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Before you know it, baseball will be back in The Bronx.

Starting March 30, Aaron Boone’s reigning AL East champion Yankees return home for Opening Day of the 2023 regular season at Yankee Stadium against the San Francisco Giants.

And all your favorite pinstriped stars like Aaron Judge, Gerrit Cole, Giancarlo Stanton, Anthony Rizzo and DJ LeMahieu are coming back to battle for the team’s first World Series win since 2009.

They’ll get a little help from high-profile newcomer Carlos Rodon and Jose Trevino as well.

With a team made up of so many mega stars, one might think tickets to home games would cost a fortune.

We’re happy to report that you’d be wrong.

Even though the Yankees’ payroll is roughly $270 million after re-signing Aaron Judge, some tickets are incredibly cheap.

In fact, at the time of publication, we found some home game tickets going for as low a s $7 before fees on Vivid Seats.

That’s cheaper than a hot dog at the ballpark.

So, if you want to root for the Bronx Bombers in person for just a few bucks — or shell out a few more shekels to huge Red Sox and Mets matchups — here’s everything you need to know about all 81 upcoming home games.

All prices listed above are subject to fluctuation.

Yankees 2023 home game schedule

A complete calendar including dates, start times, opponents and cheapest tickets available for all Yankees home games can be found below.

March and April

Yankees March & April
home 2023 game dates
Ticket prices
start at
Thursday, March 30 vs. the Giants at 1:05 p.m. $73
Saturday, April 1 vs. the Giants at 4:05 p.m. $31
Sunday, April 2 vs. the Giants at 1:35 p.m. $18
Monday, April 3 vs. the Phillies at 7:05 p.m. $10
Tuesday, April 4 vs. the Phillies at 7:05 p.m. $10
Wednesday, April 5 vs. the Phillies at 1:05 p.m. $7
Thursday, April 13 vs. the Twins at 7:05 p.m. $7
Friday, April 14 vs. the Twins at 7:05 p.m. $12
Saturday, April 15 vs. the Twins at 1:05 p.m. $15
Sunday, April 16 vs. the Twins at 1:35 p.m. $14
Tuesday, April 18 vs. the Angels at 7:05 p.m. $13
Wednesday, April 19 vs. the Angels at 7:05 p.m. $11
Thursday, April 20 vs. the Angles at 4:05 p.m. $9
Friday, April 21 vs. the Blue Jays at 7:05 p.m. $14
Saturday, April 22 vs. the Blue Jays at 1:05 p.m. $16
Sunday, April 23 vs. the Blue Jays at 1:35 p.m. $13

May

Yankees May
home 2023 game dates
Ticket prices
start at
Monday, May 1 vs. the Guardians at 7:05 p.m. $9
Tuesday, May 2 vs. the Guardians at 7:05 p.m. $9
Wednesday, May 3 vs. the Guardians at 7:05 p.m. $9
Monday, May 8 vs. the A’s at 7:05 p.m. $9
Tuesday, May 9 vs. the A’s at 7:05 p.m. $9
Wednesday, May 10 vs. the A’s at 12:35 p.m. $9
Thursday, May 11 vs, the Rays at 7:05 p.m. $9
Friday, May 12 vs, the Rays at 7:05 p.m. $15
Saturday, May 13 vs. the Rays at 1:05 p.m. $14
Sunday, May 14 vs. the Rays at 1:35 p.m. $9
Tuesday, May 23 vs. the Orioles at 7:05 p.m. $9
Wednesday, May 24 vs. the Orioles at 7:05 p.m. $8
Thursday, May 25 vs, the Orioles at 7:05 p.m. $9
Friday, May 26 vs. the Padres at 7:05 p.m. $17
Saturday, May 27 vs. the Padres at 1:05 p.m. $17
Sunday, May 28 vs. the Padres at 1:35 p.m. $20

June

Yankees June
home 2023 game dates
Ticket prices
start at
Tuesday, June 6 vs. the White Sox at 7:05 p.m. $9
Wednesday, June 7 vs. the White Sox at 7:05 p.m. $9
Thursday, June 8 vs. the White Sox at 7:00 p.m. $9
Friday, June 9 vs. the Red Sox at 7:05 p.m. $41
Saturday, June 10 vs. the Red Sox at 7:35 p.m. $52
Sunday, June 11 vs. the Red Sox at 1:35 p.m. $47
Tuesday, June 20 vs. the Mariners at 7:05 p.m. $13
Wednesday, June 21 vs. the Mariners at 7:05 p.m. $12
Thursday, June 22 vs. the Mariners at 7:05 p.m. $12
Friday, June 23 vs .the Rangers at 7:05 p.m. $32
Saturday, June 24 vs .the Rangers at 4:05 p.m. $19
Sunday, June 25 vs .the Rangers at 1:35 p.m. $13

July

Yankees July
home 2023 game dates
Ticket prices
start at
Monday, July 3 vs. the Orioles at 7:05 p.m. $12
Tuesday, July 4 vs. the Orioles at 1:05 p.m. $12
Wednesday, July 5 vs. the Orioles at 7:05 p.m. $11
Thursday, July 6 vs. the Orioles at 7:05 p.m. $14
Friday, July 7 vs. the Cubs at 7:05 p.m. $31
Saturday, July 8 vs. the Cubs at 1:05 p.m. $35
Sunday, July 9 vs. the Cubs at 1:35 p.m. $26
Friday, July 21 vs. the Royals at 7:05 p.m. $21
Saturday, July 22 vs. the Royals at 1:05 p.m. $20
Sunday, July 23 vs. the Royals at 1:35 p.m. $19
Tuesday, July 25 vs. the Mets at 7:05 p.m. $61
Wednesday, July 26 vs. the Mets at 7:05 p.m. $56
Monday, July 31 vs. the Rays at 7:05 p.m. $9

