Friday, January 9, 2026

The music is about to stop, and nine MLB teams are about to start scrambling for four chairs. It's time to ask: How badly do the Yankees want this?

Unless a bomb goes off this weekend, the tremors will happen Monday. 

That day, the Phillies have set up a Zoom call with Bo Bichette, the first B in MLB's current ice jam. This teleconference could answer an ancient Internet question: Can a blowjob be successfully delivered through Zoom? The Phillies will try. And the notion of them sweet-talking Bichette - the Jays infield linchpin - should rouse the fruited circuitry of Edwin S. Rogers III, the nepo head of Rogers Communications and Canadian Chamber of Commerce 2025 Business Leader of the Year - (I'm not making this up) - who owns 98 percent of the zillion dollar media goliath that runs not just the Blue Jays, but a large chunk of Canada, Trump's would-be 51st state, which seems a bit ornery lately over how it's been treated by its southern neighbor.  

However Philly courts Bichette, and whatever they offer, their presence will drop a grenade into the bidding war for one Cody Bellinger - the second B in our gridlock. This will tweak the wires of "Food Stamps" Hal Steinbrenner and Mets owner Stevie Cohen - Juan Soto's skybox lover - who has done nothing this winter but let popular "Amazins" walk out the door. One of these days, Mt. Cohen will erupt, blowing plumes of money across the landscape. It's hard to imagine him sitting this out.

Any movement on Bellinger will instantly rouse the Cubs, Redsocks and the mythical "mystery team" - (San Diego? Texas? Seattle?) - that always haunts free agent bidding wars. The Dodgers might also join the chat. Boston would seem most locked on Alex Bregman - the third B - while the Cubs hone in on Kyle Tucker, (the honorary 4th B.) 

Close your eyes, and nine teams could be chasing four free agents, which is why Scott Boras feels no urgency to make a deal. Considering the looming 2027 labor crisis, which could shut down baseball for much of the season, this could be the last blowout contract negotiations of this decade. 

Tick, tick, tick... 

Thursday, January 8, 2026

IT IS THURSDAY - SO HERE'S YOUR MOMENT OF BØØNE




ALTHOUGH WE LAUGH AND ACT LIKE WE'RE CLOWNS
BENEATH OUR MASKS WE'RE ALL WEARING FROWNS
OUR TEARS ARE FALLING LIKE RAIN FROM THE SKY
IS IT FOR HIM OR OURSELVES THAT WE CRY

HE'S A LOSER
AND HE'S LOST SO MUCH FOR YOU AND ME
HE'S A LOSER
AND HE'S NOT WHAT HE PRETENDS TO BE

The Yankees should pass on any long-term deal for Cody Bellinger. Prove me wrong.

Before starting, please allow me to reiterate one central tenet of this blog: 

Hal Steinbrenner has more money than each of us will spend in 20 lifetimes, and when it comes to payrolls and salaries, his incessant poor-mouthing deserves a midnight visit from Trump's Delta Force commandos. If there is such a thing as karma, Hal will spend eternity pushing a shopping cart full of bottle deposits through some upstate backwater that registers 200 inches of snow per winter. Around here, we've no soft spots for whiny, dime-pinching, nepo billionaires. The Yankees can sign any player, at any time. The problem is Hal. He doesn't want to spend his money.

That said, the notion of bestowing a seven-year contract upon Cody Bellinger is lunacy, a surefire way to continue the Great Yankee Malaise: 18 years without a ring... and counting.  

If Bellinger was ever going to warrant a seven-year deal, it should have happened in 2019, in Los Angeles. He was coming off an MVP year - 47 HRs and a .306 BA. But the Dodgers wisely blinked, and by 2022, he was barely topping the Mendoza Line. He bounced to the Cubs on a three-season deal that let him restore his name and win Comeback Player of the Year. Still, Chicago wound up dumping him to the Yankees in exchange for the great pitcher, Cody Poteet. And now he wants a seven-year deal? Sorry, but... nope.  

Listen: Everybody likes Bellinger. Guy plays hard and smart. Chokes up with two strikes, a lost art for undisciplined Yankee sluggers. Still... seven years? Gimme a break. In seven years, he'll be a china doll DH, back in the .210s, far beyond his sell-by date. And his would be replacements could be shining in other cities. 

