The Yankees had spent most of this month hanging on without Aaron Judge, doing just enough to keep their season afloat. Then came Fenway Park, and the bottom fell out.
What looked like a respectable survival act turned into a brutal stretch that has dragged the offense to a level no Yankees team has ever seen. Over the last four games, New York has managed just 12 hits while striking out 38 times and drawing eight walks. That works out to the worst offensive four-game stretch since 1898, at least by the numbers available - and maybe ever.
The run of misery includes two games in which Payton Tolle and Jake Bennett completely shut them down, one late collapse, and a forgettable loss to the Tigers in the Bronx. Against two teams that have been having disappointing seasons themselves, the Yankees somehow hit a new low.
That’s what makes this slump sting even more. This group had been surviving without Judge, Trent Grisham, Max Fried and Giancarlo Stanton.
They took a series from the White Sox with two blowout wins, beat Tarik Skubal in Detroit to take that series, and won a road set against the Blue Jays with late-game heroics in both games. For a while, they were doing exactly what an undermanned team has to do: tread water and keep moving.
Now the water’s rising.
Judge’s absence is the obvious breaking point. With him in the lineup, the Yankees were leading the league in hard-hit percentage.
Without him, they’ve fallen all the way to 26th, and the slide keeps getting worse. He’s not close to returning, either.
The Yankees said at Fenway that his injured rib isn’t even healed enough to be re-scanned for progress.
Giancarlo Stanton’s situation isn’t much more encouraging. After a setback, he could be back at square one - or, if that sounds too harsh, at best Square Two.
Aaron Boone isn’t getting a free pass, either. He can be blamed for the tone he set at Fenway by sticking with a poor defensive alignment instead of tightening things up behind Cam Schlittler. And when a team drifts into the kind of summer-long malaise the Yankees have dealt with again, it’s fair to ask whether a change is needed.
But the bigger problem is simpler and uglier: this team was only able to handle the hand it was dealt for so long. Now it isn’t.
In a watered-down AL, with the Red Sox seeing their playoff odds jump by more than 10% after a five-game winning streak, the Yankees should be in better shape after the trade deadline. Should be.
Instead, they’ve gone from barely staying afloat to sinking fast, and they’ve done it in historic fashion.
In Other News...
Yankees May Have Found Their Best Shot At A Bullpen Fix
After another shuffle in the relief mix, the Yankees are taking a longer look at Yovanny Cruz, a right-hander who has been throwing well enough in Triple-A to merit another turn in the majors. He has already flashed a little promise in New York with 2 1/3 scoreless innings, and his work in Scranton/Wilkes-Barre has kept him in the conversation as the club keeps searching for any arm that can bring a little more order to the late innings.
For a bullpen that has spent much of the season leaving the front office with more questions than answers, Cruz represents the kind of internal answer the Yankees would love to find before the trade deadline forces a bigger decision. The move comes with the usual reminder that one hot arm can change quickly, but it also shows how much the team is still leaning on depth rather than certainty while the relief corps continues to sort itself out. [Read more 🡒]
Yankees Suffer Another Scary Injury Twist With Jazz Chisholm
Another tense moment for the Yankees unfolded against the Tigers when Jazz Chisholm had to exit after running into Jasson Dominguez on a play in short right field. Chisholm had been working at second base before Oswaldo Cabrera stepped in for him, adding another uneasy injury note to a team that has already had to manage plenty of moving parts.
Aaron Boone said Chisholm entered concussion protocol after the collision, and the Yankees now have to wait for the next layer of clarity on his condition. The play itself was one of those in-between moments that can turn ugly fast, leaving New York with more concern than answers as it tries to piece together what comes next. [Read more 🡒]