August

Yankees August
home 2023 game dates
Ticket prices
start at
Tuesday, Aug. 1 vs. the Rays at 7:05 p.m. $9
Wednesday, Aug. 2 vs. the Rays at 7:05 p.m. $9
Thursday, Aug. 3 vs. the Astros at 7:15 p.m. $12
Friday, Aug. 4 vs. the Astros at 7:05 p.m. $31
Saturday, Aug. 5 vs. the Astros at 1:05 p.m. $24
Sunday, Aug. 6 vs. the Astros at 1:35 p.m. $16
Friday, Aug. 18 vs. the Red Sox at 7:05 p.m. $47
Saturday, Aug. 19 vs. the Red Sox at 1:05 p.m. $58
Sunday, Aug. 20 vs. the Red Sox at 1:35 p.m. $41
Tuesday, Aug. 22 vs. the Nationals at 7:05 p.m. $11
Wednesday, Aug. 23 vs. the Nationals at 7:05 p.m. $11
Thursday, Aug. 24 vs. the Nationals at 1:05 p.m. $10

September

Yankees September
home 2023 game dates
Ticket prices
start at
Tuesday, Sept. 5 vs. the Tigers at 7:05 p.m. $10
Wednesday, Sept. 6 vs. the Tigers at 7:05 p.m. $9
Thursday, Sept. 7 vs. the Tigers at 7:05 p.m. $10
Friday, Sept. 8 vs. the Brewers at 7:05 p.m. $10
Saturday, Sept. 9 vs. the Brewers at 2:05 p.m. $20
Sunday, Sept. 10 vs. the Brewers at 1:35 p.m. $11
Tuesday, Sept. 19 vs. the Blue Jays at 7:05 p.m. $9
Wednesday, Sept. 20 vs. the Blue Jays at 7:05 p.m. $9
Thursday, Sept. 21 vs. the Blue Jays at 7:05 p.m. $10
Friday, Sept. 22 vs. the Diamondbacks at 7:05 p.m. $9
Saturday, Sept. 23 vs. the Diamondbacks at 1:05 p.m. $16
Sunday, Sept. 24 vs. the Diamondbacks at 1:35 p.m. $14

A complete calendar of all away games — including a pair of Subway Series contests against the Mets at Flushing’s Citi Field — can be found here.

(Note: The New York Post confirmed all above prices at the publication time. All prices are subject to fluctuation and include additional fees at checkout.)

Vivid Seats is a verified secondary market ticketing platform, and prices may be higher or lower than face value, depending on demand. 

They offer a 100% buyer guarantee that states your transaction will be safe and secure and your tickets will be delivered prior to the event.


How to watch Yankees games in 2023

If you can’t make it out to The Bronx this season, no need to catastrophize.

You can still catch all games on the YES Network via DirecTV.

For those outside of the Yankees home market, we recommend watching via MLB.tv.

Yankees news

The Yankees are just a few days deep into Spring Training and surprising storylines are already emerging about the squad.

For quick hit briefs on perfect innings, a non-roster invitee fighting for a roster spot and no-doubt grand slams, check out the NY Post’s New York Yankees coverage here.

Huge concert tours in 2023

We’re just as excited about all the live music coming to NYC this year as we are the Yankees.

Here are just five of the biggest acts we can’t wait to see live in the next few months.

• Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band

• Blink 182

• Metallica

• Chris Stapleton

• Wu-Tang Clan with Nas

Want to see who else is out there? Check out our list of the 52 biggest concert tours in 2023 here.

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Original Source

David Cone on where Yankees stand heading into spring training

David Cone is not sure whether the Yankees have finally closed the gap on the Astros. He has lauded general manager Brian Cashman’s offseason moves, but he thinks there is probably still more work to do.

“Maybe a trade or two, even by the trade deadline, will change the roster a little bit here or there,” Cone, the YES Network broadcaster, said Saturday. “I don’t think Cash is done yet.”

Cone, a standout starter for both the Yankees and Mets during a 17-season MLB career, said getting Aaron Judge back “was huge.” The Yankees also re-signed Anthony Rizzo, and landed free agents Carlos Rodon and Tommy Kahnle.

Rodon, an All-Star the past two seasons, could be the pitcher who puts the Yankees over the top after their dream ended again last season at Houston’s hands.


David Cone
Stephen Yang

“He is a power left-hander, and they’re few and far between,” Cone said at a “Pinstripe Pride” event at American Dream in East Rutherford, N.J., at which many around the club signed autographs. “[It’s rare] you find those types of pitchers with that kind of stuff. When he’s on, he can literally dominate a game. Take the ball out of play, get a lot of strikeouts, almost win the game by himself when he’s on.”

Rodon, who pitched to a 2.88 ERA with the Giants last season, has blown away hitters predominantly by repeatedly throwing a nasty fastball and slider, rarely mixing in a curveball and changeup.

Is such a limited repertoire sustainable?

“Over the long haul, probably not,” Cone said. “Right now it’s good. … He can throw some other pitches, too, and that’s where [pitching coach] Matt Blake comes in.”

As Cone looked around the Yankees’ roster, he said he is particularly interested in how the shortstop position will shake up. A couple of top prospects will be competing with incumbent Isiah Kiner-Falefa.

“When does Anthony Volpe show up? Is Oswald Peraza ready?” Cone said. “I think it’s time to find out about the young guys and whether they’re ready or not.”

