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Friday, June 12, 2026

Bullpen

Bullpen (To the tune of Blackbird)

and with apologies to John Lennon and Paul McCartney

Blackburn pitching nowhere near the ninth.
Hoping for ground balls and shallow flies.
All your life…
Giving up a three run and letting the game get tied.

Jake Bird pitching nowhere near the ninth.
Hoping to command electric stuff.
All your life…
We are all still waiting for an outing that’s not rough.

Blackburn why?
Jake Bird why?
Do you both give up RBIs?

(Music)

Blackburn why?
Jake Bird why?
Are you where strong outings go to die. 



(Music)



Doval pitching nowhere near the ninth.
Cranking up a pitch to one-oh-two.
All your life…
No one knows where it is going. Especially not you.

We are stuck with all three and there’s nothing we can do.

We are stuck with all three and there’s nothing we can do.

We are stuck with all three and there’s nothing we can do.


Before he'll accept a trade to the Yankees, el Chapo wants an apology. Here's one.

Our dearest Aroldis,

Hope you're staying cool. For some reason, when I think of you enduring these 90-degree days of late, I get flashbacks to the Johnstown flood. 

Anyway, I see on the Interweb that you're still a bit miffed over how those mean old Yankees treated you, back in 2022. I couldn't agree more. You deserve an apology. 

It's hard to believe that those creepy management toadies fools left you - a great pitcher - off the Yankee playoff roster, simply because... 

a) you were getting regularly bombed. 
b) you were unable to throw strikes.
c) you let a new tattoo get infected, sending you to the IL.
and d) you missed a mandatory team practice. 

Why, the gall! The unmitigated gall! 

Not only that, but after the tattoo thing - and who doesn't have enough of them - those simpletons handed the closer role to Clay Holmes. And then, they had the nerve to suggest they did it simply because a few players hit walk-off HRs, leaving you to stand on the mound, smirking like Mr. Sardonicus, in much the way you must have looked after shooting up your ex-wife's garage, back in your madcap salad days, back when your trails of sweat didn't conjure comparisons to the 2021 Fukushima nuclear plant tsunami.  

I'm sorry, sir. O, how sorry I am! 

I'm sorry that your feelings were hurt by the bad people with the desks. And now, now, as the Redsocks prepare to dump trade you to - um - I'm sure that somebody, anybody, somewhere, will be delighted to hand their fate in 2026 to a petulant, 38-year-old toddler, who hasn't pitched a full season in the last four years. And it will soon be time to change venues once again.

Surely, I speak for the Yankiverse when I beg your forgiveness, allowing you to return to the team you so artfully destroyed in the early 2020s. Why, it would be like old times, watching you walk the first few batters! Maybe we can stage a reunion with Jose Altuve! Or Rafael Devers! Or Mike Brosseau!

O, well. I understand that you are a proud man. On that note, I hope you stay in Boston, to give the youngsters a role model. And next year... maybe the Mets? We can only dream.

Thursday, June 11, 2026

With the Knicks overcoming their curse, maybe it's time to revisit the Juju Rules, starting with the first and most important one of all

"DO YOU BELIEVE IN MIRACLES?" I answered, "NO."

It's fair to say that every half-cogent NY baby boomer remembers where he or she was on the afternoon of Nov. 22, 1963, when the news came down: The president had been shot. The president was dead. The world had changed. You were no longer a kid...

For New Yorkers, next came the night of Feb. 22, 1980, in the sleepy Adirondacks town of Lake Placid. There, as the final seconds counted down, the immortal Al Michaels shouted, "DO YOU BELIEVE IN MIRACLES? YESSS!" as the USA hockey team somehow beat an all-world lineup from Russia. A moment frozen in time. We remember where we were.

For hardened NYers, there was the night of Nov. 18, 1985, when Lawrence Taylor hit Washington QB Joe Theismann so hard that he changed the dynamics of football, making Left Tackle the most important position on the line. Taylor broke Theismann's leg, a brutal blindside, and his frantic gestures for help were probably the greatest act of humanity in his violent career. We remember where we were.

There are other moments. 

Of course, Sept. 11, 2001, when the World Trade Center fell.  

Oct. 12, 2001, Derek Jeter's flip play at home plate, to nab Jason Giambi's brother. 

