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Yankees Patch Their Third Baseman

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Yankees Patch Their Third Baseman

Yankees Patch Their Third Baseman-Shaped Hole With Ryan McMahon

Katie Stratman-Imagn Images

Sometimes you just can’t wait for the weekend. On Friday afternoon, the Rockies traded longtime third baseman Ryan McMahon to the Yankees in exchange for pitching prospects Griffin Herring and Josh Grosz. MLB.com’s Mark Feinsand first reported the deal, while Jorge Castillo of ESPN was first to report Herring’s inclusion and Bob Nightengale of USA Today was first to name Grosz.

McMahon was drafted by Colorado in 2013 and has spent his entire nine-year career with the Rockies; he ranks ninth in franchise history in games played. He is in the fourth year of a six-year, $70 million extension, and the Yankees will take on the rest of his remaining contract. He is owed a tad less than $4.2 million this season, and $16 million a year in both 2026 and 2027. At the time of the trade, the Yankees have an 88.8% chance of making the playoffs, but they’re 4 1/2 games back of the Blue Jays in the AL East after dropping two of three in Toronto earlier this week. New York could use a boost, and to say that McMahon has the potential to fill a position of need would be an understatement.

When Jay Jaffe wrote up the Yankees’ third base situation in his Replacement-Level Killers Series, he led off by saying, “Areas of need don’t get more apparent than this.” Oswald Peraza has spent more games at third than any other Yankee, and amazingly, his season wRC+ of 24 drops to 10 if you just look at his time as a third baseman. Jazz Chisholm Jr. hit like crazy while spending the month of June at third base, but he’s now back at second, where he started the season. The Yankees released DJ LeMahieu a few weeks ago. Oswaldo Cabrera has an 83 wRC+ and suffered an ankle injury in May that will keep him out until at least late September. Jorbit Vivas is batting .164 over his first 65 major league plate appearances.

Put it all together, and the Yankees have received just 0.6 WAR from the third base position, which ranks 23rd in baseball (though it does put them ahead of fellow playoff contenders the Phillies and Cubs). If you discount Chisholm’s time at third, New York would fall all the way to -0.7. This is a team in dire need of an upgrade. That said, the Yankees are not getting Eugenio Suárez. Let me hit you with a post from former FanGraphs editor Jon Tayler:

Yankees 3B this season: .214/.292/.354, 83 wRC+
Ryan McMahon this season: .217/.314/.403, 88 wRC+

Jon left out McMahon’s typically great defense, which has pushed him to 1.4 WAR, but his point is still clear. McMahon hasn’t hit much better than the Yankees third basemen this season. It’s surprising, but in eight full major league seasons, McMahon has never once put up even a league-average batting line. He hits the ball hard and takes his walks, but he’s striking out nearly 32% of the time and he’s never surpassed 24 home runs in a season. His best year came in 2022, when he ran a wRC+ of 97 and put up 3.1 WAR. Clearly, the Yankees see the potential for more, so let’s talk reasons for optimism.

We have to start with exit velocity. McMahon has always hit the ball hard, but he’s ascended to a new plane this season. He’s tied for sixth among all qualified hitters in average exit velocity. The only players ahead of him are Oneil Cruz, Aaron Judge, Shohei Ohtani, Kyle Schwarber, and Juan Soto. This is rarefied air (in rarefied air). McMahon’s 90th-percentile exit velocity is roughly the same as it’s been for the last few years, but even if he hasn’t accessed an entirely new gear of top-end power, it’s surprising that all that extra hard contact hasn’t resulted in increased production. He’s running career highs in barrel rate, pulled air ball rate, and launch angle on hard-hit balls. That’s not usually a recipe for a career-high 63-point gap between your expected slugging percentage (.466) and your actual slugging percentage (.403).

McMahon also has the best xwOBA (.343) and best DRC+ (93) of his career. His luck should change at some point. Moreover, a left-handed hitter who just raised his pulled air ball rate from 11.1% to 18.8% seems likely to do pretty well in Yankee Stadium. Leaving Coors Field may hurt, but at the risk of being cynical, heading to a different organization and new coaching staff is probably going to help. The situation isn’t exactly analogous, but I’d refer you to Chisholm, who ran a 102 wRC+ with the Marlins and so far is at 135 with the Yankees. For that matter, LeMahieu represents another former Rockie who joined the Yankees at the age of 30 and immediately blossomed at the plate.