The Yankees’ pitchers and catchers will report for spring training in Tampa on Feb. 15.

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Original Source

Yankees offseason scenarios if Aaron Judge stays or leaves

Here in this little sliver of the world we are not a hostage to format. This might be 3Up, but I think there are four big-picture ways this offseason can play out for the Yankees:

1. They re-sign Aaron Judge, and then keep spending big to join the Dodgers and Mets with near-$300 million payrolls.

2. They re-sign Judge, and are relatively more frugal afterward, settling in with a payroll more in the $260 million-$270 million range.

3. They don’t re-sign Judge, and they compensate by making lavish additions elsewhere.

4. They don’t re-sign Judge, and they attempt to reset their tax situation by going under the first threshold of $233 million.

Before we do a dive into each scenario, first let’s cover items that will be universal for each:

The Yankees will work hard to get rid of the $29 million ($21 million next season and $8 million due on the buyout of a 2024 option) owed Josh Donaldson and the three years at $30.5 million (plus another $1 million in an assignment bonus if there is a trade) owed Aaron Hicks.

This will not be easy. The duo (with the assignment bonus) is due a combined $60.5 million. I floated the idea at the GM meetings to a Nationals official of taking those two plus a prospect (more on this in a bit) for Patrick Corbin, who is owed $59 million over the next two years. The rebuilding Nats would get a prospect for the trouble of basically washing money while the Yankees would occupy just one 40-man roster spot with Corbin rather than two with Donaldson/Hicks. They then can hope with their pitching lab work to revive Corbin, who has been one of the majors’ worst pitchers the past three seasons, into a back-end starter or useful reliever. The Nats official essentially told me he wouldn’t put Donaldson on his roster.

Josh Donaldson’s lackluster year at the plate, big contract and big personality make him difficult to trade.
Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

The problem with moving Donaldson — beyond that he turns 37 next month and his offense went considerably south — is his prickly reputation precedes him. Most clubs are not going to want anything to do with him, even if the Yankees take back bad money and/or sprinkle a prospect into the trade to make absorbing Donaldson’s deal easier. Remember, the Yankees wanted access to Isiah Kiner-Falefa and Ben Rortvedt last year, and the price for doing that was to take on the two onerous years left on Donaldson’s contract plus his baggage.

The Yankees could talk themselves into the idea that Donaldson’s defense at third and occasional power is enough to bring him back next year. I would love to see what a secret ballot of his teammates and coaches would say about that.

No player is untradeable, but some are close. So Hal Steinbrenner might have to decide whether he sees Donaldson as a sunk cost and simply move on. You might notice the Cubs just released Jason Heyward with $22 million left — and he has a reputation as a great guy.

The Mets, in early May last year, released Robinson Cano with most of two years left on his contract. It has been generally reported the Mariners were paying $3.75 million in each of the five seasons that were left on Cano’s deal when he was traded to the Mets. But Seattle actually doubled up on those payouts in Cano’s first Mets season, so as not to owe anything in 2023. Thus, besides paying most of the $20.25 million they owed Cano last year, the Mets are on the hook for $24 million for him this year — unless it is offset by the probably minimum salary if he hooks on elsewhere. Cano’s cost toward the luxury-tax payroll remains the same, though, at $20.25 million for the Mets in 2023.

The White Sox, with pitchers Lance Lynn (above), Lucas Giolito and Aaron Bummer, might match up as trade partners for the Yankees.
Getty Images

That is an involved way of saying the Mets are going to pay about $11 million more in all to rid Cano from their roster than the Yankees would have to pay to do the same with Donaldson. It is not impossible the Yankees find a trade for Donaldson in which they offset his money in some way. But if they don’t …

The need to move Hicks is not as desperate. If he were the fourth outfielder, it would just be an expensive luxury. His presence is more about bad mojo that the Yankees don’t need. It became clear that Hicks’ performance got even worse when the fans turned on him completely in 2022.

Arizona’s Madison Bumgarner has two years at $37 million left. But he has a five-team no-trade provision, and everything from his history would suggest he has no desire to play in New York. Plus, word from inside the Diamondbacks is that even as Bumgarner’s effectiveness has waned from his elite heyday, he has been resistant to modern/analytic advancements — which would also make him a bad New York fit.

Would a team such as the White Sox take on Hicks for, say, Lance Lynn (owed $19.5 million) if they also could get their hands on a young pitcher such as Clarke Schmidt? Would a team such as the A’s, who have no major league contracts signed yet for 2023, much less 2024, take on at least part of the Hicks deal if they also could get their hands on some prospects?

The Yankees at this point will be very open to seeing if there is any lingering interest in Albert Abreu, Deivi Garcia and/or Luis Gil as part of an enticement.

Luis Gil, who likely will miss all of next season after undergoing Tommy John surgery, is part of a crop of pitching prospects who have limited futures with the Yankees.
Bill Kostroun

Those three pitchers have basically no future with the Yankees. All three are out of options. Gil, who had Tommy John surgery and will likely miss all of next season, can be put on the 60-day injured list, where he would not count toward the 40-man roster. But in 2024, he would have to be all the way back to stick with the Yankees all year or be potentially lost on waivers. That is true for Abreu and Garcia in 2023. Does anyone believe either will make it through the whole season with the Yankees’ major league team next year?

