Padres to begin this career. Doval is the only one of the three to ever throw a meaningful pitch in August let alone October.
4. Max Fried had a 1.29 ERA through 11 starts and the Yankees were 10-1 in them. Fried has a 4.30 ERA over his last 12 starts and the Yankees are 5-7 in them. Fried was bad again on Monday: 5 IP, 8 H, 4 R, 4 ER, 3 BB, 7 K. Eleven baserunners in five innings isn’t going to cut it. Fried now has one quality start (July 29 against the Rays) in his last six outings going back to July 1. In those six starts he has a 5.81 ERA and the Yankees are 2-4.
5. Aaron Judge is set to return on Tuesday. “Judge tomorrow,” is what Boone told the media on Monday night in a way that makes me believe Boone thinks Judge is going to come back and solve all of the team’s problem. I hate to break it to you, but Judge only missed nine games since going on the injured list. The Yankees were a bad team with Judge. They have just continued to be a bad team without him.
6. Judge’s DH-only return means Giancarlo Stanton will be going to the bench. The Yankees are taking their best active hitter out of the lineup because they are afraid to let him play the outfield. There are 49 games left and the Yankees are closer to being out of the playoffs than they are to moving up in the current playoff picture. If Stanton gets hurt playing the outfield, so be it. His bat is too valuable to remove because Judge can’t play the outfield. Stanton has to play. What are you saving him for? The postseason that you’re not going to play in if he doesn’t play every day right now. Stanton can’t be a glorified pinch hitter and allowed only one plate appearance a night until Judge can throw again.
7. “Do you feel like this stretch is weighing on guys?” Boone was asked after the game.
“Yes,” Boone answered surprisingly.
I didn’t think Boone had it in him to admit things aren’t going well when things are obviously not going well, and that’s the first time in his eight years as manager I can recall him doing so. Boone said after Sunday’s loss that it’s “gut-check time” for his Yankees and they went to Texas, checked their gut and got punched in it again.
As I wrote after Sunday’s loss, Boone’s postgame tone completely shifted over the weekend. He sounds like someone who knows where this season is headed and with each passing day they are one loss closer to missing the postseason.
8. Despite having a somber tone in his voice, Boone did manage to throw out some of his favorite go-to lines after the loss. He gave us a “Gotta get over it” and a “We gotta win games” and a “We gotta do it better” when asked about his team’s recent play. The team he called “the best team in the league” a month ago. Boone said, “The season is getting shorter in a hurry.” I wonder if he has relayed that message to his clubhouse, especially Volpe, who has recently mentioned how the Yankees have so many games left.
9. On Friday, the offense scored 12 runs and the pitching gave up 13. On Saturday, the pitching held the Marlins to two runs and the offense was shut out. On Sunday, both the offense and defense sucked. On Monday, the offense scored five runs and the pitching gave up eight. The Yankees find a new way to lose every game, and that’s the most obvious sign of a bad team, which is what they have been for a long time now.
10. The Yankees are 19-28 since June 13. They went 13-14 in June, 12-13 in July and are 0-4 in August. They had an eight-game lead in the division at the end of May and are now 6 1/2 games back in the division (tiebreaker included). They had a 12-game lead in the loss column over the Red Sox at the end of May and now trail the Red Sox by 3 1/2 games for the first wild card (tiebreaker included). They are now tied with the Mariners record-wise, but do hold the head-to-head tiebreaker to be the second wild card. With Will Warren going against Nathan Eovaldi on Tuesday and the Mariners hosting the White Sox, I expect the Mariners to pass the Yankees by the end of play on Tuesday.
Last modified: Aug 5, 2025