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Rivalry Reloaded: Yankees Finally Flip the Script on Boston

Hunter Tierney 's profile
By Hunter Tierney
October 3, 2025
Rivalry Reloaded: Yankees Finally Flip the Script on Boston

The Bronx had a different kind of buzz Thursday night — half relief, half pure joy. When the Red Sox come to town, there's just a different energy around the stadium. To make things even sweeter, the Yankees ended the Red Sox’s season with a clean 4–0 shutout and sent their rivals packing until next year. For New York fans, it was the first time since Aaron Boone’s legendary walk-off in 2003 that the Yankees officially slammed the door on Boston. And for anyone who still carries scars from 2004, 2018, or the one-and-done loss in 2021, this one felt like a long-overdue bit of payback.

The best part? It wasn’t some wild, homer-happy slugfest. It was a calm, confident statement win carried by a 24-year-old rookie from Walpole who grew up in Red Sox country, surrounded by hats with that red "B" and Dunkin’ cups, and decided to carve his own page in the rivalry by pitching like he had a personal score to settle.

The Night New York Needed — And a Star That Delivered

Cam Schlittler, Welcome to the Rivalry’s Front Page

Oct 2, 2025; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees starting pitcher Cam Schlittler (31) walks in from the bullpen prior to game three of the Wildcard round for the 2025 MLB playoffs against the Boston Red Sox at Yankee Stadium.
Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

Cam Schlittler completely controlled the game like a veteran ace who’d snuck onto the roster wearing a rookie’s number. Eight scoreless, five singles, no walks, and 12 strikeouts in just his 15th big-league start. His fastball lived in the high 90s and flirted with triple digits all night. It was conviction more than velocity, though — the first-pitch strikes, the pace, the refusal to nibble. He pounded the zone, trusted his stuff, and dared Boston to beat him. They couldn’t.

From the first inning on, you could feel the Red Sox offense tightening. The swings got shorter, then later, then defensive. Schlittler’s heater at the letters set the tone; the two-seamer and cutter bullied barrels; the slider showed up just often enough to make good hitters guess wrong. The pitch chart looked like a coach’s dream. He finished with 75 strikes in 107 pitches, and if we’re being honest, it never looked shaky.

It was personal, too. He said as much:

“Some of the bigger accounts they got over there, I was able to see, unfortunately... I don’t really check my phone much before the game, but there was some stuff that was brought to my attention. Don’t need to give them the attention they’re looking for, but just channel it and made sure I took it in the right way.”

The Four-Run Fourth — Small Ball, Big Mistakes, and the Inning Boston Will Replay All Winter

The Yankees didn’t need to rely on some towering moonshot barrage to put Boston away. Instead, they used some old-school playoff baseball. It was the only crooked number of the night.

It all started with what looked like a harmless pop-up off Cody Bellinger’s bat. Nine times out of ten, that’s an easy out. This time? Ceddanne Rafaela took a really strange angle and tried to make a diving play, unable to get there. The ball plopped right into no-man’s-land and rolled long enough for Bellinger to cruise into second. One moment of miscommunication turned a routine out into a double that perfectly summed up Boston’s rocky relationship with fundamentals all year.

From there, New York did exactly what you're looking for in October: kept the line moving. A patient walk set the table, Amed Rosario slapped a clean RBI single, and Anthony Volpe came through with another shot through the infield. Then came the dagger — Austin Wells rolled a tricky chopper that ate up Nathaniel Lowe at first, letting two more runs cross. In a game where Schlittler looked like he could pitch until the lights shut off, four runs felt like forty.

If you’re a Sox fan, you don’t even need to watch the full game to know what happened. Just circle that inning in the box score; that was the season in a nutshell.

The Quiet Heroics on the Edges

This game will be remembered for Schlittler’s line, but the margins mattered. Ryan McMahon gave New York its Derek Jeter-in-’04 moment by somersaulting into the visiting dugout to steal an extra out down the third-base line. 

And when it was time for the handshake line, David Bednar took the ninth. The deadline acquisition needed just 12 pitches to end it, finishing off a Boston lineup that never got anything going at any point. Ballgame.

What This Win Really Says About the Yankees

Aug 25, 2024; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees designated hitter Giancarlo Stanton (27) and center fielder Aaron Judge (99) celebrate after defeating the Colorado Rockies at Yankee Stadium.
Credit: Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

The Rotation Puzzle Looks Solvable

Everyone’s first thought after the clincher was pretty obvious: where does a kid like Cam Schlittler fit when you already have Max Fried and Carlos Rodon? The short answer: comfortably. October isn’t about one guy tossing shutouts every night; it’s about stacking quality innings and handing a clean game to the bullpen. Fried and Rodon set the tone. Schlittler is your nasty Game 3 counterpunch who doesn’t blink. You could even hold him for a Game 4 to throw a different look at a lineup that’s already seen back‑to‑back lefties. However Boone lines it up, Schlittler isn’t “the rookie” anymore — he’s part of the plan.

