Wednesday, February 18, 2026

If the Current NY Yankees Were Cartoon Characters From Our Youth…

I think it would go something like this...

Right Field -  Aaron Judge - Mightor!




Duh! 





Center Field - Trent Grisham - Secret Squirrel

I always picture Grisham in a DEA windbreaker. Trench Coat would work too. 


LF  - Cody Bellinger - Popeye 



OK I know he’s not muscle bound but if you’ve ever looked at his eyes you can see he likes “the spinach".





2B - Jazz Chisom -  Cosby Kid Rudy Davis   

Wikipedia says he “is a sharp-dressed, smooth-talking, cocky huckster whose smart-aleck attitude frequently gets him into trouble. “  Sound like anyone you know?


3B   - Ryan McMahon - 

I googled images of this guy and I still don't know what he looks like much less what cartoon character comes to mind. Weird huh? Close your eyes and try to picture him. You can't can you?


SS   Anthony Volpe - Elroy Jetson 




Someone push the launch button. Please. 






C  Austin Wells  Benny The Ball



Nice whiskers.






DH  - Giancarlo Stanton – Gigantor


Huge. Powerful. Can't run. 

Needs regular oiling.

 



4th OF Jasson Dominguez  – Dodo The Kid From Outer Space  

Short. Space themed. Big ears. 


Aaron Boone – Officer Dibble  

Inept authority figure. Nice guy.


Brian Cashman - Commander McBragg 



Lives in an alternate universe filled with his own exploits




Hal – Scrooge McDuck



Too easy!




So how about...



Doggie Daddy. (Featuring Brian Cashman as Augie Doggie.)

Stanton's name could pop up in the Epstein files. As Camp Tamp opens, the top 10 crazy things you didn't know about Giancarlo.

Breaking Broken News: This week, Giancarlo Stanton reported to Yankee camp without tennis elbows, piano wire hammies and/or the heartbreak of psoriasis. For now, his "2026 Lost Time Due to Injury" total stands at zero. Zero!

What this means: Sometime, around May 30, a carbunkle will pop, a cog will go into reverse, and Giancarlo will have his annual season-ending MRI.

So goes the Yankee mating dance between hope and truth. The hope is that Stanton can play 100 games and hit in October. The truth is that, at any moment, he is a walking, chain reaction pile-up on the New York State Thruway. 

Yesterday, Stanton took BP, whacked a couple balls into the Gulf, and declined oxygen. That's huge. Guy is 36, slow as a city bus, and the most breakable Yank since Mickey. He stands beside Don Mattingly as the Yankee most likely to never ride down the Canyon of Heroes.  

So, this is it. If the 2027 season is to be canceled due to labor strife, that makes 2026 his Ring Year... or bust. 

On that note, here are 10 things I bet you didn't know about Giancarlo, starting with the clickbait headline.

1. He is represented by the Wasserman agency, which recently caught its fingers in the Jeffrey Epstein cookie jar. The founder, Casey Wasserman, is abruptly retiring, after his name popped up. Marilyn Monroe is in there. So is Elvis. It's a wide swath. Is anybody searching for "Giancarlo?"

2. Baseball Reference lists as his nicknames as "Bigfoot" and "Cruz." I have never, ever, heard him referred to as either.

3. In 2026, he is projected to hit 23 HRs, drive in 62 runs and bat .231. In other words, we'd be better off with Ben Rice.

4. This year, his career will officially tilt towards NY. Until now, he has eight seasons with the Marlins, eight with the Yankees.

5. With Florida, he hit 267 HRs and batted .268. With the Yankees, 186 and .244. Night and day.

6. His last triple came in 2018. For him to reach third on a batted ball, two outfielders need to be carted off in an ambulance.

7. In his career, he will be hard-pressed to reach the gold standard of 500 HRs. He sits at 453, which means he needs two more seasons. If next year gets canceled, he's done. 

8. In eight years with the Yankees, he has stolen six bases. (Thrown out only once!)

9. Hall of Fame? Well, his statistical astral twins include four:


10. Contractually, the Yankees have him this year and next, at $25 million per season, with $10 million each year to be paid by the Marlins. They actually have him through 2028, but there is a $10 million buyout option that they will surely invoke.