I'm talking about Jasson Dominguez and Spencer Jones. Can't say if either will ever become a star: The Martian can't field, and Jones strikes out too often. But in baseball, at some point, you have to go with your farm system. There comes a time when the Yankees must call the question on their vaunted prospects, and that time is here. 

If the Yankees sign Bellinger, they might as well start shopping The Martian tomorrow. On that note, I'd like to point out that - for age 22 - he didn't do that badly last year: 10 HR, 23 SB, .257. He's fast as hell. In fact, Dominguez hit rather well (.274) from the left side. If, say, the Yanks signed Austin Hayes, (.319 last year from the right side) and platooned the pair, how much more from Bellinger could they realistically expect? 

Listen: I get it that Bellinger is a fine human being: flushes the toilet, remembers birthdays, etc. Apparently, he loves NYC, which is important, because many players do not. New York is full of lifetime opportunities. But if a seven-year deal is the hill on which Bellinger wants to die, I say, let him go. 

Sorry, folks. Hal has too much money for his own good. But players ought to show at least some allegiance to the fan bases that embrace them. (That's why there will always be a special dung heap in hell for Juan Soto.) Demanding a seven-year deal is to drop a future bomb on your team. If that's what Bellinger wants, fuck'm. 

Wednesday, January 7, 2026

Yank fans prep for 2026: The Year of Interesting Times.

Interesting times, eh? We're "running "Venezuela, home to Miguel Cabrera, Jose Altuve and Omar Visquel - a threesome that tortured Yankees over the years. Our best Venezuelan was Bobby Abreu, who never met a warning track that didn't terrify him. There was Davey Concepcion... Luis Aparicio... Johan Santana... all from Venezuela, which we're running. 

And then there is... Greenland? That's a bingo square I didn't have. I had Epstein files, measles, polar vortexes and our inexcusable unwillingness to dress nicely for plane rides. Interesting times. 

And, right now, baseball isn't giving us any escape. 

We're fiddling into January, waiting. Eventually, presumably, something will happen. Winter began in November with a spasm of player movements - Pete Alonso, Kyle Schwarber, Sonny Gray, Dylan Cease - while Food Stamps Hal moped about paying the rent.

December came and went. Hal moped. Here we are, waiting for Cody Bellinger to pick a team, while our modern Babadooks - the Mets, Phillies, Cubs, Jays, Redsocks and Dodgers - lurk in the money piles, keenly aware of our owner's moping. 

Any day now, something will happen. Suddenly, markets for Kyle Tucker and Bo Bichette will explode, unleashing chaos. At that point, the Yankees will address their needs - SS, RH bat, bullpen, rotation, maybe 3B? - while we sit back and wait... waiting for the real waiting to begin. 

Through April/May, we'll wait for Anthony Volpe, though I honestly don't know why.  

Through May/June, we'll wait for Carlos Rodon. (He'll be 33.)  

Through June/July, we'll wait for Gerrit Cole, at 35.

Through August/September, we'll wait for Clarke Schmidt, who might have to wait until 2027, when the season becomes a wait.   

So, everybody... wait. 

Maybe today, something will happen. Interesting times, eh?

The Walter Winchell Show, 1953, ABC Network. Yankee scoop at 1:06.

Tuesday, January 6, 2026

While we await something, anything, here are 10 (relatively) fun facts about new Yankee Paul DeJong.

In case you missed it, due to the delightful global events or the seemingly endless, two-hour Stranger Things finale, the Yanks on Friday signed veteran infielder Paul DeJong.

Ten fun - (sorta fun, anyway) - facts:

1. His middle name is Sterling!

2. In 2015, he graduated from Illinois State University with a degree in biochemistry.

3. In 2017, in his first-ever MLB at bat, on his first-ever MLB swing, he homered. 

4. Later that year, he became the first-ever rookie in MLB history to record seven extra-base hits in a three-game series.

5. That season, for St. Louis, he hit 25 HRs and batted .285.

6. It's all downhill from there.

7. He's played for the Cards, Blue Jays, Giants, White Sox, Royals and Nationals.

8. His highest BA with any team was .233. In several cases, he hit below .200.

9. Tough injuries - a broken hand, a broken rib, a broken cheekbone - derailed his career. 

10. At 32, he'll compete at SS with Jose Caballero, 29, until Anthony Volpe returns, sometime around May. (Pardon me if I weep. They are not tears of joy.)

