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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.

Complicated Corner: Ryan McMahon Is Yankees' Gold Glove Answer
Gold Glove Defence, Whiff Rate Crisis

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.

WHY DID THE NFL FINE JJ MCCARTHY $11,593 FOR A WEEK 18 RUN?

A stiff-arm, a collision, and a 15-yard penalty: find out why the league hit Vikings QB JJ McCarthy with a heavy five-figure fine.

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JJ McCarthy fined $11,593

The Packers were just going through the motions in Week 18 against the Vikings, but someone forgot to tell JJ McCarthy. Right out of the gate, McCarthy dodged pressure, stiff-armed linebacker Ty’Ron Hopper into the turf, then ploughed into cornerback Keisean Nixon, knocking him backwards and finishing off the run with authority.

Instead of getting buried for a big loss, McCarthy managed a decent gain, then got right in Nixon’s face and let him have it. The officials didn’t miss that—he got flagged for a 15-yard penalty. The NFL didn’t let it slide either. A few days later, the league hit McCarthy with an $11,593 fine for taunting.

Meanwhile, the Packers left Minnesota with no league punishments. Honestly, most of their key guys never even suited up. The game meant nothing for playoff spots or seeding, so Green Bay played it safe.

Now, sitting at 9-7-1, the Packers locked up the NFC’s No. 7 seed for the second year in a row. Next up: a Wild Card game at Soldier Field against the Bears, who finished 11-6 to win the NFC North and grab the No. 2 seed. Despite Chicago’s record, the oddsmakers at DraftKings gave Green Bay the edge—Packers by 2.5 points right before game time.

The two teams split their regular-season games, each winning at home. Both matchups happened in December, but Green Bay probably should’ve swept the series. They blew a 10-point lead in the fourth quarter of the second game and lost in overtime by six.

Jordan Love, the Packers’ quarterback, hasn’t taken a snap since that overtime loss to Chicago. He got knocked out with a concussion late in the first half. He missed the next week against Baltimore because of concussion protocol, and then the coaches rested him against the Vikings to keep him healthy.

The final injury report on Friday didn’t look great. Several players showed up as questionable: DT Warren Brinson (foot), safety Javon Bullard (knee), LB Nick Niemann (pectoral), OT Zach Tom (back/knee), WR Dontayvion Wicks (concussion), and backup QB Malik Willis (right shoulder/hamstring). Wicks is already ruled out, and the rest of the inactives won’t be announced until about 90 minutes before kickoff.

Out of everyone, Zach Tom is probably Green Bay’s biggest worry. He’s been the second-best right tackle in football this year, at least according to Pro Football Focus, but he’s missed three straight games with those nagging injuries—five total this season.

They really need Willis to be ready in case something happens to Love. If Love goes down and Willis can’t play, the Packers would have to hand the offence to third-stringer Clayton Tune. That’s not a spot they want to find themselves in, especially with their season on the line.

YANKEES FACE $260M CODY BELLINGER DILEMMA AS SCOTT BORAS PLAYS HARDBALL AGAIN

Will the Yankees cave to Cody Bellinger’s massive price tag? Inside the negotiations that could define the Bronx Bombers' 2026 season.

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Cody Bellinger's price soars

The Yankees want Cody Bellinger back; no secret there. But if that doesn’t happen, they’ve got their eyes on Bo Bichette as plan B. Still, bringing in Bichette comes with all kinds of headaches. Honestly, it’s risky. Meanwhile, let’s check out three Yankees who look ready to smash their 2026 projections.

This offseason has turned into a waiting game for the Yankees. Scott Boras is doing his usual thing, pushing Bellinger’s price into the stratosphere. Seven years, nearly $260 million? That’s treating Bellinger like he’s an MVP every season, and his career just doesn’t back that up. He’s streaky, and there’s always the risk he slides backwards. Sure, Yankee Stadium could boost his numbers, but shelling out almost $40 million a year for a guy who needs the right park to thrive? That’s a bet that could go south fast.

Then there’s the backup plan—Bo Bichette. On paper, paying $300 million for Bichette means you’re betting on him staying a top-tier shortstop for years. But the numbers say he’s not as reliable on defence as people think, and he might not even stick at short. Plus, with Anthony Volpe locked in at shortstop, adding Bichette would just create a mess. Someone like Jazz Chisholm gets squeezed out, and the team loses that athletic vibe they’ve been building. Bottom line: the Yankees need to show some restraint. Overpaying out of panic shuts championship windows quietly but quickly.

Three Yankees Ready to Blow Past 2026 Projections

Steamer’s 2026 projections see the Yankees as good but not quite there yet. Still, three guys could beat those numbers. First up, Ryan McMahon. He didn’t wow anyone last season, but dig a little deeper—better exit velocity, more barrels, and he’s hitting the ball in the air to his pull side more often. If the Yankees use him right, keeping him away from tough lefties, McMahon could quietly turn into a key bat at the bottom of the lineup.

On the pitching side, Will Warren’s projections look kind of meh, but there’s more upside than people think. He’s sharpened his fastball, and if he gets his secondary pitches working, he could follow the same path as other Yankee pitchers who took off after some tweaks. The boldest pick is Ben Rice. The projections predict a step back, but forget that. Rice hits the ball hard, doesn’t chase much, and his platoon splits aren’t a big problem. Give him a full season at first base, and he could get close to MVP levels.

Ben Rice Is Changing Everything

Rice has honestly flipped the script for the Yankees. In his first full year, he put up big numbers while splitting time between catcher and first, ending with a 133 wRC+—that’s elite company. With five years of team control left, the Yankees suddenly have a cheap star just as payroll is getting tighter.

The deeper numbers love Rice even more. He’s near the top in expected slugging, hard-hit rate, and exit velocity, but his batting average tanked because of some ridiculous defensive luck against him. Add in his great eye and low strikeout rate for a power hitter, and you’ve got a rare building block. Even if his glove at first is just okay, his bat is enough to make him a star. Once that luck evens out, Rice could be right in the MVP mix, all while giving the Yankees a ton of value.

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