Yankees Slump Just Turned Into A Real Brian Cashman Problem

As the Yankees face a critical mid-season slump, strategic trades could be the key to reigniting their World Series hopes.

The Yankees’ June skid has turned into a full-blown alarm bell.

New York has dropped six straight and opened July 1 in second place in the American League East, sitting 2.5 games behind the first-place Tampa Bay Rays. Yes, the Yankees still lead the AL Wild Card race, but that hardly eases the pressure for a team and fan base built around World Series expectations.

The offense is dragging the club down, and the recent numbers are brutal. Chris Kirschner of The Athletic laid out the slump in plain terms: Goldschmidt is 0 for his last 14, Rice is 5 for his last 41, Domínguez is 2 for his last 17, Volpe is 5 for his last 30, Caballero is 5 for his last 35, Bellinger is 3 for his last 30, Chisholm is 1 for his last 15 and Wells has struggled all season. Kirschner also reported Tuesday that the Yankees have “16 hits in their last 5 games, the lowest number of hits over a 5-game span in franchise history.”

Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton are not part of that list, and that matters. Getting those two back would change the look of the lineup in a hurry. But neither is playing Wednesday, leaving Aaron Boone with an offense that has no margin for error.

That’s why Brian Cashman needs to be active before the Aug. 3 trade deadline.

If the Yankees are serious about fixing this now, the first phone call should go to Washington. The Nationals are weighing a possible move on All-Star shortstop CJ Abrams, and the 25-year-old gave another reminder Tuesday night why he’d be such a tempting target. He hit his 18th home run of the season and leads all MLB shortstops with a career-high .866 OPS.

Abrams won’t come cheap. He’s under team control through 2028, which raises the price.

But the Yankees have already seen enough from Anthony Volpe to know he may not be the long-term answer at shortstop. A deal built around a pair of top-100 prospects would be the kind of move that could solve the position for years.

The next call should go to San Francisco.

The Giants could be headed toward a fire sale, and third baseman Matt Chapman would be one of the biggest names available. The 33-year-old is in a rough stretch at the plate, hitting .235 with seven home runs and a .692 OPS. Still, the track record is loud: he has hit at least 21 home runs in four of the last five seasons and was an MVP candidate as recently as 2024.

Chapman’s value doesn’t stop with the bat. He’s one of the best defenders in the game at third, with five Gold Glove awards and two Platinum Glove awards.

And because he’s attached to a six-year, $151 million contract that runs through 2030, the Giants would likely have to move him as a salary dump. That could keep the Yankees from having to part with top prospects to get him.

The odds still say the Yankees are in fine shape. FanGraphs gives them a 97.0% chance to make the playoffs and a 12.3% chance to win the World Series. But this is no time to sit back and trust the math.

The path forward is pretty clear: add Chapman and Abrams, stop the bleeding, and wait for Judge and Stanton to return. If that happens, Boone could soon be writing out a lineup with enough punch to make this June swoon feel like a bad memory.

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