Throughout U.S. history, the state of the Yankees has always mirrored that of our nation. You can look it up.
Vietnam/Horace Clarke.
Watergate/Otto Velez.
Great Recession/Sidney Ponson.
As for 2026? Yikes. The midterms. ICE. Epstein. The debt. The Melania movie on streaming. Max Shuelmann...
Ten reasons to fear the State of the Yankees.
1. The simple problem with returning last year's roster: You also rerun the reasons why that team failed.
2. They have ignored the biggest problem: Shortstop. For three seasons, Anthony Volpe has shat the bed. Apparently, around late May, they'll conjure him up for one more try. Last year, they barely gave Jose Caballero a shot. He hit .266 over 95 plate appearances, then handed the keys to Volpe. Caballero turns 30 in August. He's getting old for a frontline SS, especially one who specializes on speed. Are we really, once again, gonna balance everything on Volpe?
3. The Yankee bullpen is full of holes. It seems to be based on the franchise-wide assumption that the farm system will endlessly churn out young arms, while helping retreads like Jake Bird and Camilo Duval return to form. In other words, we're hoping to be lucky. Is that a good idea?
4. They still have no sense of balance in the outfield. If they sign a righty hitter - there aren't many left - they'll relegate The Martian and/or Spencer Jones to platoon roles, which - frankly - would jeopardize their long term careers. They are the most hyped youngsters in the entire organization - still the most intriguing - yet the Yankees have no place for them. Scranton? Again? Insane.
5. The farm system looks perilously thin. According to The Athletic, two of their top 20 prospects went unprotected in the recent Rule 5 draft - and nobody took a flier on them. Yikes. (By the way, they are Alan Facundo, ranked #15, and Henry Lalaine, #16, two lefties.) What does it say about our system?
6. The Yankees seem to be depending on Cade Winquest, a Rule 5 pick from the Cardinals. Last time a Rule 5 selection made the Yankees' Opening Day roster was 1973, the year of Hoss, Ron Swoboda and the elderly Matty Alou. Bad sign. Really bad sign.
7. Amazingly, the Yankees haven't addressed the need for a RH-hitting catcher. Their three lefties - Austin Wells, Ben Rice and JC Escara - create a stark roster imbalance that, back in October, drew the ire of A-Rod, of all people. When the happy-talking A-Rod is criticizing you.. yikes.
8. This week, Boston traded for Caleb Durbin, a 5'7" ex-Yankee sparkplug who will torment us for years to come. Something about a bad trade - as Melencamp would say, "Goes on, long after the thrill of livin' is gone." Last year, Cashman traded Durbin for Devin Williams, who relentlessly sucked. Durbin finished third in the NL Rookie of the Year balloting. Hate to think of what he'll do to us. But I've got a feeling we'll hear many references to Dustin Pedroia.
9. The Yankees seem to assume that Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodon will return, as they were before surgery. Maybe they will. Maybe they won't. Either way, it's one hell of a gamble.
10. Speaking of happy talk, Aaron Boone is back, spackling over our weaknesses. Nothing changes. But the world is starting to notice how weak the Yankees have become. Boston fans, in their acidic ridicule, actually pretend to feel sorry for us. It doesn't get worse.





