Yankees Quietly Got Another Harsh Reminder About Their Winter Bargain Plan

The Yankees' gamble on Nick Torres fizzled out, leaving fans frustrated and the team's offseason moves in question.

The Yankees’ winter gamble on Nick Torres is over, and the whole episode now reads like a snapshot of how thin their margin was from the start.

Back in late December, New York had spent weeks doing very little while other clubs made noise. The Cody Bellinger talks dragged on, first base stayed unsettled, and the fan base kept pushing for a real bat. Then the Yankees made a move that briefly changed the mood: they signed Torres to a minor league deal with a spring training invite, and for a couple of days his name was everywhere.

That buzz made sense on paper. Torres had just won the 2025 Mexican League MVP award for Algodoneros Union Laguna, and the numbers were loud enough to stop people in their tracks.

In 86 games, he hit .347/.425/.730 with 27 home runs and 79 RBIs. His 1.155 OPS led the league, and he tied for the league lead with 32 doubles and 65 extra-base hits.

It wasn’t just one hot stretch, either. Since 2021, Torres hit .343 with a 1.025 OPS for Union Laguna. The Yankees had not really tapped that market before, but the production was real, and the timing made the signing feel bigger than a standard depth move.

The catch was impossible to miss. Torres, a fourth-round pick of the Padres in 2014 out of Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, had never played in a major league game.

He got as far as Triple-A with San Diego and Texas by 2018, but his affiliated career ended with a combined .267 average across 212 Double-A games and 71 at Triple-A. His final season in the minors came in 2018 with Triple-A Round Rock, where he hit .195 before the Rangers let him go.

He went to Mexico the next year and stayed there for seven seasons.

That made the Yankees’ decision a lottery ticket, plain and simple. A minor league deal carries almost no risk, and New York knew exactly what it was buying: a long-shot bat with a huge recent track record and a very long layoff from affiliated pitching.

The first clue that the path would not be straightforward came when Torres was assigned to Double-A Somerset instead of Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. He had been expected to start at the level closest to the majors, but the Yankees sent him to Somerset instead. In 40 games there, he hit .247 with two homers and 11 RBIs.

That was enough for the organization to move on. On Wednesday, as the Yankees prepared for the third game of their series against the Rays in Florida, Somerset announced that Torres had been released from his minor league contract. He is 33.

The timing fit the larger picture in New York. The Yankees were 50-42, five games behind Tampa Bay in the AL East, and had dropped eight of 10.

They lost the night before Torres was cut and lost again that evening. Their offense had disappeared, and over a 20-game stretch they had struck out more than any team in baseball.

A 40-game look was never going to solve that. It was also never meant to be the whole story. But it was the story the Yankees ended up with.

General manager Brian Cashman had spent the winter talking about a market split between cheap options and expensive ones, and he said the club was in a good spot. Torres fit the cheap side of that equation. The Yankees had a real opening at first base behind Ben Rice, and Torres checked the boxes as a right-handed bat who could cover a corner and cost almost nothing to evaluate.

What they got, though, was not impact production. Two home runs in 40 games is not impact production.

Torres is now a free agent. With no major league service time, his path narrows quickly, but he can still sign with another organization, return to Mexico, or try independent ball. His old Mexican League club said goodbye publicly when he left, calling him one of the most beloved players in its history.

The Yankees, meanwhile, keep moving through a stretch that only sharpens the questions around the roster. They visit Washington after the Rays series, then host the Dodgers coming out of the All-Star break. Their deadline needs are a right-handed catcher, an infielder and pitching depth.

Nick Torres was never going to check those boxes. He never reached Triple-A in pinstripes.

He never played at Yankee Stadium. And six months after the signing that briefly quieted the noise, the Yankees are right back where they started - only now the highlight reel is gone too.

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