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.
NFL EXECUTIVE NAMES COLE PAYTON HIS "NO. 2 QUARTERBACK" IN THE 2026 CLASS
From 94.6 PFF grades to 4.56 speed, Cole Payton is the Eagles' latest QB project. Analysing his path to the NFL depth chart.
Cole Payton, who played quarterback at North Dakota State, might end up making a bigger splash as a fifth-round pick than people expect.
He’s not just another late-round flyer, either. An NFL executive recently told insider J.L. Canfora that Payton has real upside. The Eagles have done something similar before, so this isn't coming out of nowhere.
Remember Carson Wentz? Philly grabbed him with the second overall pick back in 2016, but Jalen Hurts ended up taking over. Now, some people around the league think history might repeat itself with Payton possibly replacing Hurts down the road.
The executive went all in on Payton: “You know, I believe in that kid. That was my No. 2 quarterback in the draft. And Howie [Roseman] takes him? Come on. He sees it too. Cole Payton, if you bring him along the right way, can start in this league.”
Roseman, the guy in Philly’s front office, was a big part of the Wentz pick. He’s seen his fair share of quarterback changes over the years, and honestly, that might matter this time, too.
The executive didn’t hold back: “All the stuff you hear about Hurts, all the drama and where he is in his contract." You can call me crazy, but I think this kid could take over from him in a few years. They did this with [Kevin] Kolb, even when [Donovan] McNabb was still there. I know how Howie thinks. This kid has a chance.”
Payton had to wait for his turn at NDSU.
Payton rolled into North Dakota State in 2021, known as a strong recruit for an FCS quarterback, straight out of Omaha.
He was supposed to be the next big thing, just like the string of successful Bison quarterbacks before him. But things didn’t break that way at first. Cam Miller, the QB ahead of him, kept stacking up wins and making a name for himself in Fargo.
Miller even beat out Quincy Patterson II, a gifted dual-threat quarterback who transferred in from Virginia Tech. After Patterson got banged up in 2021, Miller took over, steered the team to a national championship, and then hung on to the starting job through 2024.
Patterson left for Temple, so Payton slid into the Bison’s running packages in a spot that Patterson had filled before. And Payton did more than just fill that role. In 2022, he ran for 284 yards and two touchdowns on 38 carries. By the next year, he really took off: 615 yards and 13 touchdowns on 84 carries.
Setback, then a breakout
Payton started 2024 looking like the same kind of threat on the ground, but a shoulder injury cut his season short. He only managed 164 rushing yards and a score on 21 carries before he went down.
Finally, in 2025, his shot as the full-time starter arrived after Miller left for the NFL draft, drafted by the Raiders in the sixth round. Payton made the most of it. He led NDSU to an unbeaten 12-0 regular season, completing 70% of his passes for 2,719 yards, with 16 touchdowns and just four picks. And he still ran wild, with 777 rushing yards and 13 touchdowns on 136 carries.
Now, he’s got a fresh chance in Philadelphia. If you ask people around the league, he’s not just there to hold a clipboard. They're watching to see what happens next.
DAVE ROBERTS COMPARES LEFTY JUSTIN WROBLESKI TO CLAYTON KERSHAW AFTER METS GEM
Discover how Justin Wrobleski transitioned from the bullpen to becoming the Dodgers' statistical leader in a historic 2026 run.
Dave Roberts gets it; he isn’t surprised Logan Webb might’ve hit Daulton Rushing with a pitch.
But there's something else on his mind: Justin Wrobleski. The Dodgers have a fresh-faced lefty in the rotation, and Wrobleski isn’t just holding his own; he’s shining. Roberts can’t help but see shades of Clayton Kershaw in him, and he’s letting people know it.
Wrobleski’s just 25, fresh out of Oklahoma State, but don’t let the age fool you. He’s pitched 36 innings as a starter with a 1.25 ERA, the best mark in the National League. People are starting to talk. Roberts definitely is. The Kershaw comparisons are already swirling, and they don’t sound that far-fetched if you watch Wrobleski work.
On Monday, he diced up the Mets by going right after hitters, pitch after pitch. Roberts has been around long enough to recognise the approach. “He’s got a great mentor in Clayton,” Roberts said, “and sometimes, it really feels like he channels Kershaw’s mentality. Attack guys, force them to put the ball in play.”
Just look at what he did to the Cardinals on Sunday. Six scoreless innings, only one walk, six hits – nothing fancy, just solid pitching. That’s two starts in a row; he’s thrown up six scoreless frames. Last year, Wrobleski mostly worked out of the bullpen. But with Blake Snell hurt and Emmet Sheehan shaky, Roberts gave him a shot, and Wrobleski ran with it. In 2025, he struck out 76 over 66 innings but had a 4.32 ERA. He got swings and misses back then, but in 2026, the punchouts dropped. Just 15 in 36 innings. Still, his control and poise jumped another level.
Roberts sees it up close. Sometimes he even jokes about the similarities. “He wears Skechers like Clayton does,” Roberts grinned. “He does his side work in his full jersey, just like Kershaw.”
Reporters asked Wrobleski about admiring a legend like Kershaw now that he’s part of the Dodgers mix. His answer’s honest: “Just watching him every day was something special for me,” Wrobleski said. “Not everyone gets to be around guys who are legends of the game.”
So yeah, it’s early. Comparisons can sound wild. But as long as Wrobleski keeps pitching this way, the talk isn’t stopping anytime soon.