Ryan Weathers #40 of the New York Yankees pitches during...

Ryan Weathers #40 of the New York Yankees pitches during the first inning against the Chicago White Sox at Yankee Stadium on Thursday, June 18, 2026. Credit: Jim McIsaac

For those hoping the Yankees follow the Knicks up the Canyon of Heroes come November, don’t count on another parade just yet.

But we’re comfortable saying this much: You can pencil them in for the World Series right now. And if that sounds like too bold a prediction, take a glance at the rest of the American League, a menagerie of semi-competitive teams lining up like bowling pins for Aaron Boone & Co.

Take the White Sox, for example. They’re a fun South Side story, shaking off back-to-back last-place finishes, including the history-making 121-loss debacle, to claim a share of the AL Central lead. The Sox rolled into the Bronx this week after consecutive series wins over Atlanta and the Dodgers, the top two teams in the majors.

What happened? They got whacked, with the Yankees outscoring them 22-7 in Chicago’s two losses. In Thursday night’s finale, Camilo Doval got ambushed by Andrew Benintendi, who smacked his first pitch of the night, a 100-mph sinker, for a tie-breaking grand slam in the eighth inning to ultimately sink the Yankees, 5-1.

Ryan McMahon’s leadoff homer in the third was the only run support for Ryan Weathers, who struck out eight over 6 1/3 innings. Jazz Chisholm Jr. also departed in the fourth inning after he fouled a pitch that caromed off the ground and hit him in the groin, but manager Aaron Boone didn’t have any additional info about his condition postgame.

“Not the way we wanted to finish it,” McMahon said. “But overall a solid series.”

The Yankees are 12-3 vs. the Central this season, and they took two of three from the White Sox without their pair of injured MVPs (Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton), leadoff-hitting centerfielder Trent Grisham and $218 million co-ace Max Fried.

On paper, those appear to be significant holes. But the Yankees entered Thursday 9-4 since Judge last picked up a bat on May 31 and still were averaging the fourth-most runs (5.77) in the majors during that span. Plugging in 38-year-old Paul Goldschmidt has been an unexpected boost, as the former MVP had raked at a .382 clip (21-for-55) with five homers, 17 RBIs and a 1.087 OPS in the 13 games since Judge was diagnosed with a fractured rib.

Goldschmidt was slugging right along with the Yankees’ current MVPs — Ben Rice (20 homers, 1.001 OPS) and Cody Bellinger (11 homers, .860), who were tied for the team lead with 49 RBIs. After that, Boone can deploy his deep bench to lengthen the lineup with a number of platoon options, and that wreaked havoc on the White Sox.

“Really, the offense sticks out,” Chicago manager Will Venable said Thursday afternoon. “Just relentless throughout their order and it comes from everyone in their lineup. The ability to use the whole field, make good swing decisions, really kind of boxes us in as far as our pitching staff and our ability to attack them.”

The Yankees slipped to 17 games over .500 (45-28) after Thursday night’s loss, tied with the Brewers for the third-best record in the majors. Most important, they were tops in the AL. While everyone was freaking out over the Judge injury, the Yankees steadily built a three-game lead over the Rays in the division, and there’s no reason to think that momentum will fade anytime soon.

“I think we all understood that a lot of our guys are out and we have to do what we can to continue to win games,” Bellinger said. “No excuses. We’re playing well right now.”

The Yankees’ plus-118 run differential also is the best in the AL by a mile (next was the Mariners at plus-23). You could argue their 9-11 mark against teams over .500 is a red flag, but consider this: The AL has only four other clubs above that low bar, including AL West-leading Seattle, which was barely treading water at 39-37. Also, seven of MLB’s top nine teams reside in the NL.

And life only gets easier for the Yankees from here. Check out the road ahead. They finish the first half with a bunch of weaklings — the Reds, Tigers, Red Sox and Nationals — and a potential speed bump in the slipping Rays, who were 13-17 during the last month. Not only that, but the Yankees’ remaining opponents this season have a combined .492 winning percentage, which puts them in the bottom third of weakest schedules (according to Tankathon).

Hard to believe the Yankees could be playing their best baseball without Judge, their captain and three-time MVP, who probably won’t be back until late August. But they still have the mindset of a team prepared to steamroll back to October, with the benefit of little resistance.

“I love what I’m seeing with these guys, and that kind of singular focus each and every day,” Boone said Thursday afternoon. “But it’s June 18, so such a long way to go that we got to keep fighting for that.”

Occasionally, it helps to have a few punching bags around, and the AL Central graciously teed up another softie with the White Sox visiting the Bronx this week.

It’s not their fault. By the AL’s subpar standards, this already has been a great season on the South Side.

The Yankees don’t grade on a curve, however. And their $340 million roster seems well-equipped to plow through the rest of the league, with more All-Star reinforcements on the horizon.

We’re not yet prepared to say ticker tape-ready, but the World Series has never looked closer in mid-June.

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