Keep in mind that roster spots are precious. With both Gil and Scott Effross expected to take up 40-man spots all offseason even though neither is likely to pitch next year, the Yankees are essentially operating with a 38-man roster this winter. So some cleansing is going to have to be done. Garcia has probably lost all of his prospect shine. Abreu has shown the kind of erratic talent and lack of control that is true about many arms in pro ball. And Gil, who probably is the most attractive of the group, is recovering from major surgery. Would a rebuilding team see the value of rehabbing him in 2023 to see whether they can have a talented 25-year-old with years of control beginning in 2024?

There’s another item that I think will be true no matter which way the Yankees go: the possibility of trading Gleyber Torres and/or Kiner-Falefa. I think it would be more surprising if both were back next year than if both were gone — and I would be shocked if at least one was not moved. The Yankees let executives at the GM meetings know they were open for business with their middle infielders.

At last year’s trade deadline, the Yanks turned down the Marlins’ ask of Torres and Oswald Peraza for Pablo Lopez and Miguel Rojas. Some form of that proposed deal can be rebuilt. The Mariners have interest in Torres and have bullpen arms that should interest the Yankees even after using Erik Swanson to land another mid-order righty bat from Toronto in Teoscar Hernandez.

Here is my totally made up trade: Torres and Schmidt to the White Sox for Lucas Giolito and Aaron Bummer. Torres and Giolito are roughly a 2023 salary wash, but Chicago gets two years of control with Torres versus having Giolito in his walk year. Schmidt would replace Giolito in the White Sox rotation with five years of club control. Giolito had a down 2022, but did so for a dysfunctional team with a poor defense. He had an ugly confrontation with Donaldson in the past — uglier than the one that Gerrit Cole and Donaldson patched up — so that would have to be considered if the Yankees don’t move Donaldson. Bummer is owed at least $10.5 million over the next two seasons, and, at his healthiest best, is a bit of Zack Britton 2.0 — a lefty with a menacing sinker.

The Yankees made it known at the recent GM meetings that they’re willing to listen to offers for Isiah Kiner-Falefa and Gleyber Torres.
Getty Images

As for Kiner-Falefa, MLB Trade Rumors has him pegged to make $6.5 million in 2023 via the arbitration process. I can’t imagine the Yankees would want to pay that much to a backup infielder — and if Kiner-Falefa is anything more than a reserve, that would be accentuating a 2022 mistake. Teams have to add 2023 contracts to their 40-man personnel by Friday. That is the first hurdle: Will Kiner-Falefa be tendered a contract? I would think so.

One last move I think is true in all offseason scenarios: The Yankees try to secure a lefty-hitting left fielder with retaining Andrew Benintendi perhaps the first priority and Japanese star Masataka Yoshida a possibility if the Yankees think he can handle the defensive assignment in their spacious home left field.

OK, let’s get to the Judge scenarios:   

1. Judge stays and the Yankees keep spending. I think if this plays out, it does so in one of two ways: They also make a big play for a starter such as Justin Verlander, or they make a big play for a shortstop such as Carlos Correa or Trea Turner and then use Peraza as a trade chip to upgrade elsewhere, likely in pitching. Anthony Volpe would move to second base and DJ LeMahieu would become the regular third baseman, which is what he should be next year in all scenarios.

When I envision Verlander and the Yankees, I think about Randy Johnson and the Yankees. Johnson and the Yankees kept circling each other, and by the time he joined, it was the lefty’s age-42 season and the Yankees got a pale version of Johnson (and one who clearly hated playing here). Verlander and the Yankees have circled each other a few times. He pitches at the age of 40 next year, though he just won the AL Cy Young at 39.

If not Verlander, Carlos Rodon and Jacob deGrom are also atop the free-agent starting pitching market. Does deGrom even want to play in New York, especially if it is not for the Mets? Is Rodon just too much of a health risk?

The Yankees and Justin Verlander have been linked as potential partners in the past, but would it make sense for the Yankees to invest heavily in the soon-to-be 40-year-old star?
Getty Images

The Yanks can play big in the shortstop market, but this will only worsen how bad their decision-making from last offseason looks. They decided not to pursue anyone in an elite free-agent shortstop class because their intention was to use the money to re-sign Judge and they believed Peraza and Volpe were close to the majors.

Now Peraza and Volpe are probably ready, and in this scenario, Judge is signed. If the Yankees invested $300 million-ish in a shortstop now, would it scream that they should have done it a year ago and greatly improved their chances of winning the 2022 title?

2. The Yankees re-sign Judge and are more deliberate elsewhere. They already have retained Anthony Rizzo for two years at $40 million. I think ideally they would like their 2023 infield to be Rizzo at first, Volpe at second, Peraza at short, LeMahieu at third and Oswaldo Cabrera moving all about. The minimum-salary-range deals for Volpe, Peraza and Cabrera would be somewhat of a balance for re-signing Judge, as would moving as much as possible of the money owed to Donaldson and/or Hicks, plus Torres and/or Kiner-Falefa.

Two rookies in the middle infield, plus Cabrera as the rover, is a lot of risk with inexperience for a team trying to win next year. Perhaps the Yankees retain Torres to begin the season at second, start Volpe at Triple-A, and if he earns his way up, they try to revive Torres trade talks during the season.

But keep in mind that new rules might favor the young infield. There is a ban on extreme shifts next year, so middle infielders will need to be rangier. Peraza and Volpe almost certainly have that over Kiner-Falefa and Torres. Also, bigger bases and restrictions on pickoff throws are expected to promote base stealing, as those rules did in the minors last year. Peraza and Volpe were 77 out of 90 in stolen-base tries in 2022 at various levels. Could they provide energy, defense and a different scoring avenue for the 2023 Yankees?