Ha! Gotcha with the Epstein reference, right? 

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Above Average has a marginally important question to ask of all of YOU . . .




Hello Spew Believers:

I have the opportunity to see the
New York Yankees face off against
the Giants live at Oracle Park in
San Francisco on Saturday March 28th, 2026.

Should I go and report back from the game ?

PLEASE let me know your thoughts as . . .

I'M CONFLICTED.

Thank you in advance to each
and every one of you.








The five most intriguing players in Campa Tampa

It's on, the annual Yankee blood-hyping, which raises certain wild narratives like bubbles in Epstein's jacuzzi. 

Let us ponder the most intriguing players in Tampa and beyond.

1. Carlos Lagrange. Our new fantasy. He's Judge-sized (6'7", 247) and Martian aged (22).  He showed up, hitting 103 mph on the gun. Threw 120 innings last year, fanned 168, in the dreg leagues. He's on the Top 100 prospects lists. Yesterday, he threw against Judge, who homered and struck out. If he keeps reaching 102, he'll rise through the system like Ricochet Rabbit. The first great hope of spring. 

2. Spencer Jones. Face it, wherever he goes, this is the most intriguing prospect in the weight room. (Not necessarily for the better.) We all know about Jones - hits HRs, fans too often. He's 24. Can apparently play decent CF. Last year, in spring training, he hit 3 HRs in 32 ABs (.250. BA) Something about this guy: You look at him and dream. If he learns to hold off on one sucker pitch, if he figures out how to put his bat on the ball, he could be our CF through 2030. And if we trade him, I believe the Yankees will rue the deal for years to come. 

3. Ben Rice. Remember last February, when Rice appeared as the most muscled-up Yankee in camp? Well, it worked. He had a great year, and every Yank fan secretly believes - even if we don't say it aloud - that Rice should NOT platoon at 1B, and that he could hit 35 HRs and become an all-star. If Rice improves on defense, as I'm sure he will he could also become a lifelong Yankee. How many of them do we see? 

4. Nick Torres. Huh? you say. Who's he? Well, Torres is a 32-year-old nobody, who plays 1B, where I just christened Ben Rice as King Cheese. So, shoot me. All Torres did last year was win the Mexican League MVP. The Yankees recently signed him, signaling his lifelong dream. I realize the Mexican League is not the Majors. It might not even be Triple A. But MVP is MVP, and this could be his moment. Some guys bloom late. Hey, ya gotta believe!

5. Bryce Harper. Didja see the interview he gave yesterday? He can't wait to hit in front of Aaron Judge in the World Baseball Classic. Harper grew up a Yank fan, his dream being to wear pinstripes. For the last four years, he SHOULDA have been hitting in front of Judge. (Manny Machado too.) Next month, when Harper and Judge team up, close your eyes and imagine what the Yankees coulda been, if they had the right owner. He's my favorite shoulda-been-a-Yankee in baseball. How, how, HOW did we let it happen?  

Please don't make me know this. I can't. I'm begging you. Don't tell me. Please don't tell me. Please. Please.


 

Monday, February 16, 2026

You know it's all about that gear.

 



I was alarmed when I saw some interview with Aaron Boone in spring training the other day—that is, more alarmed than I usually am when I see any interview with Aaron Boone—and it seemed that a fungus was eating his hat.

Turned out it was just the latest design for the annual, Yankees' "springcaps," as modeled by this puckish fellow here. 

The design? Assorted flora around...a grapefruit. Get it? Grapefruit for the grapefruit league. Those teams that train in Arizona have some sort of cactus design on their springcaps. 

Sigh.

As the wonderful Meghan Trainor might have sung, back in her more wonderfully zaftig days:

You know it's all about that gear

Bout that gear

Bout that gear

No pitching

All about the gear

No pitching—

These little dandies are selling online for a mere $55.99—quite a bargain for a baseball cap that Carmen Miranda could have embraced.  

I'm bringin' the whole team back

Go ahead an' tell them bitchin' fans that

No, I'm just playin'

C'mon an' buy my hat—

The promised fury of the fans has been sufficient—at least for now—to ward off the abomination of the "City Connects" unis (Gear that poses as a social conscience!) so far. It's pretty hilarious to see the Mets and Red Sox in that ugly crap. But somehow, their front offices seem able to assemble teams while peddling the gear.

