With the trade deadline closing in, the Yankees’ patience with Austin Wells looks thinner by the day.
Wells has become one of the least productive everyday hitters in baseball, and the numbers are ugly enough to make the case on their own. His 42 wRC+ ranks fourth worst in the sport, sitting behind fellow catchers Edgar Quero and Patrick Bailey.
The defense has held up reasonably well by the metrics, but that’s nowhere near the level the Yankees expected from the catcher they drafted in both 2018 and 2020. Right now, he looks more like the club’s answer to 2022 Martín Maldonado than a long-term fixture.
And yet, the people around him keep talking like the breakout is right around the corner.
Hitting coach James Rowson has stayed firmly in Wells’ corner.
"Austin absolutely can hit," Rowson told NJ.com's Randy Miller. "I'm confident as ever in him. We'll keep it at that."
Manager Aaron Boone has backed that sentiment, even as Wells’ season-long slump drags on.
"I feel like he's been in position a lot better on a lot more pitches, whether it's a take, whether it's foul ball, whether it's an out," Boone said, parroting Rowson's sentiments. "I feel like he's getting in a stronger position. If he does that, the results will follow."
The Yankees’ belief in internal fixes has shown up elsewhere this season. When they’ve had a better option in-house, they haven’t been shy about pushing a player out of the job.
Ryan McMahon lost reps to Amed Rosario, and Anthony Volpe was optioned to Triple-A after his rehab assignment. They did something similar with Gary Sanchez, too, when Kyle Higashioka took over and Sanchez didn’t even start in the 2021 Wild Card game, which ended up being his last in pinstripes.
That’s the pattern. If New York has a replacement, it tends to move quickly.
At catcher, though, there isn’t a ready-made answer sitting on the roster. Ali Sánchez has shown a few encouraging signs, but there’s no obvious internal fix, which leaves the Yankees looking outside if they want to change the position. And based on what’s surfaced publicly, they don’t sound content to just ride this out.
The interest in a right-handed catcher has been there since last winter, and Ryan Jeffers is the name that has emerged most clearly. The New York Post's Joel Sherman described Jeffers as the "player who should most intrigue the Yankees-and definitely be available because he is in his walk year."
Jeffers also fits the kind of target the Yankees tend to chase when they’re serious. The organization has a habit of circling a name and eventually making the move, or at least taking a major run at it.
Sonny Gray in 2017, Joey Gallo in 2021, and more recently David Bednar and Ryan McMahon all followed that script. The Yankees had been watching last season’s deadline acquisition for years before they finally got involved.
The Jeffers situation comes with a catch, though: health. A hamate fracture is no small issue, and his absence since last May likely affects the market. But that also could make him more appealing to the Yankees if they see a chance to buy low on a catcher who can upgrade the position without costing a ton.
The production is there to justify the interest. Jeffers is batting .295 with a .949 OPS, seven home runs and 26 RBIs in 37 games and 122 at-bats. Compared with Wells’ .157/.258/.241 line, four home runs, 10 RBIs, 23 walks and a 26.3% strikeout rate in 55 games and 166 at-bats, the gap is obvious.
If the reports are right, the Yankees may already be heading toward a change behind the plate. Jeffers also has a direct tie to the organization through Tanner Swanson, which only adds to the sense that this is more than just a passing rumor. Unless another team gets there first, it feels like the Yankees are lining up their next move.
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Cashman is expected to be busy, as he usually is this time of year, and the real suspense is less about whether the Yankees will add than how aggressively they will do it. The market will be shaped by health and depth, with the returns of several key players likely to affect how urgent the front office feels and how far it is willing to go. For a club trying to protect a playoff spot while also building a roster that can hold up in October, those decisions are already coming into focus. [Read more 🡒]