Nov. 8, 2016, Election Night, as the country chose Donald Trump. 

March 27, 2022, when Will Smith slapped Chris Rock during the Oscars.

July 13, 2024, the assassination attempt on Trump.

And then there is last night, when the Knicks - down by 29 - inscribed themselves into the cultural history of Gotham... and Hollywood. We will never forget where we were when OG Anunoby's hand soared in from outer space to score the winning basket with one second on the clock.

I certainly will never forget where I was.

In bed, sleeping. 

I'd watched the first half, seen enough. I trundled off to the Land of Nod, thanking my stars for not going whole-hog onto the Knicks/celebrity bandwagon. Nope. I reminded myself - they're still the Nixx, guaranteed to disappoint - be it against Reggie Miller or Wemby. They hadn't fooled me. And I was going to get a good night's sleep, maybe waking up only once to pee.

So, today I wear the shame of disbelief. My gravestone will say, "COWARD WENT BEDDY-BYE, MISSED KNICKS' COMEBACK." 

Do I believe in miracles? No. (And now, having made my bed, I must do it again in Game 5. The juju worked. Forget FOMO. I am a lost cause.)

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Today's Game Thread – Car'Loss and Volp'EEEEE ! ! !




The Catching Conundrum and Other Stories

 

With the neck injury to Austin Wells, one that will be difficult if not impossible to truly come back from, the Yankees need a catcher. 

But who and from where? There are very few quality catchers left, not only in the Yankee farm system, but throughout baseball and there is a very good reason...

It’s a crappy job. The worst in baseball.

Crouching the whole game, wearing extra padding on 90+ degree days, taking foul balls off your head and bounced balls in the nuts, having to react in a millionth of a second to a 100 MPH fast ball thrown by a guy like Carman Doval who has NO idea where it’s going and, if it gets by you and the runner scores from third... people blame you.

Who needs that kind of aggravation?

Let’s face it, kids don’t want to be catchers anymore. Not even the bottom heavy, tough, slow ones.  

Speaking of... Last year’s MVP  candidate Cal Raleigh “The Big Dumper”  is shitting the bed this year, hitting a paltry .161 this year and is currently on the IL.  

Just an aside, after 2333 MLB at Bats Raleigh's lifetime BA is 222.   That’s Lloyd Hanes territory.

---

I spent the morning drinking Old Overholt and looking for solutions to the Yankees catching situation and to baseball's as well but all I could come up with, and it's long term is... people need to impregnate more Molinas. 



The real issue isn't finding catchers per se, it's finding catchers that can hit. 

It's kind of inexplicable. Why aren't catchers better hitters? 

They see more pitches than anyone else by a lot. Well over one hundred a game. They see the spins. They gage the speeds, Track the movement of the ball... 

Is the issue that their gloves are so big that they only need to approximate where the ball is going to end up? Whereas with a bat being off, even by as little as a quarter of an inch is the difference between a hit and pop up.

Even if this is true you'd think they would walk more because they should be able to tell what pitch is going to be a ball right out of the pitchers hand. 

I can't figure it out.

---

Wemby knew that the league couldn't call a flagrant foul. 

Why? Because he already has one on the books for an earlier dirty play.  

His next one carries an automatic one game suspension. There is no way that the corrupt and shameless NBA commissioner would suspend him during the finals.  Consequently he was freed to be as dirty as he wanted. 

International marketing face of the league. 

Think Othani and gambling. 

Hard to be a fan of anything these days. 

--

Jose Ramirez...  clone or unacknowledged child?  No other explanation. 

---

The Knicks face a staggeringly powerful juju curse. Ten warnings from The Abyss.

Our world exists to be discussed by twosomes. Vladimir and Estragon on the hill. Charlie Brown and Linus in the pumpkin patch. John and Suzyn in the booth... 

O, to be a fly in the MSG owner's box Monday night, as drooping eyelids and long, liquid breaths suddenly changed conversation into soliloquy.  

On that note, here's mine: Ten singular thoughts on the NYC condition, which now faces existential dread.

1. Soul-crushing Knicks owner James Dolan launched a massive curse Monday night, when he hosted Donald Trump. You don't invite the vampire into your house. This was a juju atomic bomb, from which the Knicks will not recover. In every game thus far, the Spurs have improved. Tonight, a blow-out.  