Over the course of his career, McMahon has real platoon splits. He’s got a 95 wRC+ against righties, compared to 75 against lefties. This season, he’s all the way down to 58 against lefties. However, if any team can absorb that issue, it’s the Yankees, whose 120 wRC+ against lefties is the best in baseball. Manager Aaron Boone expressed excitement about McMahon during his pregame press conference on Friday. “I know there’s real offensive potential in there,” he said. “I know he’s had offensive success, as well as some struggles there over the last calendar year too. It seems like over the last month, he’s really started to swing the bat like he’s capable of. Because he can impact the ball, he can control the strike zone. He’s had some swing-and-miss that probably hurt him a little bit, but then he can really defend over there. Just the handful of times that we’ve played against them that I watch him, you’re like, ‘That’s what it should look like over there.’”

Boone’s estimation of McMahon over the last month is not quite accurate, though the third baseman has been swinging a hot bat over the last two weeks. In nine games since July 11, he has a 197 wRC+ across 36 plate appearances. From June 25-July 9, the previous two weeks, McMahon had a -27 wRC+ over 14 games and 51 plate appearances.

For the rest of the season, McMahon has a pretty low bar to clear to represent an improvement. If all he does is keep playing the way he has on both sides of the ball, he’ll be better than what the Yankees would otherwise have gotten at third. If his luck changes and a few more of those hard-hit balls find grass (or the short porch), all of sudden, he’s up around league average at the plate and a massive upgrade for New York. If the Yankees can help him to make the most of his pull power, he could be a difference-maker going forward. McMahon has put up 10.7 WAR since 2021, making him a reliably healthy, reliably slightly above-average third baseman, and he’s under contract through 2027.

As for the Rockies’ portion of the trade, dealing a favorite like McMahon with two and a half years left on his contract signals a real departure. As Darragh McDonald noted at MLB Trade Rumors, the Rockies are fond of extending less-productive homegrown players, and have also let players like Trevor Story and Jon Gray walk in free agency rather than trading them at the deadline. It may be an acknowledgement of just how deep a hole the team has dug for itself.

This is the first time we’ve written about either Herring or Grosz here at FanGraphs, so after this paragraph, everything you read was written by Eric Longenhagen. The Yankees drafted the left-handed Herring out of LSU in the sixth round in 2024, and Eric currently has a future value of 40 on him. The 22-year-old has been dominant in his first professional season, and according to MLB Pipeline, he slots in as the team’s fifth-ranked prospect. Josh Grosz, who is also 22, jumps to the very top of the list of players most likely to be confused with Josh Sborz. The Yankees drafted the righty Grosz out of East Carolina in the 11th round in 2023, and although his results have been varied so far as a professional, he’s running a 3.38 FIP in High-A and striking out nearly 10 batters per nine innings. Eric has a future value of 35+ on him. With that, here are Eric’s breakdowns:

Griffin Herring
Herring spent two years as LSU’s most consistent long reliever (working as many as five innings) and was a draft-eligible sophomore in 2024. The Yankees made multiple changes to his delivery and pitch usage, which helped him dominate Low-A and earn a promotion after just eight starts. He had a 1.71 ERA combined at both levels at the time of the trade, though his K% dipped quite a bit after he was moved up to Hudson Valley. Herring’s fastball only averages about 90 mph but lives off deception and riding life. Since turning pro, his arm slot has been raised, but his stride down the mound has gotten bigger and longer, and his extension was just shy of seven feet at the time of the trade.

His loose, whippy arm action prevents hitters from seeing the baseball until release, and despite lacking anything close to MLB average fastball velocity, Herring’s heater has generated above-average chase-and-miss so far this year. With the Yankees, Herring also emphasized the use of his slider, which has become his most-deployed pitch. It ranged from 80-85 mph in his final Yankee outing prior to the deal, and has tight late movement but lacks huge depth. It’s playing like an above-average pitch in pro ball. Herring didn’t really have a changeup in college, but he’s added one as a pro and is throwing it about 14% of the time. His feel for it isn’t bad considering he’s just begun using it, but it often cuts on him or finishes too high. A smooth on-mound operator, Herring looks the part of a starter even though he isn’t especially physical because of his mechanical grace. It’s impressive that he’s maintained his excellent college strike-throwing even though his delivery has been changed, and he projects as a high-floor backend starter.

