The Yankees will begin to have Anthony Volpe taking drills at second base, manager Aaron Boone told reporters on Friday (link via Bryan Hoch of MLB.com). Volpe remains on the big league roster even with José Caballero back from the injured list. New York optioned rookie outfielder Spencer Jones last night.
Caballero had a minimal IL stay due to a fracture in his right middle finger. The Yankees recalled Volpe to handle shortstop for the past week and a half. Boone said at the time he viewed Caballero as the starting shortstop. The manager was a little less firm on that today, saying he’ll “make (that) decision every night,” but Caballero indeed drew back in today against Nick Martinez for the start of a big weekend series against the division-leading Rays.
Volpe has played more than 4000 innings at the MLB level, all of which have come at shortstop. He started two games at second base in A-ball five years ago. That said, it’s common for shortstops to move fairly easily to other infield positions. Boone said the Yankees don’t intend to have Volpe take any reps at third base. They’ll hopefully quickly get to a point where they’re comfortable using him at either middle infield spot.
Jazz Chisholm Jr. remains the primary second baseman. He’s starting his 48th of 52 games there tonight. Amed Rosario has gotten the other four starts to occasionally spell the lefty-hitting Chisholm against an opposing southpaw. Chisholm has had a tough year against pitchers of either handedness, but his .239/.317/.372 line in a down season is still better than what Volpe provided at the plate over his first three seasons.
Volpe appeared in eight games while Caballero was out. He had five hits, including two doubles, while drawing seven walks in 30 plate appearances. He showed enough that the Yankees opted not to send him back to Triple-A, though it remains to be seen if they’ll get him into the lineup on a semi-regular basis.
They’re not going to use Volpe only against left-handed pitching. Rosario is a better hitter against lefties and a cleaner fit in that role, not that the Yankees use Chisholm as a strict platoon player regardless. Caballero has more established positional versatility and was out to a strong start to the season. He’s the team leader with 13 stolen bases while hitting .259/.320/.400 across 147 plate appearances. Caballero was a full-time shortstop early in the season with Volpe rehabbing last fall’s shoulder surgery. He could bounce to third base or the outfield if the Yankees want to mix Volpe in at shortstop. They haven’t gotten much from Ryan McMahon at the hot corner all year.

Now they have some push on McMahon and Chisholm to step it up. It would be nice to have a rh bat at catcher.