2. Gotta think the Yankees - watching NYC go bonkers over the Knicks - must imagine themselves riding down the Canyon of Heroes in a pandemonium of good cheer. If (and when) the Trump-stricken Knicks fail, the city will grow even more rabid for a world championship.

3. JM is right. (See below.) This cannot go on. Anthony Volpe is not hitting, and his defense grows shoddier by the day. This is Year Three of the Volpe experiment. It's not working. The guy plays hard, hustles, cheers his teammates: It's not a failure of character. But either Jose Caballero (or Max Schuemann) takes over at SS, or George Lombard Jr. should get the call. As for Volpe? I doubt he'll be a Yankee after July 31.

4. I just realized something scary: Next year, we will be watching the '27 Yankees.

5. Spencer Jones' massive HR last night, his first in MLB, did something rather rare: It scored two runs. Throughout his minor league career, Jones has been streaky. Could he start something? And could his HRs come with runners on base? 

6. Tampa won last night, maintaining their one game lead in the loss column. It's too early to play scoreboard. But until the Yankees pass the Rays, they're in the wild card ghetto. 

7. Jose Ramirez just kills us. Game after game. Guy is 33, he looks like a college dorm refrigerator, and he has 24 stolen bases. Twenty-four. Tied for the MLB lead. He hitting only .241, but no other MLB batter scares me more. Twenty-four SBs? WTF? 

8. Yankee bullpen held up heroically over the last two nights. But you can feel it burning out. Multi-inning saves in early June? That's how you develop Scott Proctors. Today, Carlos Rodon needs to go seven. But he's on a pitch count, too. We can't go on like this.

9. In June, Ben Rice is hitting .231 with one HR. He's pressing. I think Rice was benefiting from the Post-Judge Sigh Derangement Syndrome: The pitcher just faced the game's biggest slugger, so he relaxes. Rice jumped on mistakes. Now, he follows Trent Grisham. Aint the same.

10. Gerrit Cole's facial expressions last night were troubling. He looked genuinely concerned over his inability to secure strike three. You wonder if he has fully adjusted to his new, post-surgery reality.  He will. Eventually. I think. Maybe...

And now, a carefully considered, deeply researched, and meticulously presented analysis of our shortstop


Jesus fucking Christ, Volpe is terrible. 

He can't hit. He can't field consistently. David Cone says he works sooooo hard, he's really trying. I'll say he's trying. He's the most trying player on the goddamn roster.

He is now batting .190. McMahon is showing some signs of life, outhitting the hometown failure, while our catchers still can't hit for beans.

This can't go on. Volpe is getting worse, just as he has for three years now. And there's no injury excuse this time.

Boone is an idiot. Cashman is incompetent. Poor Volpe is just not a major leaguer, maybe he never will be, and what the Yankees have done to him by pushing him to this point is criminal.

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Game Thread – Tuesday Swoon Ninth – 202SUX


Dear Influencers of the Yankiverse (You know who you are.) Enough with the Judge-replacement theories

Lars Nootbaar? Byron Buxton? Adley Rutschman? Your momma? That's it! Enough! We're done here! You're either stupid, or you hate America! Turn off the microphone, darling! This is over, Piggy! 

What? Huh? You're still here? Oh, I get it. You were watching the Knicks, anyway. Enough with the trade talk! Enough!

Ever since Aaron Judge went down with the bum rib - ribberty-bibberty! - the interweb has been bubbling-over with ridiculous, clickbait trade rumors, none of which make sense, aside from displaying the warped minds of people suffering from Volpe Derangement Syndrome, which has rotted our peanut-sized brains.

Listen: The last thing the Death Barge needs to do right now is trade what's left of our farm system for a two-month outfield replacement, or a rent-me veteran shortstop, or a catcher in the final throes of his contract. There is no reason to package whatever talent we have left in Scranton, or Somerset, or the back alleys of Tampa, for an OF who, come September, will simply add to the bottleneck of clogged baseball arteries. 

The Yankees have one play, one...

With Judge out, probably through mid-August, they must give Spencer Jones and Jasson Dominguez full-scale opportunities to show what they've got - even if it's nothing.

