SOURCE SPORTS: Yankees’ Jazz Chisholm Jr. Makes Christmas Wedding Proposal To OF Model Ahna Mac

Yankees infielder Jazz Chisholm Jr. made headlines on Christmas Day after proposing to his partner Ahnalys Santiago, known publicly as Ahna Mac, during a trip to Finland beneath the Northern Lights. What should have been a private and celebratory moment immediately became public fodder once Chisholm shared the engagement on social media.

Instead of congratulations, the response online quickly turned hostile. Chisholm was met with trolling from users who repeatedly referred to Santiago as “our girl,” a phrase used sarcastically to imply shared access based on her online subscription content. The comments were not celebratory or supportive. They were dismissive, sexualized, and intended to provoke a reaction.

Chisholm responded directly and emotionally. He denied claims that his fiancée is an OnlyFans creator and attempted to shut down the narrative by confronting users head on. That approach backfired when an X user posted what they claimed was her account, further escalating the situation and keeping the engagement in the algorithm longer than it ever needed to be.

The moment that drew the most attention came in a video Chisholm posted himself. In it, he said that Santiago “scams men on social media” and that the money ends up in his bank account. The comment was meant as a counterpunch to trolls questioning his relationship, but instead it amplified the conversation and shifted the focus away from the proposal and onto his judgment, wording, and decision to keep engaging.

This matters because Jazz Chisholm is not just another athlete posting through the noise. He is one of the Yankees’ most important players and one of the few in franchise history to record a 30 home run 30 stolen base season. In his most recent campaign, he finished with 31 home runs and 31 steals, placing him in rare company and cementing his value as a true power speed threat in the Bronx.

He is also entering the final season of his contract, a year where perception carries real weight. In New York, everything is magnified, and fair or not, off field behavior often becomes part of the conversation surrounding leadership, focus, and maturity. That does not mean Chisholm should accept disrespect or stay silent forever. It does mean that choosing when to disengage can be just as important as choosing when to respond. Also, how the Yankees organization perceives his social media antics will weigh heavily on whether or not he’s back in pinstripes for the 2027 season.

None of this erases Chisholm’s talent or his right to defend the woman he plans to marry. The issue is not loyalty. The issue is exposure. Social media trolls are not looking to be convinced. They are looking for reaction, and every response keeps the cycle alive.

As Chisholm prepares for a pivotal season with championship expectations and long term money on the line, the smartest move forward may be to let the engagement stand on its own and let the baseball speak. He has already proven he belongs among the Yankees elite on the field. The next step is recognizing that not every timeline battle is worth fighting, especially when the stakes are this high.