Uh-oh. Timmy's missing. A storm's a-brewin.' Mom and Dad are frantic.
Bark. Huh? Bark! What's up with Lassie? Barkity-bark! What's the problem, girl? Barkbark, bark. Jeb, I think she's trying to say something. Bark, woof, barkbark. She wants us to follow her. Bark! Go ahead, girl. Bark woof! She's heading to the back 40, to that old abandoned well. Bark, bark, bark!
Okay, for a moment, let's accept the concept of literary arrogance. Let's say Aaron Judge is - well - Timmy.
I realize it makes no sense. Judge couldn't fit in a well, much less fall into one. But right now, across the Yankiverse, he is definitely missing, and one Yankee bat is barking, and it's Volpe's, and he wants us to follow, so whacha gonna do? Okay, girl, lead the way! We're right behind you.
Before plummeting deeper into this hole, let's establish one thing: Lassie never bit people. She snarled and pawed you but never tasted the tangy sweetness of human flesh. (Unlike the wolfish Rin-Tin-Tin, who went straight for the testicles. Damn dog loved chewing a nut sac. Cujo barely ate better.)
| Last seven days, Yankee hitters |
But... anyways... where were we? Ah, yes... Judge Timmy is gone, and Lassie Volpe is barking at us. He wants us to follow.
Over the last 15 days, Volpe is hitting .396, the sixth highest BA in all of baseball.
Over the last seven days, he's at .364, ranked 19th in MLB.
Lately, he has been our most productive hitter, while batting 9th, in front of Ben Rice, which means seeing hittable pitches. Bark.
Meanwhile, Jose Caballero seems to be running himself ragged, playing everywhere and, at times, hardly resembling a MLB outfielder. But Cabby has earned the right to fuck up. He's been one of the steadiest Yanks, and everybody knows Volpe - the fair-haired local boy - didn't deserve to have the SS position kept open for him.
Still, here we are. Lately, Volpe is going with the pitches, hitting to right, and lashing line drives, rather than trying to power balls halfway to White Plains. At 25, he's hitting .267 on the season - serviceable - and fielding his position.
Dare we believe that, in year four - with George Lombard Jr. breathing down his neck, with the team in need of a spark, with Judge barely halfway through his rehab, with a two-game lead (loss column) in the AL East, and with Boston on the horizon - Anthony Volpe might be the one to lead us?
Hard argument to make. Still... what's that sound?
Bark.