And yes, the means watching Jones attempt to hit with a stance that looks like he's taking a dump while practicing goat yoga. He's curled up and struggling like the way Clint Frazier once did, before the Yankees pulled the plug. Jones has a vicious, violent, uppercut swing, and when he does finally connect, it will be a 450-foot blast with an exit velo that causes David Cone to giggle another punk tune from the eighties, but I'm wondering if, instead of Blondie, we'll be seeing the reincarnation of Ron Kittle.  

Last night, Jones went 1-4 with three strikeouts, swinging through curve balls the way Trump goes through Diet Cokes. Fortunately, most of the Yankiverse was watching the Knicks game. And more fortunately, the Martian will soon return from his rehab in Scranton. From there, either Jones hits, or we go to Plan B: Jasson Dominguez, for at least another two weeks. 

After that, I suppose we can try Yanquiel Fernandez, a stepped-on former Rockies prospect, who has 13 HRs in Scranton, plus a cannon-arm. What we don't need is Nootbaar. Or Buxton. Or somebody that rips apart the current reality. 

Don't get me wrong. The Yankees will need bullpen lug nuts. Last night, they used an unsustainable eight pitchers to beat Cleveland. Had they not scored two runs in the 10th - if the game had, say, gone into the 11th or 12th, they would have either needed to cut into the rotation, or sent out a position player to pitch. (And they had run out of position players, as well.) You can't use eight pitchers per game.

And you can't trade the house for a two-month replacement. You hear me, Piggy? You just can't. Huh? The Knicks lost? WTF? How do I get outahere?    

Monday, June 8, 2026

Game Thread – What'll you be watching tonight ?


 


Wearing Giancarlo's pants and swinging Judge's bat, Jazz Chisholm chases the defining contract of his life. Can he lead the Yankees?

First off, the trousers do look a bit clownish. Are weather balloon pants a thing? At least, he should get some cheap bases on pitches that zip the cotton, low and inside. 

The bat doesn't look different, though it's big enough to tweak a gonad.  

The mystery of Jasrado Hermis Arrington Chisholm Jr. is nearing its conclusion. All the suspects have gathered in the parlor, and soon, one will be accused of making - or murdering - his career. At age 28, "Jazz" has four months to reclaim his former slot as one of MLB's rising stars. How he performs on the Great Gotham Stage will determine not only his place in Yankee history, but his financial well-being. 

Whenever Jazz homers or has a big game - like yesterday - the YES team goes full Shane Spencer, spinning the bonkers fantasy that Chisholm has suddenly turned "The Corner" and is ready to fulfill the hype that came with the tabloid-level infatuation with his name. There was never another Yankee named Jasrardo. There was never one named Jazz. And there have been few with such high expectations. 

Maybe it's the position. In this millennium, the Yankees have basically put all their chips on three second-basemen: 

Robbie Cano
DJ. LeMahieu
Gleyber Torres. 

(In a distant alt-planet, Rob "Brigadoon" Refsnyder is the 4th, but in the era of "Shmigadoon," why go there?) That leaves Jazz as the current keeper of the keystone - following DJ and the Gleyb. 

This was gonna be his year. 

Last winter, Jazz famously suggested that he could be a "50-50" hitter - that is, 50 HRs and 50 SBs. (Last season, he was 31-31.) In simple terms, he was predicting an MVP season, above Judge and Ohtani, and one of the greatest years of all time. This was - well - fucking insane. The Gammonites - courtier descendants of Dick Young and Ring Lardner - ran with it like drunken Leprechauns. Ever since, Jazz has been a disappointment, figuratively and literally. 

Thus far, on the season, he is hitting .234 - the lowest batting average in his MLB career, aside from a meager cup of coffee in 2020, over 56 at bats, with the Marlins. Thus far, counting yesterday's blast, Jazz has 8 HRs and 16 stolen bases. Statistically, he's on a course to be a 20-40. Not awful, maybe. Definitely, not 50-50. 

It's been a tough year. In April, he hit .202. In May, .281. Thus far, in June, .176. But let's face it: We can make numbers jump through hoops. For Jazz, the next four months - through September - will either lead him to a $200 million payday - it's his contract year - or vault him into the cosmic void of selling himself after the worst season of his life. And the next two months - without Aaron Judge - will make the difference.

