The Yankees are imperfect. Even on a day they actually won at home and against a lefty starter — areas of concern this year — they nearly blew two different five-run leads as their bullpen literally walked the club to the precipice of an unacceptable defeat.
So you know what that imperfection makes the Yankees? Just like every other club that might win it all in 2024. There are no great teams. The Dodgers, the Phillies, the Orioles, every expected superpower has gone through — or, in the case of the Phillies, is going through — funks that are White Sox-ian.
No team is on pace to win 100 games. The best trajectory is 95 wins. You know who that is? The Yankees and Orioles. Yep, with all those imperfections, the Yanks are tied with Baltimore for the AL East lead and the majors’ best record.
Thus, so much is about improving upon the imperfections. So that means continuing to work with Marcus Stroman, who was better over five-plus innings of one-run ball in what would be an 8-7 victory over the Rangers. And finding a bullpen formula that does not walk so many. And getting key pieces such as Clarke Schmidt and Jose Trevino healthy.
But more and more it looks like the Yankees are solving what had been a season-long issue — that their offense was a two-man show. Don’t misunderstand — the two remain phenomenal (Juan Soto) and whatever comes after phenomenal to describe Aaron Judge, who basically stopped making outs in May. Those two combined for three homers Sunday — two by Soto that allowed him to reach 30 (homers in a season and homers against every team in the majors) and one by Judge to reach 299 in his 952nd game (Ralph Kiner at 1,087 games is the fastest to 300).
But suddenly the band has expanded. The Yankees have produced at least eight hits in 15 straight games — the longest they have done that since 1997, raising their team batting average six points. The contributions have been wide. But there has been nothing more vital than the Yankees getting oomph directly behind Soto and especially Judge with the emergence of Austin Wells and the return of Giancarlo Stanton.