Not so much your New York Yankees.

Yeah it's pretty clear

We ain't goin' anywhere

But Hal can make it, make it

While the Sox an' Jays we chase

With all the wrong guys in all the wrong places—

You know it's all about that gear

Bout that gear

Bout that gear...








Current Top Ten Yankee hypes, ranked.


10. Carlos Rodon "can't wait" to return!

9. Gerrit Cole return "ahead of schedule!"

8. Jake Bird looks "nasty!"

7. Ryan Weathers throwing 98.5 mph!

6. Prospect Elmer Rodriguez is "turning heads!"

5. Judge hitting line drives, nearly kills BP pitcher!

4. Fernando Cruz "brings energy on the mound and on the mic!"

3. Yanks sign 17-year-old Mexican pitcher Felipe Hernandez! ETA: 2030.

2. Yanks sign 16-year-old catcher Marko Morua, "first-ever Hungarian!" ETA: eternity.

1. Carlos Legrange "throws 102 mph!"

Tidbits from Tampa we need to see

Ah, the vagaries of spring training. This is how it should be...

Monday: 

A team spokesman confirmed that veteran LF Bob Terwilliger lost his cell phone after a brief fracas Sunday. A clubhouse official said the device will "turn up somewhere.” Terwilliger, who refuses to talk with reporters, declined comment.

Backup catcher Manny Estrada says he won’t make the sign of the cross before at-bats in upcoming exhibition games. “It’s just spring,” the former Brewer says. “If this were the regular season, I’d be praying.”

Lefty specialist Al Carter has a big, festering pimple on his hip, which teammates find disquieting. "That's why we wear pants," he said yesterday. According to ESPN's Skippy Worth, Carter plans to get his teeth cleaned, which will be a first.  

Veteran minor leaguer Ange Swink wowed teammates by eating 50 hard-boiled eggs in one half-hour. Last year, Swink missed six weeks after a light bulb exploded in his stomach.

Bob Terwilliger, in day three of his media blackout, missed the team bus and had to walk a half mile to practice. Several reporters said they would have given him a ride, if he’d been willing to ask them.

Wednesday

If you see him, wish Dominican prospect
Arlindo Vasquez a happy birthday five times. His U.S. Visa has been corrected. He’s now 31.

Pitcher Rob Bell says Jesus Christ will return at the all-star break and bring universal judgment to mankind. Bell is recovering from a rattlesnake bite. 

Bob Terwilliger’s phone turned up at the media center yesterday. Reporters say Terwilliger can have it... if he asks. 

Thursday

First-baseman Hal Grimbel has 3,500 songs on his classic, still-functioning iPod. Word to the wise: Don’t get him started about the Freelance Whales.

Zeke Paltrow has a slight bruise on his left pinkie. He'll be out until August.

Knuckleballer Geoff Turley got a surprise yesterday. His ex-wife, Trudy, the former Miss Buffalo, said he suffers from severe penile disfunction. Of his ex, Turley said, “Cal Ripken wouldn’t have lasted a week.”

Someone broke into the media center Wednesday and stole Bob Terwilliger’s cell phone, scrawling obscenities about reporters on the wall.

Friday

Third baseman Robbie Glint recently rented the 2003 movie Dogville, starring Nicole Kidman, and was impressed with the set design and thematic symbols.

Bob Terwilliger has broken his media silence. One day after the outfielder’s cell phone was burglarized from the media tent, a reporter dialed its number, and Terwilliger answered. Asked if he knew Jeffrey Epstein, Terwilliger shouted an obscenity and hung up.

Sunday, February 15, 2026

Is Max Fried the Yankees' "Quad God"?

 


Word comes from Florida that Max Fried, the reigning ace of the Yankees' pitching staff—well, right now, about the entirety of the Yankees' pitching staff—is still upset over his awful start against the Blue Jays in the playoffs last year, and is using it to "motivate" himself this season.

Uh-huh.

Here is where today's athletes separate themselves from the rest of us. We mere mortals might have assumed that the $31.5 million a year that Mr. Fried makes would have been motivation enough, but no siree. Fried will be hell-bent on avenging that disastrous, embarrassing outing, when he surrendered 7 earned runs in less than 4 innings and essentially ended the Yanks' postseason hopes.