So, here we go. Tonight, with the Knicks game everywhere, with Trump coming, with the streets wild and the whole world watching, the Yankees can see how NYC might react to a world championship. They'll be in Cleveland, home to the A Christmas Story house. Presumably Jazz will be wearing his "Big Boy" pants. It's time to start something. 

Sunday, June 7, 2026

Hopefully young Cam will be more on his game today, 'cause MR BOONE WILL BE WATCHING !


Gambling is stupid. Don't gamble stupid.

 


Just to cut in again before the game thread, the New York Yankees, having lost 4 of their last 6, and far and away their greatest player of a generation, and quite possibly two of their leading starters to injury—don't look for Cam to get out of the third today, more's the pity—are now...once again heavy favorites to take the American League pennant.

The Yanks are rated a 40.2 percent chance to do just that; the next highest favorites are Seattle, 18.3; and the Cleveland Guardians of Traffic, recent vanquishers of our boys, at 14.9.

AND...the Yanks remain the no. 2 favorite in all of baseball to win the World Series, at 20.6, trailing only the surging Dodgers (28.2). Next up is Atlanta, at 12.4. 

The next highest Series pick in the AL is Seattle, at 7.6 percent. Tampa Bay, which still leads the Yanks by half-a-game in their division, is only a 2.2 percent pick.

As always, this has to do with the "Pythagorean record" of the Yankees...never mind that they are, for instance. 7-12 in one-run games.

The real bet to take? The Bronx Bombers are considered to have a 99.8 percent chance of making the playoffs. They will not. 

Run out and take that money, if you can find it. Do it now, before we learn today that Cam Schlittler is having, oh, a little bit of a muscle spasm in his shoulder. Nothing serious, maybe just some imaging this week, to be on the safe side...

You heard it here first.







The perfect Yankees back-up catcher...is backing up the backstop in Flushing.

 

Remember this guy? 

Nah, why would you? Why would any of us?

He's Luis Torrens, the Mets starting catcher these days, now that the Mets' perennially injured chef catcher-of-the-future, Francisco Alvarez is, well, injured again.

Torrens was signed originally by the Yankees, at the age of just 17, in 2013. 

Since then, his road to the big leagues has made Job's existence look like a walk in the park. A torn labrum held back his development in the Yanks' system, but nonetheless, he'd battled back to hit .250 with Charleston in the Sally League in 2016.

Some genius in the front office left him off the 40-man roster, though, and San Diego picked him up in the draft.

(Meaning, let me spell out, that we got NOTHING for him. N-O-T-H-I-N-G.)

Torrens wound up in Seattle, where sharing catching and DH duties in 2021, he hit .243, with 16 doubles and 15 homers in 108 games. Not exactly Bill Dickey, but positively Ruthian numbers compared with a certain catcher hitting .166 today.

In 2022...Torrens hurt his shoulder again, this time ending up at the bottom of a pig pile in a bench-clearing brawl. Still, he was back before the end of the season, to become the first position player in a long, long time (Rocky Colavito?) to win a game as a fill-in pitcher. (In the second game of a doubleheader that day, he caught, and got a hit.)

In 2024, the Mets picked Double-Duty Torrens up as a free agent. Since then, he's hit all of .227, with (very) limited power. Nonetheless—again, unlike somebody else we could name—he's turned himself into a stellar defensive catcher.  

Among other things, here are his percentages of throwing out runners trying to steal, as opposed to the league average:

2024: Torrens, 46.4, NL, 203.

2025: Torrens, 40.8 (led league), NL, 23.2.

2026: Torrens, 44.0, NL, 25.0

Boy, makes you wonder what the Yanks could do if they ever hired a general manager.








The Yankees have a black hole behind the plate. Historically, that's a crushing blow. But they do have a solution.

In our distinguished and noteworthy lives, we have leaned upon one unshakeable truth: 

Every great Yankee team features a great Yankee catcher. Consider...

Bill Dickey. (1928-1946)
Yogi Berra. (1946-1963)
Elston Howard. (1955-1967)
Thurman Munson. (1969-1979)
Jorge Posada. (1995-2011)

And that, my friends, is why the '26 Yankees are a smoldering, moldering dud. 

