
via Imago
Credit IMAGO / Imagn Images

via Imago
Credit IMAGO / Imagn Images
The Yankees can’t coach defense, can’t develop instincts, and sure can’t keep pretending otherwise. Jasson Domínguez was supposed to be the future—he’s barely present, stumbling through left field like a lost intern at orientation. Now, the front office is scrambling, fans are boiling, and accountability’s still on vacation. What do you do when your golden prospects start to rust? If you’re the Yankees… You promote another one.
How have the top 2 contenders to win the World Series this year been in such a mess? The Dodgers seem to have forgotten how to win games, and the Yankees, even with wins, are a mess. The New York Yankees have so many problems that one trade window will not solve anything. But a trade window with some good homegrown talents could help them achieve stability because their current homegrown talents have been a letdown.
In a recent episode of Talkin’ Yanks, they talked about how the homegrown prospects have been a huge letdown for the Yankees this season. But in the spotlight was Jasson Dominguez. They said, “Dominguez looks like a dog ran onto the field and two security guards were cornering it.” They also talked about how they will need someone like Spencer Jones. But after a while, they posted on X a video of Spencer Jones with the caption, “THIRD home run of the game for Spencer Jones! He has 13 in 19 games at Triple-A!” The question is, why would you go for someone like him when you have him?
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Jasson Dominguez was once a symbol of hope in pinstripes, but that hope’s fraying fast. Since returning in 2025, he’s slashing a grim .195/.267/.317, looking more lost than legendary. His defense in left field has been a liability—no dives, no slides, just misreads and missed chances. For a franchise desperate for production, Domínguez has become the quietest bat in the loudest market.
THIRD home run of the game for Spencer Jones! He has 13 in 19 games at Triple-A! pic.twitter.com/w2YO9xvWT7
— Talkin’ Yanks (@TalkinYanks) July 24, 2025
It’s not just him—the Yankees’ entire crop of homegrown hitters is flashing tools but fumbling timing. Gleyber plateaued, Anthony Volpe is streaky, and the next wave still lacks polish. They’re athletes, not ballplayers, yet, failing to make instinctive plays or show real IQ. Development gaps are growing wider, while accountability stays on the sidelines beside them.
But beneath it all, Spencer Jones is quietly crushing baseballs and knocking on the Bronx’s door. Across Double-A and Triple-A, he’s slashing .317/.415/.691 with 26 homers and 16 stolen bases in just 243 at-bats. That’s not just a promise—it’s production with purpose, and the Yankees should be listening. If Domínguez falters, Jones might be the thunder that finally drowns out the silence.
The Yankees don’t need another headline—they need a developmental revolution. When your top prospects require babysitting and your front office treats “potential” like a finished product, you don’t contend—you pretend. Jasson Domínguez may still find his footing, but New York’s runway is short and unforgiving. Spencer Jones is waiting at the gate with numbers that demand a boarding pass. At this point, the Yankees don’t just need help—they need saving… preferably from themselves.
Yankees fans want the Yankees to promote Spencer Jones after the recent disaster.
The Yankees say they’re competing, but their outfield says otherwise—and fans have had enough. Jasson Domínguez is still chasing shadows in left field, while the front office keeps treating “development” like a trust fall exercise. Meanwhile, Spencer Jones is launching baseballs and building a case with every swing. If the Yankees won’t fix their problems, fans will at least shout the solution: promote the guy who’s already playing like he belongs.
Move him up now, idc. We need the ball in play
— Shawz 🤍✝️ (@ShawzyyXO) July 24, 2025
“Move him up now, idc. We need the ball in play.” It feels less like a comment, more like a cry. Spencer Jones is slashing .317/.415/.691 with 26 homers and 16 stolen bases—he’s not just hot, he’s unavoidable. While Domínguez stumbles at .195, Jones keeps proving his bat belongs in the Bronx, not Scranton. When a guy hits three homers in one night, fans don’t whisper—they riot in lowercase.
That fan comment saying “Say anything you want, but I’d rather see Dominguez losing playing time for Jones than for Grisham” captures growing impatience. Though Domínguez bats better (.253 AVG, .734 OPS) than Trent Grisham (.251 AVG, .820 OPS), his defense still lags significantly. Meanwhile, Spencer Jones’s sizzling Double‑A/Triple‑A slash line (.317/.415/.691) with 26 homers and 16 steals proves he belongs in the Bronx.
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“Trade Dominguez and Schlitter for Suarez and Gallen now. Bring up Jones” isn’t sarcasm—it’s desperation. Fans are done watching missed routes and bullpen roulette while Spencer Jones hits moonshots in Scranton. They want frontline arms like Ranger Suárez and Zac Gallen, not more vague “development timelines.” When the minors are producing stars and the majors are leaking runs, impatience becomes a full-blown trade proposal.
“My question is where he fits in the OF :/” isn’t denial—it’s a logistical concern wrapped in emoji. This fan isn’t doubting Spencer Jones’s talent, just wondering who sits when he arrives. With Judge, Soto, and Domínguez already there, the outfield’s crowded even if production isn’t. But when a guy slashes .317/.415/.691 with 26 bombs, you make room—preferably with a glove and a plan.
“Trade Dominguez for pitching” sounds less like a hot take, more like a tired fan’s roadmap. With Jasson Dominguez slashing .195/.267/.317, patience is thinning faster than his contact rate. Pitching is the Yankees’ real need, and fans are done waiting for potential to grow up. If Spencer Jones is the future, Domínguez might just be the trade chip that buys them an ace.
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The cries aren’t just growing louder—they’re becoming strategic, surgical, and strangely rational. What started as “promote Spencer Jones” has morphed into trade machine blueprints and lineup overhauls. The Yankees can keep talking about development, but their fans are building the depth chart themselves. If Jones keeps raking and Domínguez keeps dodging fly balls, the decision won’t be developmental—it’ll be directional. And right now, the fans are pointing north to Scranton.
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