
Any Yankees title hopes will have to go through baseball’s toughest division
NY Post
DUNEDIN, Fla. — When the U.S. men followed the U.S. women in beating Canada in the gold medal hockey game at the Olympics, Aaron Boone said he sent a meme — Hulk Hogan playing a guitar — to his former ESPN broadcast partner, Toronto native and Blue Jays broadcaster Dan Shulman.
It was a good-natured exchange between friends. It also was what Boone could not do last year for himself — in the regular season or playoffs — against Canada’s lone major league team.
For the Yankees, it continued an issue that has beset them for years, notably during Boone’s tenure.
The Yankees are good every year. Usually very good. Eventually, though, they run up against a team in the playoffs that is no less than their equal and their season ends.

The deal that brought Aidan Thompson to the Rangers didn’t create the ripple effects that the Artemi Panarin trade did because of who departed the organization. That was only Derrick Pouliot, a 32-year-old defenseman more than two years removed from his last NHL game. It didn’t create the waves like one for, say, Vincent Trocheck, would have because of current NHL players or draft capital the Blueshirts received in return, either.