The Bullpen Makeover Actually Worked

That deadline push for David Bednar looked aggressive. Turns out it was necessary. Bednar brings both power and calm, which is exactly what you want in the ninth when the building’s shaking. Yes, usage matters — you don’t want three straight days unless you have to — but the bigger story is depth. With Devin Williams, Camilo Doval, and matchup arms ready, Boone can manage leverage instead of just asking “who’s rested?” That’s the difference between surviving October and steering it.

The Lineup’s Personality Is More Than Just Power

The Yankees led the league in homers, and they’ll still hit them. What won this series, though, was the boring, winning stuff: the two‑strike single, the tough walk, the ball shot back up the middle with runners moving. That’s October offense. The long balls will come; this pass‑the‑baton approach is what buys more chances to hit them.

The Kids Aren’t Just Along for the Ride

Ben Rice doesn’t flinch in big spots. Volpe is turning in grown‑up at‑bats when it matters most. Wells keeps proving he belongs. When your young guys lengthen the lineup instead of just filling spots, it takes pressure off the stars and makes the whole team feel more complete.

Red Sox Gut-Punched, But Already Plotting the Comeback

Mar 17, 2025; Fort Myers, Florida, USA; Boston Red Sox Alex Bregman (2) connects with the ball in the first inning against the Baltimore Orioles at JetBlue Park at Fenway South.
Credit: Credit: Chris Tilley-Imagn Images

They Were Better Than Expected — Until Their Biggest Flaw Came Back to Bite Them

Boston’s turnaround after the Rafael Devers trade was impossible to ignore. They played fun, competitive baseball for months, found an ace in Garrett Crochet, and rode a surprisingly athletic roster into October. But the issue that haunted them all year — defense — didn’t magically go away once the calendar flipped. They led the majors in errors, and in the biggest moment, two usually steady outfielders got tangled up on a routine play that most teams handle without thinking. That’s not just a bad bounce.

The Lineup Lacked One More Thumper

After the Devers deal, the offense became scrappy and opportunistic. That’s fine, but in October you need the guy who can take a 98 mph heater and change the game with one swing. Trevor Story carried more than his share in this series, and Alex Bregman chipped in a few moments, especially in Game 1. Still, when you run into a starter who gives you nothing to work with, you either have to manufacture chaos or punish one mistake. Boston couldn't do either in Game 3.

The Leadership Is Intact; The Roster Needs Tuning

Alex Cora pushed the right buttons to get this group into the postseason, and the young core flashed enough to make fans excited about 2026 and beyond. The offseason task is turning “we got here” into “we belong here every year.” That means adding a true middle-of-the-order bat, finding a frontline partner to pair with Crochet, and shoring up the infield so the defense doesn’t keep giving away free bases.

The Awkward Bregman Question Is Already on the Table

Bregman holds an opt-out, and he’s earned the right to explore it. His late-season slump complicates the contract a bit, but there isn't going to be any shortage of suitors around the league. Boston wants him back, and he fits what they’re building, but if he walks, the front office can’t just shrug. They’ll need a replacement plan locked and loaded. Either way, this winter has to be about shifting away from “platoon everyone” and finding a few steady, everyday anchors who can settle the lineup.

This Rivalry is a Living Thing

Oct 2, 2025; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees outfielder Aaron Judge (99) celebrates in the clubhouse after defeating the Boston Red Sox in game three of the Wildcard round of the 2025 MLB playoffs at Yankee Stadium.
Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

Nights like this remind you why Yankees–Red Sox just hits different in October. The whole sport feels a little bigger when these two square off with the season on the line. The ledger swung back toward New York, but that doesn’t erase 2004, or 2018, or even the Wild Card in 2021, and it doesn’t need to. Rivalries aren’t about wiping the slate clean; they’re about stacking moments on top of moments until the pile is too high to ignore.

And fans showed up. For all the noise that baseball’s become niche, this series threw a big wrench into that argument. A do-or-die Game 3 in the Bronx between two brands that market themselves? It’s a win for the sport — and for every fan, writer, and broadcaster who lives for nights like these.

What’s Next: A Very Different Kind of Test in Toronto

The Yankees don’t get much time to soak this one in, because next up is a trip north to face the Toronto Blue Jays in the Division Series. It’s a totally different matchup than Boston — Toronto doesn’t beat itself with sloppy defense, and their contact-heavy lineup makes you work for every out.

They won the season series against New York and are built to put the ball in play, forcing the Yankees’ gloves to stay sharp. At the same time, their pitching staff has a tendency to give up the long ball, and we all know which lineup is best equipped to punish that. It’s power versus contact, patience versus pressure, and it should be a fascinating clash.

For the Yankees, the formula stays the same: ride the frontline starters, trust the bullpen depth, and lean into that balanced lineup that just proved it can win in more ways than one. If they can keep the mistakes to a minimum and keep accepting that singles will work at the plate, they have every reason to think this run can keep going. The Sox series was about exorcising some demons. The Jays series is about proving this team’s not just hot for a weekend — it’s ready to make a real push through October.

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