Oswald Peraza’s solid defense and speed on the bases will take on greater import in 2023 as new rules banning the shift and making bases larger go into effect.
Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

3. The Yankees lose Judge and splurge to replace him. This would have a lot of overtones of the 2013-14 offseason. Cano was their best player and their best homegrown player since Derek Jeter. But the Yankees thought it was too risky to invest so heavily in one player well into his 30s. They had thoughts about trying to go under the luxury-tax threshold, especially with Andy Pettitte and Mariano Rivera retiring and Alex Rodriguez being suspended for the season.

When Cano signed with the Mariners, however, there was a huge blowback against Hal Steinbrenner that he was not willing to invest like his father. He responded by guaranteeing $458 million to Carlos Beltran, Jacoby Ellsbury, Brian McCann and Masahiro Tanaka.

Judge is the Yankees’ best player and their best homegrown player since Jeter. Their concern about investing in Judge into his late 30s tempered their extension offer last spring. They could counter and go under the tax in 2023. But if Steinbrenner thought the noise was loud about Cano, just wait for what he hears if Judge gets away.

At that point, they could try to redirect dollars and anger by signing, say, Verlander and Turner plus importing Yoshida. How badly do the Angels want to get out of the eight years at $283.6 million left on Mike Trout? Is he an asset to the sale of the Angels or is that contract deep into his baseball senior citizenry a detriment? Would he accept a trade out of Anaheim? Would Giancarlo Stanton (owed $130 million the next five years by the Yankees) accept a trade to his native Southern California? That is $150 million in savings for the Angels plus perhaps a prospect or two. OK, it is all a pipe dream.

The question the Yankees will have to ask: Is the cost to replace Judge worse than simply paying Judge what he wants, especially considering that Judge has demonstrated he can flourish in New York and the Yankees always have to worry when they dabble outside their walls if they are signing the next Ellsbury?

Aaron Judge’s ability to perform in front of intense Yankee Stadium crowds is not a skill every star possesses.
Getty Images

4. Judge leaves and the Yankees go frugal. Let’s create a pretend number here to sign Judge. Let’s say it’s in the range of eight years at $304 million to nine years at $342 million — $38 million per season. Are the Yankees better for the extent of those years signing Judge or not signing Judge?

In the short term, they are probably better with Judge. He is a great, New York-tested player. But 62 homers has created an amnesia about his age and past health issues that helps him in this market. Let’s try these questions: Do you think Judge is likely to play as well in any future season as he did in his walk year? Do you think he is more likely to play better for the next six years than the six years he just played — and now add on two or three more future years in a contract?

Steinbrenner is committed to keeping Judge. But if he didn’t, there would be logical reasons to let him go beyond Steinbrenner being cheap. If the best strategy is to do what your smartest opponents hope you don’t do, then I would ask this question, too: Do you think the Rays want the Yankees to retain Judge or not? I bet they hope the Yankees pay him a ton. A club such as Tampa Bay needs scenarios in which the Yankees spend poorly to open an avenue to beat them. And watching Judge and Stanton age into a battle for DH at-bats would be ideal for the Rays.

So if the Yankees let Judge go, would it then be wise to counter by not spending a ton of money, especially long-term money? What would that look like? They still would have Rizzo and Stanton. They could keep Torres. They would not suddenly be a team without power, especially if youngsters such as Cabrera, Peraza and Volpe deliver 15-20 homers each. They can use the year to find out about those three youngsters, and perhaps put Schmidt into the rotation to learn whether he can be a full-repertoire starter if they stop forcing him to be just a slider-monster reliever. They will see whether outfielders Jasson Dominguez and Everson Pereira and lefty-hitting catcher Austin Wells can make it to the majors — or if they improve or worsen their prospect standing.

Should Judge decide to leave in free agency, Anthony Rizzo and Giancarlo Stanton still would bring power bats to a less experienced lineup.
Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

In the best case, that is still an 85-plus win team that can augment at the July trade deadline. And the Phillies just showed it is about getting into the tournament healthy and getting hot at the right time.

Either way, if it succeeds or fails, the Yankees will have learned a lot about themselves, and can then try for Shohei Ohtani in free agency next offseason and/or Juan Soto in the one after that.

This is the scenario I believe is the least likely to occur because I do think Steinbrenner will do everything to sign Judge and will not just go mild if he fails there. But if the Yankees do not retain Judge, this scenario should not be simply dismissed. It arguably could leave the Yankees in a better place for the long-term future.

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Original Source

Brian Cashman in contact with Aaron Judge

Yankees GM Brian Cashman said he’s in contact with superstar outfielder Aaron Judge’s agent, Page Odle, and reiterated Judge remains their top priority. Responding to a comment by one person who’d spoken recently to the Yankees camp and suggested they didn’t seem overly confident or interested in re-signing Judge, Cashman said, “Whoever said that, I’d drug test him.”

Cashman added, however, that he has no feeling regarding their chances, and no knowledge about who else is targeting Judge. He also said he hasn’t sought or been given the advantage of having the final shot at Judge.

The one team known to be in the Judge market is San Francisco, and to that end Giants baseball president Farhan Zaidi suggested they have the wherewithal to make big moves.

“From a financial standpoint, there’s nobody that would be out of our capability,” he said.

The Giants were disappointed to go from an MLB-high 107 victories in 2021 to a .500 team last season, and they are in contact with multiple free agents. Though they have Brandon Crawford, whom Zaidi called “the best shortstop in franchise history,” he has been talking to the top shortstops on the market and has the idea one or more of them might be willing to move to second base.

The Yankees remain committed to signing Aaron Judge, but will have some West Coast competition.
Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

Jacob deGrom has let the Rangers know he is interested in them (as well as presumably the Mets and perhaps others), but Carlos Rodon may be a better fit for Texas ultimately.

