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Aug 12, 2025  |  
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NextImg:Giancarlo Stanton is giving the Yankees everything they ask for

Don’t miss Greg Joyce’s text messages from The Bronx and beyond — he’s giving Sports+ subscribers the inside buzz on the Yankees.

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They are proud. You must start there. In order to play Major League Baseball for any considerable length of time, it’s essential to understand the pride that lines the skin and the soul of the men who populate the game. And especially those who excel at it.

Rafael Devers became a divisive figure in Boston because of his refusal to play first base, and this is largely the reason he is now a San Francisco Giant. Nobody likes it when an athlete says “no.” Our knee-jerk reaction almost always is something to the effect of, “Pay me $10 million, I’ll play wherever you want me to play.” Understood. We are still a sporting society raised to respect the authority of a coach. That’s the default position.

What nobody wanted to hear was that Devers might be averse to playing first base because he realized he wouldn’t be any good at it. Again, first reaction: too bad. Suck it up. Of course, if you caught some of Devers’ work a few weeks ago against the Mets, the first thing you realized is this: He isn’t very good at it. He is, in fact, quite bad at it. And major league players don’t like to be made to look foolish at a game that’s hard enough to play when you focus on the things you do well.

Nationals first baseman Josh Bell (19) and San Francisco Giants first baseman Rafael Devers (16) watch game play during the seventh inning at Oracle Park. Robert Edwards-Imagn Images

So look: Maybe you don’t give a gold star to Giancarlo Stanton, who Monday night against the Twins started his second game of the year in right field. Maybe all that matters is that Stanton is earning $32 million this year, and for that he should pour beers with a smile at the concession stands if that’s what the Yankees ask him to do.