
USA Today via Reuters
Jun 11, 2024; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; New York Yankees starting pitcher Marcus Stroman (0) looks on before a game against the Kansas City Royals at Kauffman Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Peter Aiken-USA TODAY Sports

USA Today via Reuters
Jun 11, 2024; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; New York Yankees starting pitcher Marcus Stroman (0) looks on before a game against the Kansas City Royals at Kauffman Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Peter Aiken-USA TODAY Sports
There’s a fine line between patience and panic—and in the Bronx, it’s been erased with a Sharpie. The New York Yankees, already juggling inconsistency and injury roulette, just tossed Marcus Stroman back into the fire. Fans wanted answers. Instead, they got a pitcher with an ERA higher than their hopes. And if this is the cavalry, some are wondering if the season’s already waving a white flag.
Stroman is a name that is more enjoyed by the rivals than his own team, at least that is the case for a few seasons. Is he a good pitcher? Yes, but will we want him pitching for our team when it is not doing well? NO. But that is exactly what Aaron Boone decided to do against the Oakland Athletics.
It was revealed that by Talkin’ Yanks X handle when they posted “Marcus Stroman will be starting on Sunday against the A’s per Aaron Boone.” And the reaction to this news? Not good and rightly so. After the season Stroman has had this year, this was expected.
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Yankees fans don’t forget, and Stroman didn’t exactly make a quiet entrance. His preseason spat with Boone over rotation hierarchy turned spring tension into summer resentment. New York expects humility, not headlines, from unproven pinstripers. Stroman came in barking, but so far, he’s barely thrown strikes.
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Marcus Stroman will be starting on Sunday against the A’s per Aaron Boone pic.twitter.com/WimXVMKWoh
— Talkin’ Yanks (@TalkinYanks) June 28, 2025
With a ballooned 11.57 ERA and a WHIP over 2.04, Sunday feels more like suspense than excitement. The Yankees’ offense has been average at best—timely hits are rare, not routine. Just a few months ago, Stroman’s name was penciled into the Yankees’ rotation with confidence. He’d told anyone who would listen, “I’m a starter,” brushing aside any talk of a bullpen move. But the numbers didn’t back up his swagger. In each of his three starts to open 2025, Stroman couldn’t make it through five innings, surrendering three or more runs every time.
With Ryan Yarbrough sidelined by an oblique strain, the Yankees need Stroman now, perhaps for the last time in this role. The front office knows what’s at stake: Stroman is in the final year of a two-year, $37 million contract, and this outing could determine his future in pinstripes. Manager Boone watched Stroman’s bullpen session closely, looking for any flicker of the old confidence. Giving Stroman the ball against Oakland feels like flipping a coin in a storm. Fans aren’t just worried he’ll lose—they fear he’ll unravel before the third inning.
Still, Stroman’s past isn’t all stumbles and missteps. He tossed 154⅔ innings last season with a respectable 4.31 ERA. That kind of durability doesn’t grow on trees—or Yankees’ rehab charts. If he settles down and finds rhythm, this Bronx soap opera might just turn into a comeback story.
But baseball doesn’t run on emotion—it runs on results, and Stroman still holds the pen. The Yankees can’t afford sentiment or second-guessing when October dreams are on life support. If Stroman fails, the boos will be louder than the Bronx subway. If he delivers, though? The same fans might pretend they never hit send on those angry tweets.
Yankees fans split after news of Marcus Stroman’s start on Sunday
In the Bronx, forgiveness comes slower than a Stroman fastball on a rehab clock. The Yankees just lit a match under an already divided fanbase, and the clubhouse better brace for aftershocks. Stroman, the man who talks loud and pitches louder—sometimes for the wrong team—is back. And let’s just say not every Yankee fan is rolling out a welcome mat.
Well thats that game gone, is Boone blind or did he not see his latest rehab start
— Daryll Corbett (@KamiyaTai1999) June 28, 2025
“Game gone, is Boone blind or did he not see his latest rehab start?” drips with fan fury and disbelief. They’re mocking Aaron Boone’s decision, noting Stroman’s rocky rehab outing—five runs, 10 hits, and two walks over 3⅔ innings. That rough performance against the Erie SeaWolves didn’t exactly inspire confidence. The comment crystallizes what some fans already fear: another misstep on Sunday could cost more than just a game.
“This will go one of two ways” isn’t just a comment—it’s a weather forecast in pinstripes. If Stroman’s on, the sinker dances and hitters leave with broken bats and bad moods. But if he’s off, it unravels fast—like that Giants game where he gave up five runs in two-thirds. For fans, it’s either swagger or surrender—and Sunday’s forecast is still cloudy.
“Here comes the ‘it’s just baseball’ excuse after he gives up 3 in the first inning” feels like a Bronx prophecy, not a prediction. Stroman’s postgame vocabulary often spins bad outings into bad luck. After his April meltdown vs. the Giants, the weather took more blame than his command. Fans want accountability, not clichés—and three quick runs won’t buy him sympathy on Sunday.
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USA Today via Reuters
May 15, 2024; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; New York Yankees starting pitcher Marcus Stroman (0) leaves the field after completing six scoreless innings against the Minnesota Twins at Target Field. Mandatory Credit: Matt Blewett-USA TODAY Sports
“Imagine saving up… only to find this freaking turkey is pitching?” hits where it hurts. Yankees games already bleed wallets—tickets, parking, and food cost a small fortune. Fans don’t pay a premium to watch a pitcher with an 11.57 ERA audition disaster. For some, Sunday was supposed to be magic, not a Stroman-sponsored heartburn special.
“Guess I need to restock my whiskey cabinet,” says more than any stat sheet could. With Stroman’s 11.57 ERA, fans aren’t expecting a smooth outing. When nerves fray early, comfort comes in liquid form, not optimism. Watching him pitch lately feels less like baseball, more like emotional damage management.
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Split opinions are nothing new in New York, but this feels more like open rebellion. When a pitcher sparks more punchlines than punchouts, even hope takes the day off. Stroman may have the contract, the attitude, and the microphone—but right now, he doesn’t have the city. If he dazzles Sunday, he buys silence; if he crumbles, he fuels another week of talk radio therapy. In the Bronx, patience wears pinstripes—but not for long.
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