Aaron Judge has been hampered by a flexor strain in recent weeks. He first spent a minimum stint on the injured list to rest his ailing elbow, and since returning he’s been limited to exclusively DH work. Earlier this week, some questions were raised about just what shape Judge will be able to get his throwing arm back into before the end of the year. Fortunately, any concerns over Judge’s ability to throw seem to be on hold for the time being as Judge started throwing to the bases from the outfield during pregame workouts today.
The reigning AL MVP told reporters (including MLB.com’s Bryan Hoch) today that was about “checking a box” in his rehab and that he’s sticking purely to what the team’s trainers tell him to do as he works his way back into condition to resume regular duties in the outfield. Manager Aaron Boone, meanwhile, told reporters (including The Athletic’s Brendan Kuty) that while Judge “looked good” throwing to second base today, there’s still no timetable for his return to the grass in a game setting. Boone emphasized that the club feels it’s important to take Judge’s recovery process slowly in order to avoid re-injury.
That, of course, makes sense given how important Judge’s 196 wRC+ bat is to the lineup. Judge’s .218/.386/.418 (126 wRC+) slash line since returning from the IL on August 5 isn’t quite as robust as his usual otherworldly numbers, but it’s still well above average production that virtually any other hitter in the sport would be happy with. In the meantime, Giancarlo Stanton has begun playing in right field as a temporary solution to get his bat in the lineup while Judge occupies the DH slot.
Stanton’s return to the outfield isn’t the only shakeup of the Yankees lineup from the past few days. Shortstop Anthony Volpe has had a rough year on both sides of the ball, and today Boone made the decision to leave him out of the club’s starting lineup with deadline addition Jose Caballero starting at shortstop in his stead. Boone was non-committal before the game (as noted by Greg Joyce of the New York Post) about when Volpe would return to the starting lineup, but he was used as a defensive replacement in tonight’s game against the Red Sox. After a four-hit performance on August 1, Volpe has hit a paltry .121/.171/.242 in his last 19 games and was charged with an error in last night’s contest. That was enough for the Yankees to decide mix things up for at least a little while, but Volpe suggested after the game to reporters (including Kuty) that he’ll be back in the lineup for Tuesday’s game against the Nationals after sitting out tomorrow as well.
For now, it seems like this time out of the lineup is just an opportunity for Volpe to reset amid a tough stretch both at the plate and in the field. With that said, it’s at least possible that the Yankees could be looking to get Caballero a bit more playing time. Since coming over from the Rays at this year’s trade deadline, Caballero has slashed .320/.433/.600 in 31 plate appearances across 14 games with the organization. While Caballero is generally regarded as a below-average hitter overall, that recent hot streak in conjunction with his fairly well-regarded glove and impressive speed on the basepaths could be enough to earn the soon to be 29-year-old infielder some more playing time down the stretch, particularly if Volpe’s struggles continue.
On the pitching side of things, Hoch reports that the Yankees are poised to get some reinforcements tomorrow when right-hander Fernando Cruz is activated from the injured list. Cruz has been sidelined due to an oblique strain for nearly two months, but the 35-year-old had looked nothing short of excellent over the season’s first half with a 3.00 ERA, 2.48 FIP, and an eye-popping 41.2% strikeout rate in 33 innings of work prior to the injury. If Cruz looks anything like that upon his return, he should be a massive asset to a Yankees bullpen that has struggled somewhat despite the aggressive addition of reinforcements at this summer’s trade deadline. David Bednar, Devin Williams, Luke Weaver, and Camilo Doval have all taken turns in save situations but each has looked shaky of late, leaving plenty of opportunity for Cruz to fashion a key role for himself upon his return.
Hate your rivals the same way Yankee fans hate Volpe.
Solid 95 win team and early exit.
yeah its like he is terrible at baseball
Never seen a fanbase get so angry at a ~2 win player…
why is the plan to return a bad SS that can’t hit to the lineup?
He’s not a bad SS…just one going thru some trying times….after all he won a GG…And as far as hitting….in an era where league average is hitting in the low .240″s…hitting he’s not that far off…
It’s almost like batting average is a stupid metric to measure offensive performance by
Yet it’s still big news when someone is chasing a 400 AVG.
By itself no question, but it’s important in postseason to be able to hit your way on, move runners and get RBI. The top shelf SPs and BP arms don’t tend to issue a lot of walks like garden variety pitchers in regular season that help pad empty calorie stats.
“It’s almost like..stupid metric”…Yes, the percentage of times a person gets a hit is a “terrible” way to measure hitting prowess.
In other “news”, miles per hour is now considered a bad way to measure the speed of cars, because some Hollywood/Ivy League geeks say it is.
Almost but not at all. Batting average is hugely important. Dont let any stat geek convince you different.
It matters in the hugest of ways. Juan Soto gets 700M cause he is one of the best walk-takers of all-time while hitting .248 and this isn’t his first stop in the .240s.
Walks mean nothing unless someone who knows how to hit drives you in. How many 2 out walks are guys going to get to pad their stats and impact nothing when the next guys up dont get them across home plate. Hits drive guys in. Walks almost never drive guys in.
