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The Yankees' GM Brian Cashman faces scrutiny as the team has shown mixed performance in April, starting strong but struggling mid-month before finishing strong again. Fans are being polled on their confidence in Cashman after a rocky start to the season.
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April is just about over, which means it’s time for our first GM approval poll of the 2026 regular season. We’ve learned several things through the first month of games. The American League could be an absolute dogpile with just the Yankees and Rays better than one game over .500, while across the league managers’ seats are getting hotter earlier than ever. Boston’s Alex Cora and Philadelphia’s Rob Thomson learned this lesson the hard way and free-falling Mets skipper Carlos Mendoza seems likely soon to follow. Before the season started, we polled our readers on their confidence level in Brian Cashman and the team he assembled heading into the new campaign, voters overwhelmingly voicing their disapproval of the Yankees GM. Now that we are a month into the season, we are curious if any of those opinions have changed.
The Yankees started their season with a three-game sweep of the Giants at Oracle Park, followed by series wins against the Mariners and Marlins. But then the offense went silent, leading to a 2-9 stretch against the A’s, Rays, and Angels. That span included a five-game losing streak, getting one-hit by the Rays, and going 17 consecutive innings without scoring. This inability to dent home plate was primarily attributed to being dragged down by the worst bottom of the order in MLB.
Despite splitting that four-game split with the Halos, they built positive momentum as the offense started to click — this time it was the pitching’s fault, giving up 32 runs including an eye-watering 13 home runs in those four games. They rode that wave to a 10-2 finish to the month to reclaim their lead atop the division. That span included back-to-back sweeps of the Royals and Red Sox, an eight-game winning streak, four straight series victories, and a 26-inning scoreless streak by their pitching staff.
The approval rating for Brian Cashman is currently being assessed through a poll as fans reflect on the team's performance in April.
The Yankees had a strong start with a three-game sweep but faced a tough 2-9 stretch before finishing the month with a 10-2 record.
The Yankees struggled due to a silent offense during a 2-9 stretch and the worst bottom of the order in MLB, along with pitching issues in some games.
Cam Schlittler and Max Fried are the standout pitchers, ranking first and second in fWAR among all qualified pitchers.
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The dominant narrative of the early going has been the Yankees’ stellar starting pitching. Cam Schlittler and Max Fried are one and two in fWAR among all qualified pitchers. The highest ERA of their four regular starters belongs to Ryan Weathers at 3.21, and he has acquitted himself well since joining from Miami over the winter. Both he and Will Warren have a double-digit strikeout start to their names, the latter looking like he has taken the next step in his development after a solid rookie campaign. Even with the since-demoted Luis Gil’s struggles, the rotation is far and away the best in baseball, with the most innings per start (5.8), lowest ERA (2.70) and FIP (3.21), and most fWAR (4.6) of any starting staff in the land.
Fried and Schlittler aren’t the only ones on the team performing among the best in their discipline. Aaron Judge and Ben Rice place third and seventh, respectively, in position player fWAR, meaning the Yankees have the two best pitchers and two of the seven best hitters in all of baseball, which is certainly a good starting point for any roster. Judge and Rice became the first pair of Yankees teammates in franchise history with at least 10 home runs and at least 20 walks before the end of April, the pair placing second and third in wRC+ among qualified hitters in the league.
It’s a good thing that pair is more than pulling their weight when you consider the output of the rest of the offense. The Yankees do not have another lineup regular with a wRC+ above Cody Bellinger’s 108 mark. Amed Rosario has been a remarkable catalyst when he bats against lefties, but his defensive limitations prevent him from being an everyday starter. As we alluded to earlier, the bottom of the order was a black hole through the first three weeks, Jazz Chisholm Jr., Austin Wells, Ryan McMahon, and José Caballero combining to give the Yankees an automatic out in almost half their lineup. Fortunately that has turned around some in the final half of April. Every member of that quartet has posted a wRC+ of at least 119 since the start of the Royals series, and it is no surprise that this coincided with the Yankees’ best stretch of results.
That leaves the bullpen as the unit that struggled the most for the entire month. The group sits middle of the pack league-wide in ERA (3.86), FIP (3.97), and fWAR (0.7), though it’s easy to envision a scenario where those metrics are worse had the starting rotation not accounted for so many innings pitched. They optioned (and recalled) Jake Bird to the minors for the second time in his short Yankees tenure, you can reliably pencil Camilo Doval in to give up a home run in every outing, Fernando Cruz is walking almost a batter per inning, there’s a fear of pitching the suddenly-important Brent Headrick into the ground with 17 appearances in 31 games, and even David Bednar is a human vasopressor when he closes games.
Just when it looked like the Yankees would go injury-free in April, the bug started to bite in the final week. Giancarlo Stanton landed on the IL with a calf strain and his replacement, Jasson Domínguez, had to exit the series finale against the Rangers; he is undergoing imaging after getting hit on the elbow by a fastball. Conversely, they do have reinforcements on the horizon. Carlos Rodón is about a week and change away (two rehab starts) from rejoining the team after undergoing offseason surgery to remove bone chips in his elbow. Gerrit Cole is probably a month behind his rotation mate as he completes a lengthy rehab from Tommy John surgery. Anthony Volpe could join up with the big-league squad during the upcoming homestand after his offseason surgery to repair a partially torn labrum in his left shoulder. The players they will eventually displace from the active roster is a question they will have to answer shortly, but it’s a good problem to have when you’ve got veterans reinforcing a team that’s already performing well.
That brings us to today’s task. Do you approve of the job Brian Cashman has done through the end of April? On one hand, the Yankees sit atop the division with the best record in the AL posting the second-most runs per game and the lowest staff ERA in the AL. On the other hand, the areas that everyone identified as weak spots over the offseason — third base and the bullpen — continue to drag the team down. The polarizing GM certainly elicits stronger feelings than can be captured in a one-word response — you may feel a question such as the one being posed requires more nuance, greater elaboration, or a wider selection of options than just a “yes” or a “no,” however for the sake of this exercise, a binary question works best.
Note: This is the same poll that is currently appearing on the Feed, so if you’ve voted there, that should already be counted.