It wasn't supposed to happen. Gary Sanchez was gonna save us. Oh well. Then, two Augusts ago, Austin Wells arrived, hitting 13 HRs over the final two months. Our search for the cornerstone seemed over. 

But the last two years have been a disaster.

This weekend, the Yankees finally punted. They ditched not only Wells but his backup, JC Escarra, two LH catchers with the worst positional stats in MLB. 

Friday, they demoted Escarra to Scranton to bring up Ali Sanchez, a journeyman RH catcher.

Yesterday, they slapped Wells onto the Injured List, dealing with neck pain. They brought Escarra back. The Scranton Express lives! 

What an exercise in hopelessness. Up the middle, this team underperforms at every slot. Wells? Volpe? Chisholm? Grisham? Tylenol? Sour diesel? There's nothing there. And now, a midseason without Aaron Judge? 

Of course, this team can chase a wild card berth. Thank you, expanded playoff system. But come October, these flaws will bite us in the caboose. The Yankees cannot win with a catching tandem that cannot hit .200.  

We don't need to reincarnate Bill Dickey. But until the Yankees find a catcher, this team is doomed. 

Which brings me - gulp - to Ben Rice. 

Okay, I know what you're thinking. I get it: This guy is perfect and should not be tampered with. But when Giancarlo returns, the Yankees will have one too many 1B and DHs. Paul Goldschmidt is not going to play OF, and Stanton will be barely able to run. 

This is what happens when, for two years, you trade away your entire arsenal of catching prospects. 

They gotta do something crazy.  It's an emergency. It's time to break glass.

Unless Escarra or Wells starts to hit - hello? is there a batting coach out there? - the Yankees must ponder the unponderable: 

Rice behind the plate. 

Because maybe - just maybe - we will find our great Yankee catcher.

It's everywhere, it's everywhere


As Michael Stipe once sang, everybody hurts.

 

Saturday, June 6, 2026

Rainout Theater: "Rawhide" (1938) starring Lou Gehrig

Lou Gehrig... decides to give up baseball in New York for the life of a western cattle rancher. Once at the ranch, Gehrig encounters a protection racket preying on the ranchers by extortion and violence. He teams up with a crusading local attorney to fight the crooks. (Wikipedia

I have watched this twice, which should tell you something about me if not the movie. 

UPDATE: Game rescheduled for August 29. Enjoy Lou Gehrig! Did I mention that the movie is only 58 minutes and has four songs?  

Holy cow! This is from Variety, 9/2/42: 


 

NO GAME TONIGHt – So watch this instead . . . .


 

In their "Judgeless June," the Yankees lose. And across NYC, nobody cares.

Last night, across NYC, the entire festering tsunami of wild-eyed, knuckle-dragging, Gotham sports fans watched the Knicks beat San Antonio. 

From coast to coast, the NBA finals appeared on phones, radios and bracketed bar TVs, giving what would normally have been a big event - the Redsocks vs the Yankees! - the relevance of a Benny Hill rerun. 

Which is how I perceive the Yankee batting order - sped up and swinging to the tune of Yackety Sax

Imagine: The Yankees hosted Boston, and nobody cared.  

There was certainly no help from our middle of the order. It began with Paul Goldschmidt. Oh for four. Then Cody Bellinger. Oh for three. Then Jazz Chisholm. Oh for four. 

Sandwiched between five hits from Ben Rice and the mysterious Spencer Jones. Oh for eleven.

Insert a big oh-for-the-night into the order, and that's the Yankees - not only last night, but throughout 2026, when not facing a certified tomato can.  

Which is why last night was, well, mysterious.

For the record, Boson is a tomato can. The Yankees had four innings to score two runs. They couldn't solve Sonny Fuckin' Gray. In the nineth, their Aroldis Chapman - the sweaty el Chapo, the Cuban Water Cannon - generously walked two of our first three batters. Didn't matter. Coupled with Tampa's win, the Yankees now sit three games down in the loss column. 