But focusing on the OPS, which is partly walks but more slugging, the problem is if you are a guy with a garbage BA and you strike out 150 to 200 times in a full season but you can get it over the wall you probably racked up those homers against the not so best of the best. Be that under .250 BA guy who has a lot of swing and miss and get into the playoffs and face Skubal Crochet Berrios Bieber Gausman Valdez Brown deGrom Eovaldi and then see how being a low BA high swing and miss guy works for you. Also factor in how a ball moves if its 50 degrees in October. Probably double digit Ks for the day and guys in scoring position with one out and the pitcher gets out of the jam cause they can miss bats.
Batting average is the thing you want in the playoffs. Guys who dont miss. BA with some pop, gap power.
…….
Yankee SS’s winning GGs has very little to do with actual fielding prowess. It’s more tradition.
@sty Yeah that long exhaustive list of former Yankee SS that have won GG that counts exactly two guys in Jeter and Volpe?
He did not deserve that GG.
Rocky, although I understand what you’re saying, he’s last or second-to-last in offense among all MLB short stops.
because he took going to relocate bring given up on?
The chosen one won’t miss a game. Cashman insists on it.
Bigger gift to Yankees??? Ruth or a combination of May and Bueller???LOL….
Volpe and Wells are busts. If this team want to compete, they need to be benched. Clear out the front office in the off season. The players are deaf to Boone and Cashman . Bring in Donnie Baseball for real baseball with accountability.
Your sainted Don Mattingly has become another member of the old-boy network. Yankees don’t use the old-boy network.
That’s true; these are the Touchie-Feelie Yankees, where emotional stability and personal agency matter more than accountability and baseball fundamentals, as well as “we made the playoffs; YOU get a participation trophy, YOU get a participation trophy, and YOU get a participation trophy, EVERYONE GETS A PARTICIPATION TROPHY!!”
Steinbrenner, Cashman & Boone Associates, LLC: “We Make Sure To Put The BABY In BABY BOMBERS”
If you want an old school manager, I hear Larussa is available.
I wouldn’t necessarily say Wells is a bust. He’s nothing more than a backup but he was never rated very high to begin with. He just put up some good numbers early on and earned some playing time because of it.
@Joe
Wt he’ll are you talking about? He was a 1st-round pick. He was a top 100 prospect. He had a .845 OPS in his 3 minors league seasons. He’s been a top 12 C in WAR his first 2 years. Both Volpe and Wells were well regarding prospects that have hit a wall and need to adjust but both still have enough upside to keep in the lineup and build around.
This is an awful-looking team with an abysmal FO and Manager. Judge probably needs to rest–he’s obviously off. The raft of mid-level prospects they shipped off to “strengthen” their bullpen will haunt them for years. Williams has been awful–and Caleb Durbin, not a star, but….2.4BWAR, Great work Cashman!
So you want to pound Cashman for trading a mid- level prospect for a guy who was lights out for 3 years and widely considered one of the best closers and pave all the blame on him when the player fails to preform??? Yet you ignite the successes of acquiring Grisham, Goldy, Belli, Jazz and graduating Dominguez, Rice, Warren etc makes you seem ignorant.
Wells should have been benched during that awful baserunning blunder with him not counting outs, and Volpe should have been benched sooner. The other thing Yankees should have done is send Volpe down to Triple A to get a mental reset, Wells too. There is nothing wrong with sending young guys down, all the other teams do it…
To add insult to injury a catching prospect they traded to Boston (Carlos Narváez) has been having a good year for Boston.
Yankees also gave up Weissert in the Verdugo trade and he’s had a few good year too for Boston.
🙁
Escara and Rice could have handled the catching duties while Wells had his mental reset down at Triple A. The Yankees just refuse to send these young guys down…
Narvaez and Weissert are doing pretty good for Boston. Verdugo was a complete bust in New York.
Imo both Volpe and Wells should have been sent down to AAA during the season to “refresh”. Both have been abysmal offensively and defensively.
@Craven
Well still talks as a top 5 deferment C. Wtf are you looking at?
I like weissert but he has been very shaky in boston! He was sent down last year. Yea he has potential but he has not established himself as a every day reliever just yet
These are my favorite comment sections
LOL, I can see why
Team-loathing support group. Pass me a dead Brian Cashman cupcake!
A stale one, you mean?
Volpe and Dominguez were hyped as future superstars . Still young so maybe pressure of playing in new york and contending teams could be issue. Or chalk it up to a long list of more overhyped yankees prospects. Probably could’ve traded them for a star level player a couple years ago
I can see Dominguez getting dealt off season! Looking at this year’s team in say let goldy walk. Resign bellinger for 1B and platoon with rice. Resign Grisham, trade Dominguez and replace him with Spencer Jones. Sign a veteran backup catcher and a reliever/ spot starter done!
Need to get Blackburn in there tonite for one more shellacking before Cruz is activated. Great find by Trashman to augment the injury-prone, often unde-performing relief corps through the Bombers’ stretch run malaise.
“Meanwhile” has to START the sentence, not come in the middle between commas.