Thursday, April 9, 2026

Who will it be???

 

Oh, the tension grows! 

Who who who who who of the Feckless Five will be the very first to homer for your New York Yankees in the 2026 Rerun Season?

Wells and Chisholm, Grisham and Caballero and McMahon/

Write it out in verse/

A terrible futility is born...


They are, together, now at 194 plate appearances without a single Ballantine Blast. Why, with any luck, they could pass the 200 PA mark in this afternoon's contest!



To be fair, the whole team isn't hitting much. Just .218 on the season. The 1968 Yankees—not only the worst-hitting Bombers team but also the worst-hitting major-league team, EVER, since 1900, batted .214. And that was when pitchers could hit. The 1968 squad's hurlers batted all of .090. The position players hit .224—or 6 whole point above Noodniks' Row this year.
To be fair, Food Stamps Hal has insisted on scheduling and playing out one night game after another, despite the Arctic weather of late. But why, again, should we be fair, toward players making millions to play a game they are no longer so good at? (Fun fact: the Yankees' position players are an average of 30.5 years of age—not only the oldest team in the AL, but also the ONLY one over 30.)

The Big Five, shown here, hit 109 home runs between them in 2025, which is no doubt why The Brain thought they would be perfect for the Season of Reruns (next on the schedule: The Bullpen That Doesn't Work!). 

That is a lot of home runs. The top five boppers on the actual Murderers' Row, the 1927 Yankees (Ruth, Gehrig, Lazzeri, Meusel, Combs) hit 139 home runs between them. 

Amongst the other great Yankees teams of yore, the Top Five of the 1961 team (Maris, Mantle, Skowron, Berra, and Howard or Blanchard) hit 186; and the 1939 squad (DiMaggio, Gordon, Dickey, Selkirk, Dahlgren) and 1977 team (Nettles, Jackson, Munson, Chambliss, White) both belted 118. Even on the 1998 Yankees, probably the greatest team of all-time, the Top Five (Martinez, Williams, O'Neill, Strawberry, Jeter or Brosius) hit "only" 121 dingers between them.


Of course, all those players did other things, such as rope doubles and triples all over the park, bat over .300, steal bases, draw walks, and play outstanding ball in the field. 
Our Fan Five is currently striking out over twice as many times as they walk (57-28), they have driven in—collectively—less than one run a game, and none of the Ferocious Five have crossed the Mendoza Line. Ryan McMahon is currently hitting all of .077, which puts him under...I dunno what line. Mason-Dixon? Maginot? 

And even their vaunted defense of late seems...more daunted than vaunted.

But I have faith. I have faith that between the five of them, they will hit a home run this year. My guess is that the first will be Austin Wells, who has proven adept at dumping what should be routine fly balls into the Yanks' Lefty Charity Porch in right field.

What are your picks? Inquiring minds want to know!




 




33 comments:

  1. Good golly Hoss - that was far more of a wonderfully fun and entertainingly enjoyable read that anyone should be allowed to ocularize on a Thursday morning.

    I shouldn’t but I pick jr. because I feel he’s do for a child-like distracted lunge that will land just over the right center field wall.

    And let me just say that I am now really heartbroken that any chance of that 120 and 40 something season just doesn’t feel like a reality anymo’ (boy do I miss Rivera).

    ReplyDelete
  2. "Ferocious Five"! I'm laughing my ass off!

    Yeah, I agree with AA, methinketh Jizz Chasm gets a hold of one today. But not in the first at-bat, so these guys will achieve the 200 mark without a dinger.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Austin Wells with stupid beard. Doesn't he know how ridiculous he looks? You'd think somebody would tell him.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I've been on the record numerous times that they shoulda traded Wells, Chisholm, McMahon, Stanton, Volpe, Clarke Schmidt, Carlos Rodon. Oh well, too late now. Except maybe Stanton, if he continues to hit, should be easier to trade. Somebody out there must in bad need of a DH.

    But see, Cashman doesn't want to trade Stanton away, ever. That's why I keep sayin', he might even re-sign Stanton to another long contract. Maybe Cashman even extends Stanton's contract for another 3-4 years. Yes, there is a method to the madness here.

    ReplyDelete
  5. By the way, Chisholm making those ridiculous predictions about 50 homers/50 steals. Looks like he's hard pressed to hit one, single, solitary home run this year. If he keeps his mouth shut, maybe he'd feel less pressure. Surprised he didn't predict a 60/60 year.

    ReplyDelete
  6. My three personal non favorites Ryan McFan; Spent Grishom and Mr. 50-50, Chishom Jr. In verse: these three guys really stink, when Genius Cashman got them, the Yankees offense was going into the drink, the owner Hal likes his Cash (GM) and all he is concerned with is his green stash.

    ReplyDelete
  7. I had a game thread planned for today but I'll pass until
    tomorrow's game √s Tampa.....

    Weathers I'm right, or
    Weathers I'm wrong
    Weathers it's Chisholm (not in lineup), or Grisham (not in lineup), or Caballero or McMahon (both in lineup)
    Who goes long
    We'll have to wait and see
    But we've lost only three
    We've lost only three
    That third cup of coffee
    Means I must go
    and pee




    ReplyDelete
  8. The Gay Caballero will strike first.

    ReplyDelete
  9. I don’t know…probably chisolm.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Offense is terrible again. Judge… I don’t know. He seems late on everything. Another reason to dislike the WBC.

    ReplyDelete
  11. That's right. He's fouling hittable pitches off to the right side the last couple days. All season he's been taking hittable strikes too. Like he's guessing. Who knows? Non zero chance they get no hit. Day game after a night game, during the week. They're not into this at all.

    ReplyDelete
  12. This is exciting so far.

    Way to use up those challenges, Gay!

    ReplyDelete
  13. A tip of the hat for Davey Lopes. A worthy competitor. RIP.

    ReplyDelete
  14. Weathers was starting to come apart last inning. Now he has. Good effort, but the idiot will leave him in for too long now.

    ReplyDelete
  15. A hit! After 12 hitless innings

    ReplyDelete
  16. and there goes Upchuck for the third time

    ReplyDelete
  17. Weathers proves me wrong. Strong inning.

    ReplyDelete
  18. Come on Captain - swing like Judge

    ReplyDelete
  19. Another awful day for Judge. The horrible thought grows, unbidden: some guys get old at 34.

    ReplyDelete
  20. Judge pulled out of a crappy start last season. Doing it again? I don't know.

    ReplyDelete
  21. at least he'll have enough cash to retire with

    ReplyDelete
  22. We lost, sure, but we got a hit! Whoo.

    ReplyDelete
  23. Actually, Judge got off to a good start last year, and didn't have an extended slump until August.

    Almost always, in his career, when he has a bad slump he's been injured. Wonder if that's the case now.

    Though age is a sort of injury—one you don't get over.

    ReplyDelete
  24. Two hits in the last 17 innings. I'm glad I went out and cut the grass today.

    ReplyDelete
  25. I'm not figuring out how Weathers is responsible for this.

    ReplyDelete
  26. Yes 2 hits and 20 k’s. Luckily, It’s unsustainable negativity.

    ReplyDelete
  27. Judge is 33. He's 6'7, 285. We are witnessing the beginning of the decline.

    ReplyDelete

Members of the blog can comment. To receive an e-mailed invitation, write to johnandsuzyn@gmail.com. And check spam if it doesn't show up. (Google account required.)

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.