The New York Yankees are not just a baseball team. They are an institution, a century-long argument for why sustained excellence in professional sports is possible when an organization gets the right things right. Twenty-seven World Series championships. A roster of retired numbers that reads like a who’s who of baseball immortality. A tradition so heavy with greatness that even being called one of the best Yankees ever carries more weight than being called the best player in most other franchises’ histories.
This list isn’t just about career stats, though the numbers here are staggering enough to stand entirely on their own. It’s about players who defined eras, who won when it mattered, who gave New York something to believe in and gave the rest of baseball something to fear. Some of them changed the sport entirely. Others simply showed up, day after day, decade after decade, and performed at a level that left everyone around them speechless.
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From the dead-ball era through the Core Four dynasty to the modern sluggers still rewriting the record books today, the Yankees have produced a lineage of baseball greatness that no franchise can rival. The men on this list didn’t just play for the Yankees. They became the Yankees. They are pinstripes, Yankee Stadium, the postseason, the rings. When people argue about the greatest baseball player of all time, several of the names on this list are always in that conversation, and that alone tells you everything about the organization that produced them.
10. Bernie Williams


Career stats (Yankees): .297 BA | 287 HR | 1,257 RBI | 4x World Series champion
Bernie Williams spent his entire 16-year career in pinstripes and was the quiet engine at the center of one of baseball’s great dynasties. He was a switch-hitter with genuine pop, a Gold Glove center fielder, and a four-time World Series champion who consistently delivered in October when the lights were brightest. He wasn’t the loudest name in that late-90s Yankees lineup, but he was one of the most indispensable.
9. Aaron Judge


Career stats (Yankees): .285 BA | 350+ HR | 3x AL MVP (2022, 2024, 2025)
Judge has made a case in recent years that is impossible to ignore. He broke Roger Maris’s American League single-season home run record with 62 in 2022, won back-to-back MVPs in 2024 and 2025, and was named Yankees captain after re-signing on a nine-year, $360 million deal. He led MLB in home runs and OPS in 2024 and followed it up with his first batting title in 2025, all while captaining the U.S. team at the 2026 World Baseball Classic. The career is still being written, and it already belongs on this list.
8. Alex Rodriguez


Career stats (Yankees): .283 BA | 351 HR | 1,096 RBI | 2009 World Series champion
The complicated legacy doesn’t erase the production. A-Rod was one of the most gifted offensive players in baseball history, and his Yankees tenure, while never free of controversy, included some of the most dominant individual seasons the franchise has ever seen. He holds the all-time record for career grand slams, spent years as the most feared right-handed hitter in the American League, and won a ring in 2009. The numbers always spoke, even when everything else got loud.
7. Mariano Rivera


Career stats: 652 saves | 2.21 ERA | 1.00 WHIP | 13x All-Star | First unanimous Hall of Fame inductee
No closer in the history of baseball has ever done what Rivera did, and he did it almost entirely with one pitch. The cut fastball was no secret; every hitter in the league knew it was coming, and they still couldn’t hit it. Rivera recorded 652 career saves, posted a 2.21 ERA across 19 seasons, and was the first player ever inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame by unanimous vote. His WHIP of 1.00 across that entire career is simply not a real number for a human being.
6. Derek Jeter


Career stats (Yankees): .310 BA | 3,465 H | 260 HR | 1,311 RBI | 5x World Series champion | Yankees all-time hits leader
Jeter is the all-time Yankees leader in hits, doubles, games played, stolen bases, plate appearances, and at-bats. He was the face of the most successful dynasty of the modern era, a five-time World Series champion who played 20 seasons in New York and never once seemed out of place on the biggest stage. He was the 28th player in history to reach 3,000 hits, finished his career sixth all-time in the category, and did all of it with a calm that made winning look routine.
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5. Yogi Berra


Career stats: .285 BA | 358 HR | 1,430 RBI | 3x AL MVP | 10x World Series champion
Ten World Series rings. That number alone separates Berra from nearly every player in baseball history. He was the Yankees’ RBI leader for seven consecutive seasons from 1949 to 1955, doing it on a roster that included Joe DiMaggio and Mickey Mantle. He was a three-time MVP and an 18-time All-Star, and the argument can be made that no player in Yankees history was more valuable to more championships than the catcher from St. Louis.
4. Joe DiMaggio


Career stats: .325 BA | 361 HR | 1,537 RBI | 9x World Series champion | 56-game hitting streak (MLB record)
DiMaggio’s 56-game hitting streak in 1941 remains the most untouchable individual record in American professional sports, a feat so statistically improbable that modern analysts still struggle to explain it. He won nine World Series titles in 13 seasons, posted a .325 career batting average, and was selected to 13 All-Star Games. Hemingway wrote about him. Sinatra sang about him. That’s the level of cultural footprint the Yankee Clipper left behind.
3. Mickey Mantle


Career stats: .298 BA | 536 HR | 1,509 RBI | 3x AL MVP | 7x World Series champion
Mantle was the switch-hitting center fielder who carried the Yankees through the 1950s and 60s on legs that spent most of his career breaking down, and the numbers he posted while half-injured are staggering to consider. He won the Triple Crown in 1956, led the American League in home runs four times, and hit 54 in 1961 while chasing Roger Maris’s then-record-breaking season. With full health across his career, the conversation about where he ranks all-time would be very different.
2. Lou Gehrig


Career stats: .340 BA | 493 HR | 1,995 RBI | 6x World Series champion | 2,130 consecutive games played
Gehrig’s consecutive games streak of 2,130 was considered unbreakable for 56 years, which tells you as much about his durability as any stat could. He batted .373 with 47 home runs and a league-leading 173 RBIs in the legendary 1927 season, part of the Murderers’ Row lineup that is still considered the greatest single-season team in baseball history. Gehrig was the first player ever to have his number retired by a franchise, and his farewell speech at Yankee Stadium in 1939 remains one of the most moving moments in American sports history.
1. Babe Ruth
Career stats (Yankees): 659 HR | .349 BA | .484 OBP | .711 SLG | 7x AL pennant | 4x World Series champion
There is no honest argument against Babe Ruth being first. He didn’t just change the Yankees; he changed the sport. Ruth arrived in New York in 1920, and within two seasons, the Yankees had built a stadium specifically to house the crowds that came to watch him. He hit 60 home runs in 1927, breaking his own single-season record, posted a .846 slugging percentage in 1920 that still stands as the highest single-season mark in MLB history, and averaged 49 home runs per season across a seven-year peak from 1926 to 1932. The case for calling him the greatest baseball player who ever lived begins and ends in pinstripes.
Forever in pinstripes


The Yankees have had more Hall of Famers than any franchise in baseball history, and this list barely scratches the surface of what this organization has produced. What unites every name on it is a singular ability to rise in October, to perform when the World Series was on the line, and to make pinstripes mean something. That’s the Yankees standard, and these ten men set it higher than anyone.