Monday, January 5, 2026

If the Marquis de Sade came back as a football team, he could not torture fans more than the Giants have done

Let us tip our hats to the finalists in this year's IT IS HIGH Worst Organization on Earth award: 

1. Association for the Advancement of Industrial Microplastics.

2. Guns for Toddlers LLC

3. Save the Roaches!

4. The New York Football Giants.

Of course, we're here to honor the Giants, whose win yesterday eliminated their shot at the 2nd pick in next spring's NFL draft. The Giants beat fellow tomato can Dallas, who sat their starting QB, Dak Prescott, in the second half. This came one week after Las Vegas mysteriously deactivated its best player, Maxx Crosby, ensuring a loss to the Giants. 

After going 2-13 through the first 16 weeks - staking their claim as the NFL's worst team - the Giants won their final two, achieving nothing. 

I'm sorry, people, but this is Nobel Prize for Incontinence territory. We can rail against the Yankees and ridicule the Mets. We can chuckle at the Jets and await the looming Knicks' self-demolition. But nothing compares to the humiliation that the Giants regularly inflict upon fans, a loyalty that is best explained via the Stockholm Syndrome.  

Folks, this is genius. The '25 Giants have been a disaster since Week III, when they went 0-3. They won two - inexplicably beating Philadelphia - then rattled off nine straight losses, including five games where they led in the 4th quarter. Entering the season's final weeks, they held the 1st draft pick, allowing their fans to imagine a new front office with a bundle of young players. Nope. They won their final two, beating cupcakes who were determined to tank, while the network TV announcers bloviated about the momentum of a two-game winning streak, entering next season. What bullshit! What unbelievable, uncompromising, bullshit. 

Let's hope that, instead of invading Greenland, Donald Trump sends his Delta Force to the Meadowlands and extracts Giants owner John Mara to a rightful perch in Riker's Island. I'm sorry if that sounds cruel - the guy has cancer, which we can agree is a tough ride - but that's sorta what the NFL did long ago, replacing the Maras with GM George Young. Back then, it saved the team from another generation of disgrace.

So, hats off to the Gints! They have destroyed a once-great name brand. They have gifted NYC to the Jets. They have become irrelevant. Are you watching, Hal Steinbrenner? Do you think it cannot happen in the Bronx? Do you think the fan base will automatically follow whatever you do, wherever you lead? 

Sunday, January 4, 2026

Syracuse, the LA Dodgers of the Golden Snowball, has built a huge lead in the Golden Snowball

 

Read it and weep, Buffaloans... er, Buffalinos... Buffalites... wha'ever.

The packed and powdered city of Syracuse won last year's Golden Snowball by a healthy blizzard. But they have not rested on their laurels. This winter, they have already notched 81 inches, nearly double that of Rochester, the current runner-up.

Let us take a moment to ponder the Syracuse Snowball dynasty. 

Aside from a recent three year blip - Binghamton won two years ago; Rochester and Buffalo before that - Syracuse has dominated the annual upstate snowfall contest in the manner of the great Yankee teams. 

Since 1940, when the records began, Syracuse has won 50 Snowballs, including nine straight in the 60s-70s, and eight straight in the 70s-80s. 

Over the first 20 years of this century, Syracuse won 15. 

Listen: It's not close. Syracuse is a city of roof-rakes, winter rats and a giant dome. They claim the Eskimos have 50 words for snow. On the Tughill Plateau north of Syracuse - a place that barely exists between November and April - I once counted 51. And this could be the snowiest on record. (Though late this week, it's supposed to hit 40 degrees! Shorts and sandals!)

On a Yankee note, Toronto just signed the Japanese 3B slugger, Kazuma Okamoto. If he's any good - (and if they keep Bo Bichette) - you could argue that the Jays just bought the AL East. 

As for the Death Barge, we won't do anything until Cody Bellinger signs. If he stays a Yankee, they'll shop The Martian and Spencer Jones. If Cody signs elsewhere, they'll probably see what they can get for Jazz Chisholm. 

Either way, we'll soon see movement. A warning: We might not like it.

