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The New York Yankees may have finally done something they avoided for years with Anthony Volpe.
They made him uncomfortable.
For the first time since Volpe arrived in the majors as the organizationโs handpicked franchise shortstop, his job no longer feels completely protected. And according to YES Network broadcaster Michael Kay, that shift may be exactly what the Yankees needed to force a different version of Volpe to emerge.
During โThe Michael Kay Show,โ Kay openly questioned whether Volpeโs recent offensive surge is directly connected to the first real competition he has faced in New York.
โMaybe, just maybe, that woke him up that this isnโt a Supreme Court justice appointment that he could lose the Yankee shortstop job,โ Kay said.
That blunt comment landed hard because it touched on a growing reality surrounding the Yankees.
Volpeโs future no longer feels automatic.
Yankees Finally Challenged Anthony Volpe

GettyAnthony Volpe #11 of the New York Yankees follows through on his sixth inning two-run base hit against the New York Mets at Citi Field on May 17, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images)
The Yankees are playing some of their best baseball of the season. New York entered Thursday leading Major League Baseball in home runs while also leading the American League in slugging percentage. The offense exploded in Tuesdayโs 15-1 win over the Kansas City Royals, when every starter recorded at least two hits.
At the same time, Volpe returned from offseason shoulder surgery rehab to find something waiting for him that had never truly existed before.
Pressure.
Josรฉ Caballero stepped in during Volpeโs absence and immediately gave the Yankees strong defense at shortstop. Suddenly, the organization had another viable option capable of taking playing time away from a player once viewed as untouchable.
For years, the Yankees treated Volpe like a cornerstone player who would simply work through struggles no matter how inconsistent the production became. But this season feels different because New York no longer has the luxury of endless patience.
This roster expects to compete for a World Series immediately.
The Yankees cannot afford automatic lineup spots anymore.
Volpeโs Biggest Problem Has Never Fully Disappeared

GettyAnthony Volpe #11 of the New York Yankees celebrates in the dugout after scoring during the fourth inning against the Toronto Blue Jays at Yankee Stadium on May 18, 2026 in the Bronx borough of New York City. (Photo by Ishika Samant/Getty Images)
The frustration surrounding Volpe has never been about talent.
It has always been about sustainability.
New York Postโs Greg Joyce recently pointed out that Volpe has produced stretches like this multiple times throughout his career. Every hot streak has sparked optimism that he finally solved his offensive inconsistency, only for extended slumps to erase the progress shortly afterward.
That cycle has become impossible to ignore.
Joyce questioned whether Volpeโs latest surge is truly sustainable or simply โanother tease,โ and that uncertainty now carries much larger consequences than before.
Because if the offense disappears again, the Yankees may no longer automatically hand him everyday playing time.
That possibility alone changes the pressure surrounding Volpe entering the summer.
The Yankees built this roster to win now, not to endlessly wait for potential. Internal competition suddenly matters more than prospect pedigree, and Kayโs comments reflected a growing belief that accountability may finally unlock the player Volpe was supposed to become.
If Volpe keeps hitting, the Yankees may finally have their long-term answer at shortstop.
If the inconsistency returns, however, the organization may be forced to ask much harder questions about one of the most important players in its future plans.
Alvin Garcia Born in Puerto Rico, Alvin Garcia is a sports writer for Heavy.com who focuses on MLB. More about Alvin Garcia