Of course, the brain trust - in reaction to Judge's injury - made a bold move. They sent backup catcher J.C. Escarra to Scranton and promoted an obscure RH-hitting millhand named Ali Sanchez. (No relation to Gary, though there's a joke there, somewhere.) He's 29, and has kicked around the sport for 13 years, with the Mets, Cardinals, Marlins, Blue Jays and Redsocks. He was hitting .226 in Scranton, though it is hard to imagine him looking worse, offensively, than Austin Wells, now at .168.

Bright spots last night?

1. Spencer Jones had three hits. Naturally, in the nineth, he was removed for a pinch-hitter. You can't make this shit up. 

2. Nobody watched. Nobody. It was the night for the Knicks, in the Year of the Knicks. New York is preparing the Canyon of Heroes. It could be the biggest sports celebration in this decade. The Yankees will watch on TV. 

Why We Figh...er, Lose


Duque will probably highlight this, also, but I just had to...

Sorry, heading for the vomitorium...

Friday, June 5, 2026

Can we please get off of googly?

 They are the corporate overlords. 

Game Thread - The Fifth of Swoon - There's a (MASS)ive HOLE in Right Field




To win without Aaron Judge, the Yankees do not need another slugger. They simply need a bullpen

Yesterday, to finally beat no-name Cleveland, leaders of the disgraceful AL Central, Aaron Boone used up his entire so-called Circle of Trust. That is...

Brent Headrick, one inning, no runs
Fernando Cruz, one inning, no runs
David Bednar, one inning, no runs.

Altogether, no hits, the first seamless bullpen outing since - well - weeks, months? It was not exactly Quan-Go-Mo, Michael Kay's ill-fated, 2004 attempt to link Paul Quantrill and Tom Gordon to the great Mariano. But for this particular bullpen, a scoreless three is found money. 

The Yankees won their first game without Aaron Judge as an option. Throughout the day, the lack of an announcement from Yankee Central Command provoked growing alarm from Suzyn Waldman. You could feel her distress rising, as the silence grew louder. 

We might not see Judge again until August. It sucks. But the Yankees do not need a replacement slugger. What they need now is still what they needed last week: A decent MLB bullpen. 

Tonight, against Boston - a team that hates us the way Hall hates Oates - Boone will be back to stems and seeds, aka Camilo Doval and Jake Bird. Both have been rampant disappointments since the day last July when they were acquired. Neither shows signs of hope. Tonight, the Yankees will start Ryan Weathers, probably leaving Boone with a three-inning hole to fill. Having used the entire Circle of Trust yesterday, only God knows how the Yankees will navigate those final three innings. We better score nine runs.

The Yankees will face Sonny Gray, another of Cooperstown Cashman's two-way trade debacles, coming and going. (To get him, they traded three prospects, including James Kaprelian and Jorge Mateo. To get rid of him, they added Reiver Sanmartin to a package that brought back Shed Long Jr.) Not only did Gray spit the bit as a Yankee, but then he went elsewhere and succeeded. And tonight he faces us in the Stadium. 

The Yankees cannot trade their way out of missing Judge. It's time to see what Spencer Jones and Jasson Dominguez can do. Both have run their courses at Triple A. Let's see what we have.  

It's almost the same in the bullpen. Why trade for another Doval, another Bird? Two days ago, in Scranton, the Yankees shifted Carlos LeGrange - the breakout pitcher in spring training - to the bullpen. In March, LeGrange looked incredible - until he didn't. He threw 16 innings with an ERA of 4.95. But he reached 102 mph on the radar toy. On a one-inning basis, if he can throw strikes, he could be formidable.  

Another guy in Scranton, Yovanny Cruz, 26, seemed to find a new fastball in May. Last night, he gave up an earned run in 1.1 innings, with 2 Ks, against the Syracuse Mets. Dunno what we've got.

But without Judge, the Yankees must change their ways. They are no longer a HR-hitting factory. They need to nickel-and-dime. They need to steal bases, move runners, clip coupons. And somehow, they need to find a bullpen.

Is there another report that says he definitely has TOS?

"Pearl has performed thoracic outlet syndrome (TOS) surgery on Merrill Kelly, Chris Carpenter and Josh Beckett, among other players, over the years. It is still unknown if Judge is dealing with TOS, or if the stress fracture is the only injury."


So says The Athletic. Just how doomed are we? And--as has been said here repeatedly--can somebody tell Judge to stop diving for balls?