The Yankees had a straightforward opening to make a different kind of move, and instead they went with the one that leaves more questions than answers.
David Bednar is on the paternity list as he awaits the birth of his child, which is why the closer was able to pitch two innings on Sunday night. With Bednar away, the Yankees chose to promote Jake Bird. That decision, in the view of the source material, is a frustrating one - especially with run prevention so important right now and with a clear top prospect option sitting in Triple-A.
That option is Carlos Lagrange, and the case for bringing him up now is obvious enough: this is the time to learn what he can handle. Instead, he stayed in the minors after a rough Sunday outing for Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, where he allowed five earned runs on four hits and two walks in just 2/3 of an inning against the Indianapolis Indians. Whether he’s ready for the majors is still an open question, but the point is that the Yankees won’t get an answer if he keeps getting left in Triple-A.
The timing matters, too. The bullpen wasn’t even heavily taxed in Boston, where the games were described as predictable enough that Bednar and Fernando Cruz didn’t appear until Sunday evening. That makes the Bird promotion feel less like a necessity and more like a stopgap, one that doesn’t really help a team that’s searching for answers.
And that’s the larger concern. Moving Bird back and forth from Scranton is the kind of thing a club does when it already has a dependable bullpen and is simply managing the edges of the roster.
It’s a different story when the team is trying to solve real problems. If the Yankees wait until late July or early August to turn to Lagrange, the pressure on him will only climb.
At that point, he’d have far less room for mistakes and far less of the patience that comes with a June or early-July call-up. That’s a shaky setup for a prospect the organization is still trying to develop.
The alternative, at least for now, is Bird. The source material suggests the Yankees may simply use him over the next few days in the series against the Tigers before optioning him back and making room for Lagrange. But that would fit the pattern they’ve already established since acquiring Bird at last year’s trade deadline, and there’s no real reason to expect a different outcome until it happens.
For a Yankees team described as the most vulnerable it has been all year, the response has been thin. Aaron Boone’s lineups have been poor, the top hitters are fading into the background, and the chemistry is lacking. Lagrange wouldn’t solve all of that, but promoting him would at least point in the right direction.
Instead, the Yankees passed on the chance to get a look at him while Bednar’s absence created the opening. They could have used Bird on Sunday, gathered a small sample on Lagrange, and made a bigger call later.
They didn’t. So for now, it’s more Jake Bird - and the rest of the Yankees will have to live with it.
In Other News...
Former Giants Star Just Pulled Juan Soto Into A Bigger Mets Mess
Tiki Barber stirred up a familiar New York debate this week by taking aim at the Mets clubhouse culture and, in the process, dragging Juan Soto into it. The former Giants star and radio host framed the teams problems as a matter of chemistry and leadership, arguing that Soto represents a business-first mentality rather than the kind of presence that naturally binds a dugout together.
Barbers comments landed even harder because he pointed to Francisco Lindor as the sort of player who can steady a roster when things start going sideways, even as Lindor has missed significant time with injuries. In a season already defined by unease around the Mets, the criticism only sharpened the attention on how much of the clubs issues are about talent and how much are about the people charged with keeping it pointed in the same direction. [Read more 🡒]
Yankees Fans Have Every Reason To Question This Cashman Rumor
With the Aug. 3 trade deadline approaching, the Yankees have already been linked to Minnesota catcher Ryan Jeffers in a report from Bob Nightengale, giving the rumor mill another familiar Bronx name to chew on. On the surface, it fits the usual deadline logic for a contender that can never have too much catching depth, but the bigger takeaway is less about the player and more about the uncertainty around what Brian Cashman is actually pursuing.
Jeffers has spent time on the shelf and is only now working back into baseball activity, which adds another layer to the chatter around him. Still, the Yankees are operating in that classic deadline zone where every report can be either a clue or a cover, and the list of possible directions behind the scenes could stretch well beyond one catcher, leaving plenty of room for fans to wonder what the real target might be. [Read more 🡒]
Yankees Face One Deadline Question With Josh Hader In Play
The Yankees are again in the market for bullpen help as the trade deadline approaches, and one name that keeps surfacing is Astros closer Josh Hader. New Yorks need is obvious, and Haders track record gives him immediate appeal, but the conversation is not just about performance. His contract still carries two years and $38 million after this season, a number that could shape both the asking price and the kind of return Houston would demand.
For the Yankees, the question is whether that is the kind of swing worth taking or whether a cheaper reliever might make more sense if they want to preserve flexibility. Houstons posture adds another layer to the wait-and-see mood, since there is no guarantee Hader is even truly in play. If he is not, New York may have to decide whether to chase a bigger name or trust its own pitching people to turn a lesser arm into a useful late-inning option. [Read more 🡒]
