Yankees Suddenly Have A Veteran Problem They Cant Ignore

As the Yankees face a critical point in their season, silence from ownership and a struggling lineup threaten their hopes of reclaiming the top spot.

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. - The Yankees’ slide has reached the point where silence from the top is starting to feel like part of the story.

After Wednesday’s 3-0 loss to the Rays, the Yankees were left five games behind first place with no clear fix in sight. Aaron Boone has run out of levers to pull.

The lineup has gone cold. And while the manager keeps leaning on the same refrain - “we’ve got to do better” - the losses keep piling up.

Brian Cashman has work to do, too. The Yankees need help at catcher, in the bullpen and at first base, where someone has to make it possible for Paul Goldschmidt to slide back into a part-time role.

Those are the kinds of moves that need to happen before the Aug. 3 deadline, though the front office usually turns its attention first to the amateur draft on July 11-12. Time is slipping.

Even the pitching hasn’t been enough to save them in this series. Cam Schlittler gave the Yankees eight innings and one earned run on Monday, and Gerrit Cole followed with 6 1/3 innings and three earned runs last night.

Still, the offense offered almost nothing. The Yankees have struck out 45 times and drawn only two walks in three games against Tampa Bay.

The larger picture is even uglier. Since June 18, the Yankees own baseball’s worst record at 5-15 and have scored the fewest runs in the sport, 56.

That’s why the lack of a public response from Hal Steinbrenner is drawing attention. He has been out of sight since last November, and while people in the organization say he does care, his absence is starting to send the wrong message.

It’s one thing to give the general manager and manager room to work. It’s another for that distance to look like indifference.

The Yankees’ problems go well beyond Aaron Judge’s injury. This slump has exposed a roster that leans too heavily on its captain, and that vulnerability is impossible to ignore now that he’s out.

An American League scout put it bluntly in a text on Wednesday:

“I always wondered what this team would look like without Judge having an MVP season,” he wrote. “Without Judge, (Cody) Bellinger (.121 over the last 18 games) has to be the guy, and he’s not built for that role.”

Goldschmidt is in a similar bind. He’s almost 39, and with Judge and Giancarlo Stanton injured, Ben Rice has become the full-time DH, leaving Goldschmidt as the only first baseman with dependable hands.

But the bat has disappeared. Goldschmidt is hitless in his last 34 at-bats, including 10 strikeouts in the three games against the Rays.

It’s a steep fall for a player who was the National League’s MVP with the Cardinals in 2022. Boone may need to give him a few days off, even if it makes the rest of the lineup awkward.

For now, the Yankees just need one win today. A split of the four-game set would at least stop the doubt from spreading any further. Another loss would push them six games out, a season low, and raise real questions about whether catching Tampa Bay in the second half is even realistic.

The Rays have already beaten the Yankees five times in seven meetings this season, and the edge belongs to Tampa Bay right now.

“It’s not where we want to be,” Cole said after the game. “And it’s not good enough to compete for first place right now.”

Still, not everyone sees the Yankees as finished. The same scout who pointed out the flaws also said, “They’re still a dangerous team.”

“With this rotation and Judge returning, they could end up a World Series run.”

That’s what makes this collapse so strange. The Yankees know they’re in a mess, but they still believe a turnaround is coming. They’re realistic, just not fatalistic.

Before the game, Jazz Chisholm captured that mood.

“What’s happened to us is not normal, it’s kind of weird,” he said. “Struggle happens. But you never see everyone struggle at the same time like this.

“But the vibe is still good. We still believe in each other.”

Maybe so. But belief only goes so far when the losses keep coming and the man at the top stays quiet. It’s time for Hal Steinbrenner to say something.

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