
The Gold Glover’s lack of hustle in center field led to plenty of boos from frustrated fans at Yankee Stadium
Things are not going swimmingly right about now for the New York Yankees. They’re coming off a sweep at home at the hands of the Reds, and after a scorching first two months of the season, Aaron Boone’s club is just 14-16 since the start of June. They haven’t won a series since taking three of four from the Royals from June 10-13. Right now, perhaps no one is feeling those struggles more than center fielder Trent Grisham.
That’s because of this play, which took place in the ninth inning of Friday’s eventual 8-4 loss to Cincinnati:
It’s hard to characterize that as anything other than a lack of hustle on Grisham’s part that allowed Jeimer Candelario to take second base on what should’ve been a mere single. Candelario was stranded on the bases, but regardless that’s the kind of thing that will stick in the craw of a demanding fan base that’s seen a lot of losing baseball lately. You can tell that from the vigorous booing that Grisham received.
No doubt adding to matters if that Grisham is batting just .165/.287/.365 in this, his first season with the Yankees since coming over from the Padres in the December Juan Soto blockbuster.
Afterward, Boone mounted a defense of his outfielder:
“I mean, that’s one of those that looks bad in the moment, especially going through what we’re going through as a team right now. It’s also the way Trent Grisham, a Gold Glover, plays center field — like that relaxed, easy nature … Do I want him to square up to it and tackle it like you and I might in a side game? Not really. I want him to catch the ball and get it in and keep that guy off second base, but he has a track record of outstanding play out there and that’s kind of the way he does — kind of a slow heartbeat, motor and that when you’re through it doesn’t look great. I understand that.”
Grisham is indeed a Gold Glover, as he claimed the award in 2020 and 2022 with the Padres. Per Statcast, Grishman has been a pronounced defensive asset every season of his career, including this — albeit across limited playing time. Yankees fans, though, weren’t objecting to his capabilities. Rather, they were objecting to what looked like a plain lack of effort.