Well, Maxxie must have been motivating like crazy throughout his career, because he has generally been an enormous flop in October, going a lifetime 2-6 in 14 playoff starts and 22 appearances, along with a blown save, and an ERA of 5.31.

Motivation, schmotivation. With everything on the line, Max resembles nothing so much as that team of walking—well, falling—nervous breakdowns now representing us at the Olympics.

One great U.S. athlete after another, invariably described as "the greatest ever," "completely invincible," "best in the world," and "boffo, baby, boffo!" (all right, I made that last one up), has not merely lost, but usually fallen flat on their faces.

The most prominent, of course, has been "the Quad God"—real name, Ilya Kuryakin—but it's been about the same for such Olympic can't-misses as Chloe Kim, Lindsey Vonn, and Mikaela Schiffrin, leaving one gold after another lying in the ice, snow, or what have you.




American athletes, in fact, have been falling down or choking up in such profusion that one wonders if they have not secretly signed up to advertise some medical service or emergency room, once these Olympics finally end.







Maybe a group shot, with all of them saying, "Once the Olympics were over, I was airlifted straight to NYU/Langone for MY rehab! You should, too!"





Or even better, perhaps, maybe some mental health group rate. 

"Under pressure? Hey, I hear ya. Come see our trusted psychological professionals before you find yourself picking the ice chips out of your teeth.!"

I kid, I kid. But boy, it's just too painful to watch anymore—for the psychic toll, even more than the physical.

So it will be with our Maxxie, I fear.  


Yes, the man has had some occasional, postseason successes. He is most renowned, perhaps, for pitching six shutout innings in the Braves' 7-0 romp over Houston to clinch the 2021 World Series—something law-abiding baseball fans everywhere could admire. 

And his first, October start for your New York Yankees consisted of 6 1/3 innings against the BoSox last year...in a game we eventually lost.

But that's about it. 

The only time that Max Fried, ace of our staff, has got through the seventh inning in a playoff game, was 7 shutout innings against Cincinnati, in an NLDS game...back in 2020. Which should tell us something.

Now 32, Fried has proved a delicate soul on the mound, never pitching as many as 200 innings in a season. He tends to weaken as the season goes on—as he did for us last year, his ERA rising from a spectacular, 1.92 to 3.26, from June 25th to August 16th.  

He then seemed to right himself, finishing strong...before his October flop. 

Hey, I don't say this is any personal failing. The man has been taught to pitch this way, no doubt by any number of the nattering nabobs now left in charge of major-league pitching staffs. You leave it all out there for six innings, throw as hard as you can, miss bats...and then a first-class bullpen picks you up.

Except...our wonderful GM forgot to provide us with any such thing this year. Or even really much of one last year. Had Max Fried been signed to play on, say, those 1998-2000 Yankees teams with maybe the best all-around bullpen ever assembled, he would be lights out.

Now—as our designated ace—with no one behind him and no one in the pen, the pressure for him to go long, consistently, is going to be unbearable. Look for another slump or even a breakdown, as October comes early. 

And be sure to buy the Quad God's new self-help book, Serenity Now.








 

Attack of the unheralded and undervalued Yankee breakout prospects

Have you heard about the tidal wave of under-appreciated Yankee prospects, soon to overwhelm the Gulf of America coastline?

With respect to fellow bloggers, whom I read faithfully, everywhere across Tampa, it's raining potential breakout Yankee prospects. These are the young - (twentysomething, anyway) - lug nuts who, if they hit .350 in April or throw a shutout in May, will abruptly vault onto the Top 20 Prospect pig lists, to be endlessly hyped by us, the hyperest of  hypers.

I believe that's why the Yankees face their current crisis.

Every winter and July 31 deadline, they trade multi-prospect packages for former all-stars, who have overstayed their welcomes in places like Miami, Colorado or Pittsburgh. In the 2020s, the front office came to realize that, unless a traded player becomes a major star, it will pay no price for dealing away young talent.