Saturday, January 3, 2026

HIT LINE – JANUARY 3RD, 1973





IT WAS 53 YEARS AGO TODAY
GEORGE BOUGHT THE YANKEES TO PLAY
NOW THEY'VE REALLY GONE OUT OF STYLE
NEVER AGAIN TO RAISE A SMILE
SO MAY I INTRODUCE TO YOU
THE FACT YOU'VE KNOWN THESE PAST FEW YEARS
HAL STEINBRENNER DROVE US ALL TO TEARS


Are the Yankees on the verge of a blow-out winter overhaul?

In the classic westerns, after a hard day of shooting renegades, John Wayne would sit around the fire, ignoring the pungent odors presumably emanating from Slim Pickens and Gabby Hayes, mull the rustling of the wind, and whisper... 

"It's quiet... too quiet."

Right now, that's how I see the Yankees. Across a lifetime shackled to this team, I cannot recall a more suspiciously quiet December and a deeper sense of dread.

Usually, by now, the Yankees have signed somebody - done something - even if it's a fallback option, because a certain ingrate moved across town. By now, the back pages should be gurgling with rumors, leaving us to refresh our keyboards in pitched anticipation of joyous, post-holiday gifts to come. 

Instead, we doom-scroll and wonder if something is broken.  

It's quiet, all right. 

Way, way, way... too quiet. 

We watched Devin Williams and Luke Weaver - the two biggest pieces of last year's bullpen - walk to the Mets. Not a peep. Then we wouldn't lift the phone on Tatsuya Imai. One player dominates our wish list - Cody Bellinger - who would repopulate last year's 2nd place team - one year older - and push the Yankees to trade what few young players they have. 

Lately, the rumors - meager as they are - carry the distinct aroma of what we would associate with Slim and Gabby. 

Talk surrounds Jazz Chisholm, who - despite a breakout season in 2025 - apparently will not get a long-term contract. You wonder how that will affect Chisholm; the Yankees might not want to find out. If they trade him, presumably for pitching, it would open a massive hole at 2B. If you're thinking of Bo Bichette, well, it requires outbidding Toronto. In fact, the Blue Jays could chase Kyle Tucker, inspiring Scott Boras' greatest wet dream: the Dodgers and Yankees in a bidding war over Bellinger. And then there are the Mets, who, last I checked, still occupy the most monied throne in New York, if not all of baseball. 

At least four teams look ready to outspend the Yankees, and then - after everything is done - there might not be a 2027 season. What happens this winter will shape baseball - and the Yankees - for years to come.

So, are we hearing the wind, or an approaching flood?

Dunno. But something's coming.

Trump distracts from Hal, Cashman failure in offseason, bombs Caracas


 

And you thought 2025 was bad.

Friday, January 2, 2026

Winter is here.


 Great empires tend to collapse like the human body, from the extremities inward, desperately shutting off those parts of one's anatomy—the toes, the nose, the fingers—that they think can be most easily sacrificed.  

Instead, these signs of decay only seem to summon the vultures, and speed the disintegration.

Not only the Yankees' gift shop off Times Square has closed, but also the Mets' shop on 42nd Street. 

Both were once the thriving outposts of empire, raking in gold and silver hand-over-fist, in exchange for just the sort of gaudy strips of cloth and assorted gewgaws that venturesome imperialists have always tried to palm on the unsuspecting locals. But word is beginning to leak out.

Last night on SNY's SportsNite, a pair of worthy sportswriting eminences, John Jastremski and Anthony McCarron, began to sound the alarm over the Yankees' retreat from the far atolls,  questioning just what the hell the Empire is doing.

SportsNite is the lively sports news show on the Mets' channel, on which a cast of dozens—male and female, old and young people of every possible age, size, and description—show highlights and banter about our NYC teams, such as they are. They are smart, witty, knowledgeable and critical. 

There is simply no equivalent thereof on the Yankees' moribund YES Network, which led us into the New Year with an A.C. Milan match and the Nets. But then, you can't be on SNY if you're a dues-paying member of the National Brotherhood of Flunkies and Lickspittles (Looking at you, Randy, Brian, and Lonn.).

Last night, both McCarron and Jastremski expressed approval of the fact that the Yanks have "checked in" on possibly signing Bo Bichette and Cody Bellinger, but were amazed that the Bronx team has done f-all (not their words) so far. Worse still, though, they were surprised that neither the Yankees nor the Mets took a flier on Tatsuya Imai, considering how he ended up going for the baseball-owner equivalent of couch change.  

