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Will Warren, who had not allowed more than two earned runs in any of his seven outings this season, surrendered three in the third inning alone in start No. 8. 

Warren, whose season high for walks was three, matched that before the end of the fourth inning. 

The Yankees offense, which had scored at least seven runs in each of the previous five games, was held to one run on three hits. 

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The Yankees offense, which entered play leading the American League in walks, did not draw a walk in eight innings against Nathan Eovaldi, reaching a three-ball count just once (Trent Grisham, in the team’s first at-bat). 

For both pitcher and team, Wednesday became something rare in the strong early going of the season: a dud. 

Warren’s location was amiss and the Yankees offense missed plenty against Eovaldi in a 6-1 loss to the Rangers in front of 40,269 in The Bronx on a night that was pleasant before rain arrived late. 

“It’s going to happen,” Aaron Boone said about Warren, who mixed in one poor start with six solid ones, but the manager could have been talking about his offense as well. 

The Yankees (25-12) dropped just their third game in their past 18 and will turn to Paul Blackburn — and not Ryan Weathers, who was scratched with an illness — for Thursday afternoon’s rubber match in hopes of avoiding their first series defeat since April 10-12, when they were swept at Tampa Bay. 


  Will Warren struggled for the Yankees against the Rangers on May 6, 2026. Robert Sabo for NY Post Will Warren struggled for the Yankees against the Rangers on May 6, 2026. Robert Sabo for NY Post

Warren allowed six runs on seven hits and three walks in four innings, swelling his ERA from 2.39 to 3.46 in less than 90 minutes. Every start matters for Warren, who is believed to be competing with Weathers to keep a rotation spot when Gerrit Cole returns in the next few weeks. 

The young right-hander again had stuff good enough to swerve around bats, seven of his 12 outs coming from strikeouts, but he did not bait Rangers hitters to chase outside of the strike zone enough and watched as four strike calls were overturned through Texas challenges. 


  Rangers center fielder Evan Carter celebrates a home run against the Yankees. Robert Sabo for NY Post Rangers center fielder Evan Carter celebrates a home run against the Yankees. Robert Sabo for NY Post

“Just not real sharp with what I thought was good stuff again,” Boone said of Warren, who fell behind in counts too many times, a problem that became apparent immediately. 

In the first inning, Warren threw three straight balls to Corey Seager. He then grooved a 3-0 fastball that was reversed to the short porch, a solo home run that gave the Rangers a lead they would not return. 

They added on from there. After an eight-pitch walk to Brandon Nimmo, whom Warren could not put away to begin the third, Ezequiel Duran drove an RBI double into left-center. Later in the inning, Evan Carter saw a 2-1 sweeper sweep across the middle of the plate and hooked a two-run homer off the facing of the second deck in right. 

“When you’re behind in the count, I think you’re trying to limit damage,” said Warren, who matched the most runs allowed by a Yankees starter this season. “Therefore you get finer, and you miss a little bit.” 

Three of the first four batters reached in the fourth — Andrew McCutchen and Nimmo on walks — before a Duran sacrifice fly and a well-placed Seager single up the middle became the last of the damage against Warren. Warren, who had allowed five earned runs in his past four starts, was pulled after the six-spot. Yerry De los Santos (3 ¹/₃ scoreless innings) impressed quickly in the hours after his summons from Triple-A. 

The entirety of the Yankees’ offense was home run No. 15 for Aaron Judge — his third in four games, sixth in 10 games and 12th in 23 games — in the sixth inning. 


  Aaron Judge homers in the sixth inning against the Rangers. Robert Sabo for NY Post Aaron Judge homers in the sixth inning against the Rangers. Robert Sabo for NY Post

Otherwise, Eovaldi — the former Yankee and frequent Yankees killer, entering with a 3.05 ERA in 25 games against the club — looked like vintage Eovaldi, throwing 72 of his 101 pitches for strikes. 

“He kind of stays unpredictable,” Boone said of Eovaldi, who kept the Yankees guessing and relied heavily on a splitter, curveball and cutter to strike out eight in his eight innings.

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