Josh Grosz
Grosz started for the better part of his last two years at ECU, and though his strike-throwing backed up during his draft spring, he still entered pro ball with a shot to start based on the depth of his repertoire and the deceptive cadence of his delivery. This is a pitcher with bad fastball shape, but the jerky cadence and short actions of Grosz’s delivery make him tough for hitters to time. He’s added about a tick and a half of velo to his fastball since turning pro, though this appears to be more a result of strength training than due to a mechanical overhaul. Grosz sits 92-95 with equal parts rise and run, effectively giving him a sinker from his three-quarters arm slot. His slider is hard, 83-86 mph on average, and lives on the glove side half of the plate as more of a flinch-inducing, strike-getting pitch than a nasty bat-misser. The biggest change for Grosz in pro ball has been the makeup and usage of his changeup. It looks like Grosz is using a splinker-style grip, and it has more consistent sink now than when he was in college, though it still is mostly a tailing pitch. This is generating the most consistent chase-and-miss of Grosz’s three pitches, even though it’s his first year of using it regularly. Without a plus offering, he looks like a consistent, low-variance depth starter.

Associate editor Matt Martell contributed reporting to this article.

Davy Andrews is a Brooklyn-based musician and a writer at FanGraphs. He can be found on Bluesky @davyandrewsdavy.bsky.social.

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2025 AVCA Women’s NAIA All-America Teams

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The AVCA is pleased to announce its women’s volleyball All-America Teams for the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics, as chosen by the NAIA Volleyball All-America Selection Committee.

The 2025 class includes 42 players—14 on the first, second, and third teams—from 29 schools, and an additional 55 players were honorable mention selections. Bellevue University (NE), Northwestern College (Iowa), and the University of Providence (MT) lead the way with three players each on the first three teams, and seven schools had two players chosen.

Coach of the Year: Candace Moats, Indiana Wesleyan University
Assistant Coach of the Year: Angie Boldt, Concordia University Nebraska
Player of the Year: Eva Joldersma, Indiana Wesleyan University, OH, Sr.
Freshman of the Year: Evelyn Brown, Mount Vernon Nazarene University, MH

AVCA All-Americans

 

Honorable Mention All-Americans

 



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Graduate Spotlight: Yassine Kamara | Bowie State

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Graduate Spotlight: Yassine Kamara

Degree Type: Bachelor of Science in Health Services Administration 
Next Steps: MBA program at Charleston Southern University, full track scholarship
Hometown: Hyattsville, Maryland

Yassine Kamara understands what it takes to succeed at a high level. As a member of the Bowie State University track and field team, she has won many events in shot put and discus and has been recognized for numerous achievements. She is graduating this winter with a Bachelor of Science in Health Services Administration and preparing to take her next step as both a scholar and an athlete. Kamara has earned multiple athletic achievements during her time at Bowie State, and she has applied the same discipline and drive that fuel her success in competition to her academic pursuits. After graduation, she plans to pursue her MBA and continue her track and field career at Charleston Southern University. 

“When I originally toured the Bowie State campus with the track coach, it just felt like home. I felt comfortable,” Kamara said. 

But being a collegiate athlete, maintaining her grades, working and finding social connections turned out to be a difficult challenge for Kamara. She struggled for her first 18 months at Bowie State to find a healthy balance. 

“At first, I didn’t really have any friends outside of track. It was a repetitive cycle of workout, practice, class, work, then go straight back to my room. I was having a hard time socially,” she said. 

In addition to sports and school, Kamara was also working two jobs at a nursing home and an assisted living facility. Her schedule didn’t leave much time for social interactions. She leaned into her time with the track team to build friendships with her teammates, who became a support system for her. 

“I’m an extreme introvert, and I didn’t really break out of that until my senior year,” she said. 

Kamara made the most of her time on the track and field team, accumulating many wins and honors. She is a three-time CIAA discus champion, a 2025 NCAA First Team All-American, the fall indoor 2024 Field Athlete of the Year, earned 11 medals across seven meets including seven gold and four silver, made history as Bowie State’s first All-American in track and field since 2010, was named to the 2025 USTFCCCA All-Region Team and recognized earlier in the season as the CIAA Female Field Athlete of the Week. 

Impact of Bowie State Experience 

In addition to her athletic achievements, Kamara has thrived academically thanks to several resources at Bowie State. She points to the Academic Advising Center, Career Development Center and tutoring services as essential to her academic success. 

“These resources helped me stay on track and maintain my spot on the Dean’s List every semester since majoring in health services administration,” Kamara said. 

She also credits the Wellness Center for helping her prioritize her physical and mental well-being while managing the demands of school and athletics. 

“Bowie State has provided me with the resources, experiences and support to grow into the person I am today,” she said. 