The Rangers likely are still a year or two away from contending, and Rodon at 30 may work better than deGrom at 34. Rodon will have a bigger market — since deGrom is expected to seek $40 million plus, which will limit his field. Texas is expected to pursue all the best starters, and will likely sign multiple starters even after acquiring Jake Odorizzi in trade. Rangers baseball president Chris Young suggested they are considering all viable starters, including the top guys.

The Rangers showed they are a serious player by spending $500 million on a double-play combination last winter.


The Angels are not trading two-way superstar Shohei Ohtani, but they also will not attempt to lock him up. That will be left to the new owner. The Angels are believed to have very little player flexibility. They are seeking a shortstop, but not one of the top four (or four tops if you prefer). … Folks expect the Cubs to be serious players for a shortstop this winter. They are four great ones on the market. They could move Nico Hoerner to 2B. The Phillies will also look at the top of the shortstop market. They could move Bryson Stott to second.


The White Sox are planning to move Andrew Vaughn to his natural position of first base. Though they are leaving the door open to longtime star Jose Abreu, the likelihood seems to be that he will go to a new team.

Teams are calling on Lucas Giolito, but the White Sox feel no pressure to move him after his off 2022 season.

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Pujols left Cardinals, so Judge could leave Yankees

PHILADELPHIA — Harrison Bader has only played alongside Aaron Judge for a few weeks, but he would like to remain in the Yankees outfield with the AL home run king.

But Bader also spent the first half of this season with Albert Pujols in St. Louis, so he knows what happened when Pujols hit free agency in 2011 after 11 seasons with the Cardinals and signed with the Angels.

“Listen, if Albert Pujols … can [leave], anybody could [leave],’’ Bader said Tuesday.

Judge is coming off a historic season in which he broke Roger Maris’ 61-year-old American League record by hitting 62 homers and is almost certain to win his first AL MVP award. When Pujols left St. Louis he had an even more illustrious résumé: He had won the National League MVP three times and had finished in the top five in voting in 10 different seasons.

Still, he left for a 10-year, $254 million deal from the Angels, and Pujols spent the next decade with them before he was released in May 2021 and signed with the Dodgers. He returned to the Cardinals prior to this season, which proved to be his last in the majors.

Aaron Judge and Harrison Bader
Getty Images

“It’s a business,’’ said Bader, who was traded from the Cardinals to the Yankees in exchange for left-hander Jordan Montgomery at the deadline in August. “I learned that very quickly this year. There are no hard feelings at all. It’s never personal. It’s about the game. Selfishly, I’d love to continue to be [Judge’s] teammate. He’s an incredible talent.”

Judge turned down the Yankees’ seven-year, $213.5 million extension on Opening Day, betting on himself in his final season of arbitration before hitting the open market for the first time.

He responded with a season for the ages and now is set to cash in, with the expectation of at least an eight-year deal worth more than $300 million.

“[Judge] earned everything that’s coming his way,’’ said Bader, who was at Citizens Bank Park, appearing on MLB Network before the Phillies’ 7-0 Game 3 win over the Astros. “I wish him the absolute best wherever he ends up. It’s a decision he and his family will make. … I’m looking forward to see how it shakes out.”

So is the rest of the baseball world.

The Yankees are still considered the favorites to retain Judge, the team’s first-round pick from 2013, who nearly won his first MVP in 2017, when he set a rookie record with 52 homers.

Following the loss in the 2021 wild-card game at Fenway Park, Judge said: “I want to be a Yankee for life. I want to wear the pinstripes for the rest of my career.’’

But he raised some eyebrows by referring to the Yankees in the past tense following their sweep by the Astros in the ALCS.

“Getting the chance to wear the pinstripes and play right field at Yankee Stadium, that’s an incredible honor that I definitely didn’t take for granted at any point,’’ Judge said last month. “Very few individuals get a chance to do that … and play in front of the fans for my whole six years here. It was a special time. I just kick myself for not bringing home that championship.”

Manager Aaron Boone said what many fans were thinking: “Hopefully we’ll see him for years to come in pinstripes. I don’t even want to think about the alternative right now. He means a lot to a lot of us in that room.”

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Yankees swept by Astros in ALCS as costly error dooms Game 4

In the end, the Yankees didn’t slay the dragon. 

Instead, the Astros chewed them up and spit them out, completing a four-game sweep in the ALCS with a 6-5 win on Sunday night in The Bronx, as the Yankees saw another season end without a World Series appearance. 

And for the third time in six years, the Astros ended the Yankees’ season in the ALCS. 

“They beat us, and we end up second in the American League,’’ Aaron Boone said. “We’ve got to keep working to get better.” 

On a chilly night at the Stadium, which wasn’t sold out, the Yankees wasted an early three-run lead, saw Nestor Cortes leave in the third inning with a groin injury and watched Gleyber Torres make a key error in the seventh that led to a pair of runs, as the Astros took the lead for good on Alex Bregman’s one-out, run-scoring single off Clay Holmes. 

Gleyber Torres and the Yankees were swept but the Astros in the ALCS.
Charles Wenzelberg

It ended with Aaron Judge, in perhaps his final at-bat as a Yankee, ending his miserable postseason with a grounder back to Ryan Pressly for the final out. 

“If we’re not the last team standing, it doesn’t matter what you do or what happened,” Judge said. “It’s a failure. We came up short.” 

Judge said he had yet to think about his free-agent future. 

Alex Bregman drives in the winning run for the Astros.
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg

Boone added, “I don’t even want to think about” the team without Judge. 

