Yankees First Half MVP Debate Says Everything About This Team

Despite Ben Rice's power, Cam Schlittler's consistency earns him Yankees' first-half MVP honors.

The Yankees have had enough moving parts this season that the first-half MVP debate could have gone a few different ways. Ben Rice has given them a real jolt with his power.

Cody Bellinger has piled up value in his own right. But ESPN’s Bradford Doolittle landed on a different name entirely: Cam Schlittler.

That choice says a lot about what the Yankees have needed most. Schlittler hasn’t just been good - he’s been the kind of starter who changes the shape of a series.

Doolittle pointed to his Monday outing in Tampa Bay, an eight-inning, one-run gem in a key opener, after Schlittler had been knocked around on the final day of June in Detroit. In Doolittle’s view, that performance was another reminder that Schlittler is still tracking toward Cy Young-level impact.

“The Yankees have needed every inning of it.”

The numbers back up the case. Through 19 starts, Schlittler owns a 2.01 ERA with 3.9 bWAR, a 9-5 record, 131 strikeouts and a 209 ERA+ across 112 innings. For a team that has dealt with injuries and inconsistency around him, that kind of production has been gold.

Rice has made his own case for attention. He’s hit 26 home runs and is batting .273 with a .941 OPS and 159 OPS+.

That’s a strong offensive season by any standard, and it’s easy to see why he’s drawing buzz as a breakout bat and a Home Run Derby participant. But even with that production, his 2.3 bWAR trails Schlittler’s overall impact.

Bellinger, meanwhile, has posted 3.5 bWAR, but his .762 OPS and 113 OPS+ don’t match Rice’s offensive line. That helps explain why the MVP conversation doesn’t break cleanly along the usual stat-sheet lines.

The bigger reason Schlittler stands out is the state of the Yankees’ rotation around him. Max Fried, Carlos Rodon, and Gerrit Cole have all missed significant time, and none of them has more than 10 starts in 2026.

That has made Schlittler’s reliability even more valuable. Every few days, he’s been the one taking the ball, giving the Yankees a chance to win, and easing pressure on an offense that has had to operate without Aaron Judge and with a shaky bullpen behind it.

If Judge were healthy and producing at the level he had before the injury, the discussion would look very different. But with the roster in its current shape, Schlittler has been the Yankees’ most important player in the first half, and the one Doolittle rightly put at the top of the list.

In Other News...

Yankees Suddenly Have New Deadline Chips Fans Arent Talking About

A few lower-level Yankees prospects have started to make themselves more interesting at just the right moment, and that matters with the August 3 trade deadline approaching. Thatcher Hurd, Kyle Carr and Stiven Marinez are each showing enough in their own way to draw attention, whether it is Hurd working back from Tommy John surgery, Carr handling both Double-A and Triple-A, or Marinez holding his own in Rookie Ball.

For a front office that is always weighing present needs against future depth, that kind of progress can change the conversation quickly. Hurds recent outing hinted at real upside, Carr has paired command with swing-and-miss stuff, and Marinez has been productive as a teenager in the Florida Complex League after the Yankees made room for him in the international market. If those trends keep going, the Yankees may have a few more ways to navigate the deadline than fans realize. [Read more 🡒]

Yankees Suddenly Linked To The Deadline Move Fans Have Been Demanding

The Yankees recent slide has only sharpened the conversation around what they might need to do before the trade deadline, especially with the club looking for a way to steady itself after a rough stretch. With about a month left before the 2026 deadline, the focus is drifting toward big-name pitching help, and one familiar front-line arm has started to surface in that conversation as a possible fit for a team trying to get back on track.

Sandy Alcantara is the kind of starter who would change the tone of any deadline discussion, and his name carries obvious appeal for a Yankees club that wants more certainty on the mound. Even so, any pursuit comes with the usual questions tied to his recent injury history and how he would hold up over the rest of the season, which is part of why this feels like the sort of move that could dominate the final weeks before the deadline. [Read more 🡒]

Yankees Deadline Reunion Rumor Raises Big Question About This Lineup

The Yankees offense has spent much of the season looking like a group still searching for a spark, which is why any deadline chatter tied to middle-infield help is going to draw attention. One name floating into the conversation is a familiar one, and the appeal is obvious on the surface: a bat with enough familiarity to make the fit feel easy, at least in theory, for a club trying to patch over its lineup issues.

But the deeper look is where the uncertainty starts to creep in. The player in question has dealt with oblique trouble for much of the year, and even with the Yankees clearly needing more production, there are reasons to wonder whether this is the kind of move that solves the right problem. For a team under pressure to hit better now, the deadline will be about more than reunion nostalgia. [Read more 🡒]