When all is said and done, the ever-shrinking platoon of Gammonites - whittled to a handful by the media's trillionaire oligarchs - will not squawk about a JP Sears, a Greg Wissert, a Thairo Estrada, a Carlos Narvaez, or anybody else who goes elsewhere and becomes a legitimate MLB player. 

Last month, Brian Cashman dealt four no-name prospects for Ryan Weathers. There was no outcry, no questioning of the price tag. In his early years as GM, Cashman notably avoided such deals, fearing a career-killing misstep. He'd never allow ex-Yanks to go to the Mets or Redsocks. Now, it happens regularly. And Cashman knows: When the Yankees trade another bundle, there'll always a new group to fill the Top 20 list. The "potential breakouts."    

But but BUT... the Yankees have a problem. By hyping one or two prospects relentlessly, they annually paint themselves into a corner. They cannot trade their Number One prospect without blowback. They're stuck with him. Anthony Volpe can have three rotten years, but he's still their golden boy. Look at this week's reaction to the idea that Jasson Dominguez - the Martian - might be ticketed to Scranton. The fans have waited seven years for him. Now, traded for a bullpen cog? Say it ain't so.

I believe the Yankees are one or two players shy of taking the AL East. You see the infield, the rotation, the bullpen. There is no free agent out there. And having cratered their farm system, they have only their top prospects to deal. The thing about "potential breakout" prospects - they're always a month away.

Wait... The Dow is over 50,000 right now. The S&P at almost 7,000, and the Nasdaq smashing records. THAT'S WHAT WE SHOULD BE TALKING ABOUT.

Saturday, February 14, 2026

With all this talk of Cash and Bubbles Boone, we mustn't forget about this man . . .



 HAROLD ZIEG
S T E I N B R E N N E R

"ZIEG HAL"
(as his college PALS use to say)
 

Ten Signs of the looming Yankeopalypse

Read the solar system, people. The Yankee God - a vain and jealous, cosmic bigwig - looks muy pissed. I'm talking about the Yankeopalypse, Yankeegeddon, the Last (Aaron) Judgement, the Doomsday House that Ruth Built.  

Here are today's 10 signs...

1. Joey Gallo is attempting a comeback... as a pitcher. Makes sense. He sure hit like one. 

2. The Gammonites are predicting improvements for Aaron Judge, due to the new automated strike zone challenge rule. Their claim: All his career, Judge has been screwed by human umps, lumbering neanderthals who expanded his 6'7" strike zone. Dunno. But I do know this: Last year, Judge was the best hitter in baseball. Are they really going to hang more expectations on the guy?

3. Could the automated zone help rookie Spencer Jones, also 6'7"? Dunno. But if Jones doesn't pan out, maybe they should cut to the chase and have him pitch? (Fun Fact: He was a great pitching prospect in high school, until he broke his arm.)

4. Gerrit Cole has a beard. Who knew he was one of them? (I think the Yankee clubhouse's demand for mustache wax is gonna rival that of condoms in Milan.)

5. Yesterday, in front of the Yankee brain trust, Cole thew two simulated innings and supposedly topped out at 96 mph. This is great news, unless it compels Cole to return too quickly. Then, it would be really, really bad news. Really, really, really. Which, I think, sums up the Yankees in many places.

6. Along with chin gardening, Cole showed off a new delivery. I hope he knows what he's doing.

7. After signing 35-year-old bullpen lug nut Rafael Montero, the Yankees quickly slotted him into Boonie's Circle of Trust. It's amazing how quickly a scrapheap acquisition can suddenly fill a massive hole, which the Yankees were refusing to acknowledge. 

8. Montero signed a minor league contract, full of incentives. Fine. Cashman's great love is romping barefoot through the scrapyard. But Montero's ERA last year tanked at 4.48, and I suspect the Tigers experience PTSD from the sight of him. He was Mark Leiter (4.62), Ian Hamilton (4.28) though he still beat Camilo Doval (4.82) who inexplicably seems to be viewed as our 8th Inning man. Go figure. 

9. They say Jasson Dominguez might need a year in Scranton. If so, what does it say about the Yankee front office's ability to assess and nurture talent? They will have effectively - perhaps permanently - screwed up The Martian. If he needed a season in Scranton, it should have been last year. They saw in spring training that he couldn't play LF. They wasted a year of his life, of his development. In another city, somebody would lose his job for this. WTF?