The Yankees didn’t get a hit after Harrison Bader’s sixth-inning homer that gave them a 5-4 lead. 

The loss came to an Astros team that has eliminated the Yankees in all four of their playoff meetings. 

And it came after Boone said after the Yankees were swept in a doubleheader in Houston on July 21 that it would all come down to what happened in the playoffs. 

“Ultimately, we may have to slay the dragon, right?” Boone said. “If it comes to it in October, the proof will be in the pudding. Do we get it done?” 

They got their answer Sunday. 

“They beat us in every facet,’’ Gerrit Cole said. “I watched the series and didn’t really see an area where we played better than them.” 

Boone and Co. were left pondering what would have happened if DJ LeMahieu and Andrew Benintendi were healthy, but it’s clear the Yankees are rattled by their inability to beat Houston. 

“That’s a good question for all of us this offseason,’’ LeMahieu said of closing the gap on Houston. “They’re really good.” 

Now, the Yankees must face an offseason in which the future of Judge is unclear, with the right fielder potentially headed to free agency for the first time, as well as general manager Brian Cashman having his contract expire. 

Aaron Judge walks off the field after making the last out of the ALCS on Sunday.
Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

The Yankees had hoped to extend the series and seemed set up to do so, at least for one more game. 

After Cortes pitched a scoreless first, the Yankees took a rare lead in the bottom half. 

Bader’s torrid postseason continued when he led off with a single. 

Anthony Rizzo was hit by a pitch by Lance McCullers Jr. and Giancarlo Stanton put the Yankees ahead with a single to right-center, as they snapped a 14-inning scoreless streak. 

Torres came up with runners on the corner and blooped a single to center to drive in Rizzo to make it 2-0. 

Isiah Kiner-Falefa led off the second with a double down the right-field line. With two outs, Rizzo poked an opposite-field double to left to drive in Kiner-Falefa and make it 3-0. 

Cortes, however, lacked his typical command and went to three ball counts on five of the first nine batters. 

With Cortes’ velocity down in the third and Jose Altuve at the plate following a leadoff walk to Martin Maldonado, Boone went to the mound with trainer Tim Lentych. 

The Astros are headed to the World Series.
Robert Sabo

Cortes remained in the game and walked Altuve. 

Jeremy Peña then hammered a three-run shot to left to tie the game at 3-3. 

Boone went back to the mound with Lentych and Cortes left with a groin injury, replaced by Wandy Peralta. 

Peralta immediately gave up a double to Yordan Alvarez. 

Yuli Gurriel’s chopper through the right side of the infield left vacant by the shift went for an RBI single to give the Astros a 4-3 lead. 

A Rizzo RBI single in the fourth tied the game again. 

Bader gave the Yankees another lead in the sixth with a two-out solo homer off Hector Neris. It was Bader’s fifth home run of the postseason. 

Jonathan Loaisiga cruised through 2 ¹/₃ innings before Altuve reached on an infield hit with one out in the seventh. 

Altuve moved to second after Peña grounded to second and Torres rushed his toss to Kiner-Falefa at second for an error on what could have been an inning-ending double play. 

With runners on first and second, Alvarez singled to right to knock in Altuve and tie the game, knocking out Loaisiga. 

Holmes entered and gave up a flare single to Bregman to put Houston ahead, 6-5. 

The Astros will head to the World Series for the fourth time in seven years and will face the Phillies.

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Yankees offense flopping at worst possible time

HOUSTON — The Bronx Bombers didn’t live up to their name, and that includes the newly christened Bronxville Bomber, Harrison Bader himself. For the first time in 24 postseason games, the Yankees didn’t hit a home run, which is a likely recipe for defeat in Houston’s house of horrors.

They don’t love Minute Maid Park under normal conditions — and they missed their main weapon in Game 2 of the ALCS. Their mojo is in their muscles.

The Yankees without a home run are Christmas without Santa Claus.

Like the Patriots without Tom Brady.

Like nails without a hammer.

They are incomplete, at best. And very likely lost.

The Yankees haven’t won here all season, and it’s hard to imagine them doing it without hitting even one measly home run. They came close when certain AL MVP Aaron Judge hit one to the wall in the eighth inning. But close is all they ever seem to do against these annoying Astros, who went up two games to none in this ALCS with the 3-2 victory Thursday night.

Let’s face it. While the Yankees posted the second-highest run total in the majors this season, they are heavily dependent on the long ball. If they don’t have it, they may not have much. The Yankees were a rare major league team to score more than half their runs on homers — it was 50.8 percent of their runs to be exact — and if they don’t go deep, they may be in deep.

Aaron Judge’s long drive was caught by Kyle Tucker at the wall in the eighth inning of the Yankees’ 3-2 ALCS Game 2 loss to the Astros.
Getty Images; USA TODAY Sports

Perhaps things will get better when they get back to Yankee Stadium, where they are a different team. They also won’t have to face all-time great Justin Verlander or All-Star Framber Valdez in either of the next two games.

To be fair, this was as tough a draw as possible. Houston had its pitching set up the way it wanted. Verlander is one of the greatest pitchers ever and he was having one of his better games in the ALCS opener. The Astros have about a 2.00 ERA for these playoffs, they are the only team yet to lose and they look like prohibitive favorites to run the table.

In an effort to jump-start things, manager Aaron Boone is making changes almost daily. Part of it is about the injuries, the locale and left versus right considerations. But there are enough alterations that it smacks partly of desperation.

