

The New York Yankees are running out of arms and, frankly, out of excuses. Just when the bullpen looked somewhat stable, reality threw another curveball—straight into Ryan Yarbrough’s oblique. The Bronx faithful have seen collapses before, but this one’s happening with medical reports, not box scores. At this point, Aaron Boone might need more luck than strategy—and maybe a backup trainer with a magic wand.
Right now, the Yankees’ biggest challenge is the injuries. Yes, the other teams have done some damage to the Yankees’ season, but nothing like the injuries have. With Gerrit Cole and Luis Gil already gone, the injury to Ryan Yarbrough is a big hit to their pitching department.
This bad news was delivered by the Yankees’ official X handle. “Prior to today’s game, the Yankees made the following roster moves: Placed LHP Ryan Yarbrough on the 15-day injured list (retroactive to 6/20) with a right oblique strain.” To fill in the spot, they have gone to Jayvien Sandridge.
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The Yankees’ injury list has turned into a revolving door, and Ryan Yarbrough just walked through. A right oblique strain shut the 33-year-old down after a solid start to his season. His 3.90 ERA in 10 outings offered rare consistency for a team grasping at stability. Now, he joins an ever-growing list of wounded arms as New York limps toward the break.
Prior to today’s game, the Yankees made the following roster moves:
• Placed LHP Ryan Yarbrough on the 15-day injured list (retroactive to 6/20) with a right oblique strain.
• Recalled LHP Jayvien Sandridge (#88) from Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.— New York Yankees (@Yankees) June 22, 2025
The timing couldn’t be worse. Yarbrough was one of their few functioning left-handed bullpen options. With Gerrit Cole out for the year and Luis Gil still sidelined, the cracks are widening. Marcus Stroman’s knee isn’t 100% either, leaving the rotation in a constant reshuffling state. The Yankees are bleeding innings and praying for duct tape.
Enter Jayvien Sandridge—unproven but intriguing. A 3.00 ERA across three minor-league levels hints at promise. He’s 26 and finally gets his shot to steady a shaken bullpen. If he can bridge even a few innings, that’s already a win in the Bronx.
Injuries have done more damage to the Yankees’ season than any rival ever could. The rotation isn’t just thin—it’s disappearing like good vibes in October. If Jayvien Sandridge can stop the bleeding, he won’t just earn a debut—he’ll earn a cape. At this point, the Yankees don’t need depth charts; they need divine intervention and bubble wrap. The Bronx Bombers might still survive, but only if their bullpen stops resembling a waiting room.
Yankees fans left holding their heads after Ryan Yarbrough’s injury report
Just when the New York Yankees thought the baseball gods had finished tormenting them, another lefty hits the IL. Ryan Yarbrough, one of the few arms holding it together, is now sidelined. The bullpen can’t catch a break, unless it’s a literal one. At this point, the Yankees aren’t managing a roster—they’re managing a triage unit with cleats.
Well that’s a shock https://t.co/yHRzSkwnEy
— Alex Garrett (@AlexGNYC1) June 22, 2025
The Yankees lost yet another pitcher, and fans barely blinked. “Well, that’s a shock,” one fan quipped, drowning in sarcasm. After seeing Luke Weaver hobble and Jake Cousins vanish, what’s one more? At this point, the bullpen’s healthier on paper than it is in person.
Yarbrough’s oblique joined the long list of Yankees muscles waving the white flag. One fan snapped, “The Yankees need to hire someone who knows only about obliques. Nothing else. Only obliques.” After Stroman’s strain and Rizzo’s setback, it’s basically a recurring theme. At this rate, the IL might need its own clubhouse.
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Another pitcher down, and Yankees fans are already bracing for the next domino. “And there is the spot for Marcus Stroman to take 🫠🫠🫠,” one fan sighed. With a 5.42 ERA and more tweets than wins, Marcus Stroman hasn’t exactly helped. Between Weaver’s hamstring and Cousins’ surgery, the rotation doesn’t need drama—it needs outs.
The Yankees didn’t just lose Yarbrough—they lost whatever illusion of stability they had left. “And this team’s pitching is completely falling,” a fan declared, echoing a season-long truth. With guys like Weaver, Cousins, and Velasquez out, it’s been collapse after collapse. The arms are dropping faster than their ERA is rising.
With the bullpen unraveling again, fans are done waiting for overpriced fixes. “JUST BRING UP SCHLITTLER!” one fan demanded, tired of the chaos. The righty has a 2.89 ERA and 42 strikeouts across 11 minor-league starts. At this point, he’s cheaper, healthier, and more reliable than half the current staff.
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From sarcastic shrugs to desperate suggestions, Yankees fans have moved past panic into pure resignation. When “Well, that’s a shock” becomes the rallying cry, you know stability has left the building. The bullpen’s held together by tape, hope, and minor-league dreams like Cam Schlittler. Unless someone finds a cure for oblique strains—or mediocrity—the Yankees aren’t just fighting opponents. They’re fighting their own anatomy.
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