10. Is it me, or does the recent spate of insanely microscopic transactions - signing and waiving players at the end of the 40-man roster - suggest the Yankees are being run by an A.I. chatbot? If so, can such a team have a soul? Are you there, Yankee god? 

Friday, February 13, 2026

Spring Training Glossary of Terms

It's Spring Training and The Yankees are back in Tampa and working out at Steinbrenner Field in preparation for the 2026 and probably final MLB season. 

The next few weeks will be filled with articles and interviews designed to give fans hope, expectation, and an understanding of how the team and the players are doing. 

To help interpret the above, here is a glossary of common terms and their actual meaning. 

--

For Pitchers

Tweak

Out 6-8 Weeks.

Soreness

Tommy John.

"Shut Down For a Few Days"

 Arm Cancer.

“Working on a new pitch”

Can’t get batters out with old pitch.

Or, 

Justifying roster space for player released by worst team in league who somehow magically will be a vital bullpen piece.  

"Throwing off flat ground"

Arm cancer in remission.

"Headed back to NY for a second opinion."

You know what.

--

For Hitters

Tweaks  

A tweak for a batter means they can’t hit a certain pitch but... by moving up/back/closer/further to/from the plate or changing their swing path... they will still not be able to hit that pitch.

 "Built for the short porch at Yankee Stadium."

 Warning track power. 

“Learning to go the other way”

Caught in Downtown Tampa soliciting male prostitute.

--

General Phrases

"No one works as hard as this guy."

Not very good. We know it. He knows it. They play him anyway.

"Great working with the young kids'

Taking the place on the roster of one of those young kids. 

"Learning a new position"

"We're paying him anyway. We might as well try this."

 "Could find his way onto the team as the 26th man."

In Scranton.

"He’s here to get a taste of the big leagues."

He was caught coming out of one of Tampa’s strip clubs.

"Potential Future All Star"

Will be traded for middle relief in July.

"It's all in front of us"

Because it sure as hell isn't behind us. Last year sucked. 


Cam Schlittler is hurt, and the Yankees say, "Don't worry?" Yeah. Right.

Move on. Nothing to see here. Nothing to worry about. Keep going. Do not stop. REPEATING: MOVE ON. NOTHING TO SEE HERE... 

In the movies, that's how it begins: The Zombie Apocalypse. One guy bites another. That makes two, then four, then eight, then a million. 

That's also how the Yankeocalypse happens. A Jonathan Loaisiga bites Clayton Beeter, who nibbles on Luis Gil, and - kaboom - the Zombie King himself, Giancarlo Stanton, shows up to feast.  

The opening of spring training begets the first wave of injuries. When it's Scott Effross, we ignore it. When it's Gerrit Cole, we feel dizzy. 

Yesterday, the Yankees announced that their Greatest Hope for 2026 - Cam Schlittler, has a barking back and lateral, and he'll take some time off, presumably to watch TV or tour the Dali Museum. Immediately, the team activated its Pooh-Pooh Machine, turning on gaslights from NYC to the Gulf of - um - America? 

They claim our concern should be Zero. 

Move on. Nothing to see here...

Listen, Cam Schlittler is why Yank fans haven't been rioting in the streets. All winter, whenever the team passed on a free agent, we were mollified by the notion that Schlittler, our looming young star, would save the rotation. Nobody inspires more hope. Last year, he arrived July 9 and went 4-3 (a 2.96 ERA) in 14 starts. He shut out Boston over eight innings in the Wild Card series, then pitched into the 7th, allowing just two earned runs, against Toronto in the Division Series. On Feb. 5, he turned 25.

Now, they say he'll "skip a few bullpens?" 

In other words, they'll shut him down and hope the problem goes away. 

Along with a tour of our medical tent, the opening of Camp Tampa is always time to acknowledge the glaring reality of the upcoming season. The 2026 Yankees are a hand grenade with the pin half-pulled. If it doesn't go off, if everybody stays healthy, they might make it until Gerrit Cole, Carlos Rodon and Clarke Schmidt return. And if the grenade blows, well, it's Cade Winquest, up from the Rule 5 draft. 

One day in, one man down. "Don't worry," they say. Move on...