The Yankees got exactly what they needed against the Tampa Bay Rays in the finale of the series: a blowout, a crooked number, and a much-needed win. But tucked inside the comfort of that result was one more reminder of a problem they can’t keep ignoring.
In the bottom of the sixth, Nick Fortes lifted a routine fly ball that should have been an easy play for Jasson Domínguez. Instead, Domínguez appeared to lose it against the Tropicana Field ceiling, and the ball fell in front of him. The play didn’t change much in that game, but it fit a larger pattern the Yankees can’t afford to keep living with.
The issue is simple: the Yankees are playing too many tight games to keep giving away outs. This one was an exception because the offense finally exploded, but most nights haven’t looked like that. In those kinds of games, a misplay like Domínguez’s can turn into another unearned run, and that’s been a recurring headache for New York.
That’s why Spencer Jones makes sense as the move to help clean up the outfield defense. Domínguez hasn’t done enough at the plate to make his glove mistakes easier to live with.
He’s carrying an 87 wRC+ on the season and is hitting .244/.284/.411 with a 93 wRC+ since returning from the IL. He has three homers and six RBI.
Defensively, Domínguez has 0 Outs Above Average in the outfield this year, which is better than the -9 he posted last season. Even so, the Yankees still seem to be getting too many stressful moments out there. If a game is decided by one run, that kind of lapse can be the difference between a win and another loss.
Jones offers a cleaner answer. He’s not perfect, with a -1 OAA in center field, but he has been neutral in right with zero OAA there.
Domínguez, meanwhile, has a -1 OAA in right, so the metrics point to at least a small upgrade. The eye test has backed that up as well.
There’s more to like than just the glove. Jones brings real power upside, and if he starts lifting the ball more, the kind of big homer streaks he’s shown in the minors could show up in the majors too.
Domínguez, who hasn’t gotten the same runway Anthony Volpe has, remains an unproven piece. The sample has been underwhelming, and it may be telling the Yankees what he is this season.
Jones has also made loud contact. His average exit velocity sits at 94.7 mph, and his hard-hit rate is 63.2%.
He also walks at an 11% clip. And while Domínguez is the faster player, Jones is no slouch, either, with an 83rd-percentile sprint speed compared with Domínguez’s 95th-percentile mark.
If Domínguez needs to keep working on his defense, the minors would be the place to do it. That’s a tough conclusion, especially for a player who works hard and is easy to pull for, but as Yogi Berra put it, “it gets late early out there.” The Yankees already paid the price last year by waiting too long to get things right.
Now, with the AL East still in reach, the path to improvement is obvious. Tighten the defense.
Cut down the unearned runs. And give Jones the chance to help do it.
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Boones comments also helped separate the real baseball question from the rumor mill surrounding Volpes role. The Yankees have supported him as the starter, and while the chatter around a possible move has lingered, the team has not asked him to play elsewhere, leaving the focus where it belongs: on how the Yankees sort out the infield behind the guy they still view as their shortstop. [Read more 🡒]
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What makes the latest turn notable is less the uniform than the reason for it. The right-handers path has already included the usual grind of a fluctuating career, but now he is back in the news for a suspension tied to performance-enhancing drugs, a reminder that even players long removed from the spotlight can still leave one more awkward footnote behind. [Read more 🡒]