This last is the most ominous development.  

Of course we can safely conclude that the Yanks never had and never will have any interest in re-signing Bellinger, and that "checking in" on Bichette is the Yanks' version of someone checking in on his smelly, irascible, 108-year-old grandfather: an empty show of virtue concerning an individual they would as soon just went away somehow. 

The Yankees and Mets passing on Imai suggests something else. It could be that Mets owner and chief executive klepto, Steve Cohen, was only in it for the casino from day one. In any case, their rush to "rebuild their core"—dumping still-productive players—while doing nothing about the pitching staff whose meltdown kept them out of the playoffs—looks more damning still.  

So what's going on?

Well, as they say in the pulps, winter is coming, there's a storm moving in, and the horror, the horror. And I don't mean all-winter-in-a-day, like what just dropped on Syracuse.

Hal and his fellow grifters are gearing up for the Big One, Billionaires versus Millionaires once more, this time for all the luxury boxes, once the basic agreement ends. They want to be stuck with as little payroll—or even as few tangible tourist traps—as possible. 

As you gentlemen have pointed out, the Yanks right now have the weakest bullpen in living memory, and a rotation where nobody knows who is going to be able to pitch Opening Day. None of the team's lineup shortcomings have been addressed—and none will be, right down to the fact that we will probably have our worst shortstop since Wayne Tolleson.

What they're planning for is a lockout that will last well into the 2027 season, and maybe into 2028, and then who knows?

There are no longer any of the checks in place that limited previous work stoppages. No Cal Ripken consecutive streak. No responsible federal judges, or a president who gives a crap about baseball or anything else. The owners and players have grown so fat on all the subsidies we have so fecklessly given them that can afford to fight on and on—and probably will.

They may be in for a surprise, though. 

Baseball is no longer our national game, and has not been for two generations. Through their algorithms and their extortionate prices, and the whole, debased ballpark experience, the owners have drained so much of the joy from the game. Players who often seem more intent on practicing their celebratory gesticulations than anything else, don't help.

If the sentiments expressed on this blog—home to as fine a set of aged, fanatical seamheads as ever existed—are any indication, not only Nepo Hal but the whole MLB apparatus has exhausted our patience.

As if they care. Already, the owners have started pulling down the flag, and heading for home. We should make sure it's the last time they do this to us.


  






   

  




Imai Blew

Imai Blew

(With apologies to Harry Akst & Grant Clarke)

Imai blew.
Imai blew.
There’s no deal. Never real.

We should sue.

Imai blew.
Astro coup.
They’ve no plan. For Japan.
I am through.


Was a time
The Yankees were number one.

It's a crime…
What they let this team become.  Lordy,

Will they pay?
Not today.
Now he's gone, our hopes too.
Imai blew.


HAL PATHETIC ! WHAT A JOKE ~ GRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR !


 2 0 2 SUX

Tatsuya Imai is an Astro, and the Yankee Coupon Clipper is in charge

A dozen cruel-but-true statements about the Yankees, for now.

1. With six weeks until pitchers and catchers, the Yankee seem to be playing dead. 

2. They might not be playing.

3. Ever since Trent Grisham grabbed his $22 million qualifying offer and flew off to the Grand Caymans, Hal seems terrified of opening his wallet.

4. In every public interview, he has poor-mouthed about the payroll.

5. Cooperstown Cashman is combing the scrap piles: Paul Blackburn, Amed Rosario, Ryan Yarbrough. Not awful. But nothing to boost hope.

6. We still balance far too heavily on LH strikeout swingers - Chisholm, McMahon, Grisham, Wells, the Martian. 

7. We know Giancarlo will get hurt and miss substantial time, and one of these years, so will Judge.  

8. The current bullpen shapes up as the weakest in our lifetimes. 

9. It's foolish to bank on three starters in their 30s - Cole, Rodon, Schmidt - returning from surgery as their old selves.

10. After three tough years, we're apparently still waiting on Anthony Volpe.

11. Imai was the best starter on the market, and the Yankees didn't even make an offer.

12. Baltimore, Boston, Toronto are improving.

Are we playing dead? Or is this the new reality?