COMPLICATED CORNER: RYAN MCMAHON IS YANKEES' GOLD GLOVE ANSWER
The Yankees' new third baseman, Ryan McMahon, is a paradox: elite power and Gold Glove defence, but plagued by a high strikeout rate.
Being in the 2nd percentile in any baseball stat usually means you're headed for the waiver wire.
When that stat is whiff rate or strikeout percentage, it often means a trip to Triple-A. But for Ryan McMahon, those scary numbers are just part of a confusing situation. The New York Yankees have finally settled on a third baseman. After moving Jazz Chisholm to second, watching DJ LeMahieu decline, and hoping Oswald Peraza would improve, they've found their guy.
But he's a complicated player to support.
McMahon is a paradox. He swings and misses a lot, but when he makes contact, the ball goes far. He stepped in at third base after the trade deadline and immediately stabilised the defence while puzzling everyone with his hitting.
The Swing's Power
Let's get straight to the point. The swing-and-miss problem is real. McMahon had a 32.3% strikeout rate last season. That's high. It's almost too high unless you're hitting 40 home runs. He was in the bottom 2% of the league in making contact.
But look at what happens when he does hit the ball:
Exit Velocity: 95th percentile
Hard Hit Rate: 89th percentile
Walk Rate: Almost 12%
This shows that McMahon has great raw power and a good eye, but his swing has weaknesses. He hit .214/.312/.381 with 20 home runs and an 86 wRC+. That's below average.
Still, the Yankees see potential. McMahon tends to hit the ball to the opposite field, but if the coaches can get him to pull the ball just a bit more, the short right field in their stadium will turn long fly balls into easy home runs. He has the potential to hit 30 home runs if he can just stop swinging at air.
Solid Defense
If the offence is inconsistent, the defence is reliable.
That's why he plays every day. The Yankees haven't had this kind of stability at third base in years. McMahon is a great defender. Last year, in 1,265 innings at third, he had:
.976 fielding percentage
10 defensive runs saved
6 outs above average
In the playoffs, pitching and defence are key. It's valuable to have a guy who catches everything hit to the left side of the infield. He saves runs and prevents bad innings. You can accept a .214 batting average when he's preventing hits every night.
A Way to Handle Lefties
There's one big problem that can't be easily fixed. McMahon struggles against left-handed pitchers. He hit .184 against them. It's not good.
Luckily, the team is built to handle this. That's where Jose Caballero comes in. The Yankees don't need McMahon to be great every game. They need him to hit well against righties and play great defence. When a tough lefty is pitching, Caballero can play, keeping the defence strong and giving McMahon a rest.
It's not ideal. Ideally, your starting third baseman wouldn't need a platoon partner. But Ryan McMahon brings valuable skills that the Yankees needed. If he reduces his strikeout rate by just 5%, he could be an All-Star. If not, he's still the best defensive third baseman they've had in a long time. It's a risk worth taking.
YANKEES DEBUT ALERT: LEFT-HANDER RYAN WEATHERS OFFICIALLY STARTS TOMORROW NIGHT AGAINST THE NATIONALS
Bronx debut: Discover how Ryan Weathers' new "bullet slider" and 97 MPH heat will lead the Yankees against the Nationals tomorrow.
Ryan Weathers is set to make his Yankees debut on the mound tomorrow night, according to Gary Phillips of the New York Daily News. The lefty will face a familiar team in the Nationals; he saw plenty of them back when he pitched for the Marlins in the NL East. The Yankees are still getting their starting pitchers ready for the 2026 season, so this outing gives them a chance to see what Weathers can do.
They picked up Weathers from Miami this offseason. He’s only 26, but he’s already been busy trying to sharpen his game. He's been working on a new two-seam fastball and a tighter bullet slider, hoping to finally show why he was once the seventh overall pick in the draft.
Before that, though, the Yankees take on Toronto today at 1:07 PM EST. Will Warren gets the start, and both Aaron Judge and Cody Bellinger are in the lineup.
Now, back to Weathers. Last year with the Marlins, he made eight starts and put up a 3.99 ERA, striking out over 22% of the batters he faced. The Yankees believe he has even more to offer. They’re betting that these new pitches, a better two-seamer and a firmer slider, will help him take that next step.
He throws hard; his fastball averaged 96.8 MPH last season, which got plenty of teams interested. The upside is real, but so is the risk. Injuries have slowed him down the last couple of years, cutting short what could have been breakout seasons.
First, Weathers has to prove he can stay healthy. Then, he needs to show that these tweaks to his pitch mix can help him avoid the hard contact that led to seven home runs allowed in just 38.1 innings last season. The Yankees are betting on his talent, though, and they see him as a possible future star in their rotation.
Tomorrow’s game is at George M. Steinbrenner Field, and it’ll be the Yankees’ first night game of the 2026 Grapefruit League, starting at 6:35 PM EST.
OLYMPIC FAMILY LEGACY: INSIDE TOM BRADY’S PLAN TO TURN VIVIAN INTO A SUPERSTAR OLYMPIAN
Sports news: Tom Brady's Olympic dream. Get the report on Vivian’s volleyball talent and Team USA’s wins in Milan.
Tom Brady, now retired and a seven-time Super Bowl champ, took his kids, Benjamin and Vivia,n to Milan for the 2026 Winter Olympics. They spent the week soaking up the city, meeting new faces, and cheering for Team USA on the ice. The real rush came on Thursday; the USA’s women’s hockey team pulled off a wild comeback against Canada, winning 2-1 in overtime. Megan Keller scored the game-winner, and Brady got to watch it all unfold right next to tennis legend Billie Jean King.
Four days later, the men’s team kept the momentum going. Jack Hughes scored another overtime winner against Canada on Sunday. You’d think that would be the biggest story from the Bradys’ trip, but no, what really got people talking was something way more personal.
Tom posted a sweet shoutout to his daughter Vivian on Instagram. Just after all the Olympic action, he shared a photo of 13-year-old Vivian, captioning it: “Future summer Olympian” with a string of volleyball emojis. Fans immediately caught on that Brady wasn’t just being a proud dad; he was dropping a real hint.
Vivian, whom he shares with Gisele Bündchen, already plays volleyball at school. She swims and plays soccer, too. What’s cool is that every sport she loves is a Summer Olympics event. Brady’s caption didn’t feel random; it felt like he meant it.
And this isn’t their first Olympic adventure together. Brady and Vivian hit up the 2024 Paris Summer Olympics and packed their days with nine different events: gymnastics, beach volleyball, swimming, and diving. Vivian even got to play some volleyball on the sand with Brazilian legend Juliana Felisberta da Silva.
After seeing all the winter action in Italy, Brady’s “summer Olympian” tag for Vivian sounds even more hopeful. He knows exactly where he sees her going.
With the Olympics set to land in Los Angeles in 2028, Vivian will be 15 when the Games kick off in July. Club volleyball is probably her next step. And Brady himself? He’s hinted he’s got his own Olympic goals for 2028, turning the dream into a full-on family mission.