Paul Skenes didn’t need much time to get back on the Yankees talk, and he didn’t exactly get a clean setup for it.
At his media availability at Citizens Bank Park on July 13, a day before the All-Star Game, the Pittsburgh Pirates ace was in the middle of answering a question when an unidentified reporter cut in with, “Just got the best interview of all time with Paul Skenes. Future Yankee,” prompting Skenes to pause and ask, “Who's that?”
It was another odd chapter in a storyline that keeps following him: the idea that Skenes will eventually end up in New York, no matter how often it gets swatted down.
The speculation has been attached to him almost from the moment he became one of the most electric young pitchers in the game. Skenes has already piled up a 2024 National League Rookie of the Year award and a 2025 National League Cy Young Award, and that kind of resume naturally feeds the trade chatter and the big-market daydreams. The Yankees are one destination that keeps coming up, and so is Los Angeles, where some believe he could one day go home and pitch for the Dodgers.
That noise has been especially loud because of the Pirates’ recent struggles and the assumption from some fans and reporters that a small-market club can’t keep a star like this long term. But Pittsburgh’s 50-47 record and its position just two games back in the NL Wild Card race have taken some of the edge off those conversations this season.
Skenes already addressed a similar rumor last November, after winning his Cy Young Award, when a former teammate spread a claim that he wanted to play for the Yankees. He shut that down then, and he did it again with the same kind of clarity.
“I got shown the Tweet and really didn’t think anything of it," Skenes said. "I got some texts about it.
I’m on the Pirates, my goal is to win with the Pirates. I love the City of Pittsburgh.
The fans are hungry to have a winner in Pittsburgh and I want to be a part of the group that did that. I think about it the same way as when I was at the Air Force Academy.
We had never been to a conference championship and my sophomore year we ended up winning the conference. We had never finished in the top four in the conference before that."
“Pittsburgh, the way that fans see us outside of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh is not supposed to win. There are 29 fan bases that expect us to lose. I want to be a part of the group, a part of the 26 guys that change that.”
“I don’t know where that came from, the goal is to win. I don’t know the reporter that reported it. I don’t know the player that supposedly said that, but the goal is to win and the goal is to win in Pittsburgh.”
Even with the constant noise, Skenes keeps performing at a level that puts him among the best arms in the sport. He has an 8-8 record across 20 starts with a 3.57 ERA in 108.1 innings, along with 130 strikeouts and 24 walks. He has held hitters to a .216 average and posted a 1.02 WHIP, with a 10.80 K/9, 1.99 BB/9 and a 5.42 K/BB.
His ERA is higher than the sub-2.00 mark he carried in his first two seasons, but the underlying numbers still paint the picture of a pitcher near the top of the league. His expected ERA is 2.74, the second-lowest in baseball, and his FIP is ninth-lowest.
Pittsburgh’s rotation has more behind Skenes, too. Braxton Ashcraft, Mitch Keller, Jared Jones and Bubba Chandler are all part of the mix, giving the Pirates a starting staff with plenty of names to lean on.
The club also has one of the best offenses in baseball and is expected to look for bullpen help at the trade deadline, while continuing to hold firm on one point: Skenes is not being moved.
In Other News...
Paul Skenes Had A Confused Reaction To Unexpected Yankees Buzz
Paul Skenes keeps finding himself at the center of baseballs imagination, and the 2026 All-Star Game brought another reminder of why. The reigning NL Cy Young Award winner was in media availability when the conversation veered away from the usual midsummer chatter and into the kind of future-gazing that follows elite pitchers everywhere, especially ones wearing a Pirates uniform.
Skenes seemed genuinely puzzled by the suggestion, which was hardly surprising given how far away his contractual timeline still is. He is under team control through 2029, but in Pittsburgh, that has not stopped the outside noise from building around one of the sports most valuable arms, with the Pirates history of avoiding major long-term commitments only adding to the speculation about what comes next. [Read more 🡒]
Paul Skenes Just Weighed In On A Controversial All-Star Snub
Paul Skenes added his voice to the growing discussion around Zack Wheelers All-Star omission, and it was a notable one coming from a fellow pitcher who clearly respects the Phillies ace. The Pirates right-hander said he was disappointed Wheeler was left off the roster, praising his performance and consistency while making it clear Wheeler has earned that kind of recognition.
The snub has already stirred debate among players and analysts about how the All-Star selections are made, and Skenes comments only sharpen that conversation. With the game set for Philadelphia, Wheelers absence carries a little extra sting, especially for a pitcher whose season has made him look like one of the obvious names for the event. [Read more 🡒]
