Yankees Suddenly Need Cashman To Solve A Growing Lineup Crisis

As Paul Goldschmidt battles a summer slump, the Yankees find themselves in a race against time to bolster their lineup before the trade deadline.

Paul Goldschmidt’s bat has disappeared at exactly the wrong time for the Yankees.

Entering Thursday’s series finale, the 38-year-old had gone 10 straight games without a hit, a brutal 0-for-34 stretch with 15 strikeouts. With Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton still on injured reserve, New York’s offense has little margin for error, and Goldschmidt’s slump has made the need for help feel urgent.

For a stretch in June, Goldschmidt looked like he had turned back the clock. The former National League MVP hit .297 last month with eight home runs, 22 RBIs and an .885 OPS, giving the Yankees a steady middle-of-the-order presence when they needed it most.

July has brought a very different version. The seven-time All-Star has opened the month 0-for-18 with 11 strikeouts, and the production has vanished along with the contact.

The downturn shouldn’t have come as a shock. Last season, Goldschmidt played only 65 combined games in July, August and September, and the result was just two home runs and a .245 batting average. Age catches up to hitters fast, and Goldschmidt’s latest skid is a reminder of how fragile the Yankees’ offensive setup has become.

That puts general manager Brian Cashman in a tough spot ahead of the Aug. 3 trade deadline. If the Yankees are going to patch the lineup, they may have to swing big.

One name that could draw real buzz is Minnesota Twins outfielder Byron Buxton. He’s tied for sixth in the majors with 25 home runs, but he was placed on injured reserve Tuesday with a hip strain.

Another possible fit is Washington Nationals slugger CJ Abrams. He ranks second among MLB shortstops with 20 home runs, is just 25 years old and would fill New York’s revolving door at shortstop. The catch is the cost: Abrams is under team control through 2028, so a deal would almost certainly require the Yankees to part with some of their top prospects.

After those two, the market thins out quickly. Boston Red Sox first baseman Willson Contreras is tied for seventh in the American League with 20 home runs, but it’s difficult to picture Boston dealing its hottest bat to the Bronx, especially with the Red Sox riding an MLB-best five-game winning streak.

The San Francisco Giants have also signaled a willingness to move third baseman Matt Chapman, who has hit at least 21 home runs in four of the last five seasons. But Chapman, like Buxton, is on the injured list with a lower abdominal strain.

The Houston Astros could also be part of the conversation if they’re open to discussing Isaac Paredes, who has 12 home runs and a .765 OPS, and Christian Walker, who has 20 home runs and a .790 OPS. Even then, the Astros are only two games behind the first-place Seattle Mariners in the AL West.

That’s the bind for the Yankees: the deadline is coming, the offense is sagging, and Cashman won’t be negotiating from a position of strength. Still, if Goldschmidt’s bat stays frozen, New York may not have much choice but to act fast.

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