After graduation, Kamara plans to use her education from Bowie State University and her eventual MBA from Charleston Southern University to work in administration, human resources or management at a nursing home or senior care facility. 

“I’ve always known that I wanted to work with seniors,” Kamara said. 

Kamara leaves Bowie State University ready for what comes next, grounded in the values, preparation and confidence she gained as a Bulldog. 



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CCIW Student-Athletes Earn CSC Academic All-District® Women’s Volleyball Honors

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NAPERVILLE — College Sports Communicators (CSC) announced its 2025–26 Academic All-District® Women’s Volleyball teams, recognizing student-athletes across NCAA and NAIA divisions for excellence both on the court and in the classroom. The NCAA Division III selections include 24 honorees from the College Conference of Illinois & Wisconsin (CCIW).
 
Academic All-District® honorees were considered for advancement to the CSC Academic All-America® ballot.  Student-athletes selected as CSC Academic All-America® finalists are denoted with an asterisk and will advance to the national ballot to be voted on by CSC members. First-, second- and third-team Academic All-America® honorees will be announced Jan. 13, 2026.
 
Augustana
Grace Gustafson
Lanah Queckboener
Katelyn Turley
 
Carroll
Bronwyn Rowse
Maggie McGough
Taylor Raley
Kylie Wittnebel
 
Illinois Wesleyan
Alex Bardouniotis*
Kannyn Boyd*
Sophia Feeney*
Hannah Tellor*
 

Millikin

Charley Condill
Delaney Higgins
Elle Richards
 
North Central
Lauren Benson
Katie Godo
Sarah Harvey
Sarah Lezon
 
North Park
Kendal Britton
Meg Rothermel
 
Wheaton
Katherine Adkison
Jordan Benford*
Lacey Higgins
Sydney Overweg
 

Follow the CCIW
CCIW on X | CCIW Instagram | CCIW Facebook |
 
The College Conference of Illinois & Wisconsin (CCIW) was founded in 1946 and currently services nine member institutions including Augustana College (Rock Island, Ill.), Carroll University (Waukesha, Wis.), Carthage College (Kenosha, Wis.), Elmhurst University (Elmhurst, Ill.), Illinois Wesleyan University (Bloomington, Ill.), Millikin University (Decatur, Ill.), North Central College (Naperville, Ill.), North Park University (Chicago, Ill.) and Wheaton College (Wheaton, Ill.).





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Minot State welcomes new head track and field coach Erik Stevens

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MINOT, N.D. – The Minot State track and field program has found its new leader in a seasoned coach with plenty of NCAA Division I experience.

Minot State’s Associate Director of Athletics for External Operations, Janna McKechnie, is pleased to introduce Erik Stevens as the Beavers’ newest head coach. Stevens takes over leadership of the Minot State track and field program, replacing former coach Jordan Aus, who stepped down to fill the role of Associate Director of Athletics for Revenue and Ticketing in November.

“We are excited to welcome Coach Stevens to Minot State University,” McKechnie said. “Coach Stevens brings a strong commitment to developing the whole student-athlete, and a clear vision for building a competitive, disciplined, and positive track and field program. We are confident his leadership will elevate our program both on and off the track.”

Coach Stevens will begin his duties as the head track and field coach for the Beavers after the start of the new year.

“I want to start by thanking President Steven Shirley and Vice President for Student Affairs and Intercollegiate Athletics, Kevin Harmon, for this opportunity to lead the next phase of Minot State University track and field,” Coach Stevens said. “I also want to thank Jordan Aus and the rest of the search committee for a great experience through the interview process.

“Minot State is a place where you can feel the support that is behind you as a coach,” he added of his decision to pursue the Beaver head coaching position. “That is an important part of building a program. And the history of excellence that Minot State has in this sport is something that I want to bring back to the University as we start this new chapter together.”

Coach Stevens steps into his role mid-season with the Beavers, who began the indoor track and field season with meets hosted by the University of Mary and North Dakota State earlier this month. The new coach will focus on quickly establishing an identity for the Minot State program moving forward in preparation for the Beavers’ next meet, the Marauders Indoor Opener on Saturday, January 17, in Bismarck.

“The most important aspect to address is to bring stability and identity to who we want to be as a program,” he said. “Bringing the student-athletes and coaches together to immediately determine that identity will be critical with me taking over the program at this time.

“Creating our identity is the most important first step,” Coach Stevens added. “Then, if we can establish what our process is, and bring the focus to trusting that process, we can get some immediate results.”

But Coach Stevens is looking beyond just leading the current Beaver student-athletes to success this season.

“We want this program to be the best track and field and cross-country program in the state of North Dakota,” he said. “That is going to take a lot of work from our staff and our student-athletes. Identifying and recruiting the right student-athletes, who will help develop our identity and establish the championship mindset and culture, will help us to realize the goal of becoming a program that can continually be in a position to finish in the top five in our conference, and bring Minot State back to the forefront of track and field.”

Coach Stevens takes over the Minot State track and field program after spending the last 3 1/2 seasons as an assistant coach at NCAA Division I North Texas, where he led the distance runners and was the head cross-country coach for four seasons.

During his time at North Texas, Coach Stevens guided two cross-country runners to the NCAA National Championship, and the women’s cross-country team finished 5th in the American Athletic Conference in 2024, the team’s best finish since 2017. In track and field, he guided the distance runners to five new school records and four American Athletic Conference/Sun Belt Conference championships.

Prior to his time with the Mean Green, he spent one season as head cross-country coach and the assistant track and field coach for distance runners at NCAA Division I Texas State, and also served as a volunteer assistant coach at NCAA Division I Florida State for one year, spent two years as a volunteer assistant coach at NCAA Division I Georgia, and two years as a volunteer assistant coach at NCAA Division I UCLA.

A 2006 graduate of Arizona with a degree in History Education and a minor in kinesiology and coaching, Coach Stevens holds USATF Level 1 & 2 certifications and is a USTFCCCA Endurance Specialist.

 



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Central’s Parrott named a finalist for the conference scholar-athlete award

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PELLA—Recent Central College graduate Addison Parrott has been named a finalist for the American Rivers Conference’s Johana Olson Scholar-Athlete of the Year Award.
           
Parrott is among three finalists for the Johanna Olson Female Scholar-Athlete of the Year Award, along with Nebraska Wesleyan University track and field athlete Avery Decker and  Simpson College women’s soccer/track and field athlete Madison Hays.
           
Parrott graduated with a 3.85 cumulative grade point average as a sociology and psychology major with a minor in religious studies. She is now in graduate school to achieve her master’s in clinic mental health counseling from Liberty University (Va.).
           
A distance runner at Central, Parrott tallied third All-American performances between cross country and track and field. In 2024, she became the first Central female to win the American Rivers Conference cross country title, earning league Most Valuable Performer honors. She also won the indoor 5,000-meters title at the 2025 conference meet.
           
Parrott was a two-time College Sports Communicators Academic All-District selection. She was a member of the American Rivers Academic All-Conference six times across track and field and cross country. She also earned USTFCCCA All-Academic honors five times.
           
The league awards were established in 2000-01. Central student-athletes have received the men’s award five times and the women’s award three times. Central’s most recent winner was NCAA Today’s Top 10 Award and Gagliardi Trophy winner Blaine Hawkins in 2021-22.
 



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Indiana volleyball gains new addition in Tennessee transfer Keondreya Granberry

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Indiana volleyball’s historic season came to end after a loss to the University of Texas at Austin on Dec. 12 in the Sweet 16 round of the NCAA Tournament. However, since the loss, the Hoosiers have already begun assembling their roster for next season.  

Indiana gained a new asset to its roster in middle blocker Keondreya Granberry, according to an Instagram post Tuesday. The 6-foot-3 University of Tennessee transfer was sidelined for most of her senior season in 2025 with an injury. However, in 2024, Granberry averaged 1.93 kills and .93 blocks per set while maintaining a .455 average hitting percentage.  

She finished her Tennessee career ranked second all-time in career hitting percentage at .372 and ranked eighth in program history in career blocks per set.  

After the 2025 season came to end, the Hoosiers lost valuable pieces to their roster in outside hitters Candela Alonso-Corcelles and Jessica Smith, middle blocker Madi Sell and opposite hitter Avry Tatum.  

In turn, Indiana is bringing in a nationally ranked freshman class for the second consecutive season. As of National Signing Day (Nov. 12), all three incoming freshmen in setter Mallory Matheny, outside hitter Sara Snowbarger and defensive specialist Ellie Hepler were ranked top 60 in the Prep Volleyball Rankings.  

The NCAA Women’s Volleyball winter transfer portal opened Dec. 7 and will close Jan. 5. In that window, Indiana volleyball will look to continue stacking pieces to replenish the highly talented 2025 roster that led the Hoosiers to a 25-8 overall record and first NCAA Tournament appearance in 15 years.  





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