Josh Donaldson walks to the dugout after striking out in the fourth inning of the Yankees’ Game 2 loss.
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg

Boone promoted Bronxville’s own Bader, the sudden slugging star, into the leadoff spot for Game 2, and Bader acted surprised about the move on the pregame show when Lauren Shehadi of TBS asked him about the switch. Either he didn’t know, or he’s as fine an actor as he is a hitter.

While Bader contributed one of four Yankees hits and a walk, it didn’t quite do the trick. The Yankees had three singles and a double total against Valdez and a couple Astros relievers. The offensive highlight was a 50-foot grounder by Giancarlo Stanton that Valdez turned into a mess.

Judge had one of the other hits, but it was also a single, which started the two-run fourth inning that accounted for all the offense. Stanton, one of the better postseason performers in recent seasons, then hit the fairly soft grounder back to Valdez that sufficed as the Yankees’ best moment of the night.

Kyle HIgashioka heads back to the dugout after striking out in the seventh inning of the Yankees’ loss.
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg

Although Stanton appears to be playing at about three-quarters speed, presumably the result of one of many foot injuries that have ailed the Yankees, Valdez panicked, turning a certain out (and maybe two) into a second-and-third situation. Anthony Rizzo followed with a run-scoring groundout and Gleyber Torres with a run-scoring ground single through the left side.

Unfortunately, that rally was all there was to write home about from an offensive standpoint. The good thing is they get to go home now, where they actually won a couple games against the Astros this season. They are now 0-5 here.

To win this series, of course, not only will the Yankees have to turn things around at home, they will eventually have to win at Minute Maid Park, where homers are indeed possible, especially into the Crawford Boxes in left field. Astros star Alex Bregman deposited the three-run shot there that became the defining moment of the game.

In the middle of the Yankees offensive ineptitude, Astros fans began chanting, “Yankees s—,” as if they were impersonating the Fenway faithful. There seems to be some surprising anger here at the team that keeps losing to their boys. If anything, you’d think they’d show some gratitude.

The Yankees continue to strike out a lot, too. After whiffing 17 times in Game 1, they fanned 13 more times. The team that eliminated the Yankees in 2015, 2017 and 2019 is threatening to do it again. The Yankees better start remembering who they are. Saturday back at the Stadium is the place to start.

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Aaron Judge’s dream Yankees season shouldn’t be forgotten

It has become increasingly difficult to imagine a 2023 baseball season with Aaron Judge playing for a team other than the Yankees. As he proved Wednesday night in Toronto, Judge is a sucker for tradition and for connections with titans of the past.

Of course, no franchise packages and sells that brand of tradition and those cross-generational bridges like the one that currently employs the incomparable No. 99.

“That’s one thing so special about the Yankees organization,” Judge said, “is all the guys that came before us and kind of paved the way and played the game the right way.”

Look at how Judge interacted with Roger Maris Jr. after the historic 8-3 victory, and listen to how he spoke of Roger Maris Sr. and the fulfilled quest “to be enshrined with him forever” after tying his American League single-season record with homer No. 61. The slugger and the Yankees are so much better together than they would be apart, and it seems inconceivable that Hal Steinbrenner, the steward of a $7 billion empire, wouldn’t pay whatever it took in free agency to keep the game’s best player in The Bronx.

But Judge didn’t grow up in Linden, Calif., dreaming of playing for the Yankees, the way the New Jersey-born and Michigan-raised Derek Jeter did. And if Tom Brady can leave the Patriots — once an unfathomable scenario — then any superstar can leave any team in any sport.

A smiling Aaron Judge is congratulated by Yankees teammates after he hit his 61st homer to tie Roger Maris’ AL record.
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg

So if the improbable does happen and Judge signs a long-term deal for north of $300 million with the Giants or another big-game hunter, he would have earned a free pass to that next phase of his career. He would have left behind a parting gift valuable enough to millions on the receiving end to ensure that his passage to the next club is absent any real fan-base animus.

The 2022 season is that gift. When factoring in the bigger, stronger, faster realities of the modern athlete, it can be argued that Judge played baseball at a higher level this year than any Yankee ever has. If you lined up Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Joe DiMaggio and Mickey Mantle next to the big man, they’d all look like Phil Rizzuto. At 6-foot-7 and 282 pounds, Judge is Wilt Chamberlain scoring 100 points against the 1962 Knicks — night after night after night.

He has made a brutally difficult game look relatively easy. Nobody has ever won the Triple Crown by hitting more than 52 home runs, and now Judge has a chance to win it by hitting more than 62, while batting at least 70 points higher than the league average, .243, the lowest it’s been in more than 50 years.

Comparing eras is always a tough proposition, especially when measuring teams and players from before and after the game’s integration. Ruth and Gehrig regularly put up ridiculous numbers in their primes. The Babe is the only player to ever post a single-season WAR of more than 12.5, and he did it three times, including a 14.2; and the Iron Horse won the 1934 Triple Crown (.363, 49 HRs, 166 RBIs).

Aaron Judge watches his 61s homer leave the yard during the Yankees’ win over the Blue Jays.
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg

DiMaggio delivered his epic 56-game hitting streak in 1941, and Mantle won the Triple Crown 15 years later (.353, 52 HRs, 130 RBIs). The 30-year-old Judge might not match their feats over the long haul, but this franchise has always separated the men from the boys with one stat — the home run — and Judge has more of them in a year than any Yankee other than the late Roger Maris, who could lose his share of the record before the season ends.

Maris wasn’t nearly as dominant in 1961, when he finished the season 92 points behind batting champ Norm Cash and didn’t land in the top 10 in WAR. Maris showed a lion’s heart when toppling the Babe that year against the wishes of nearly everyone involved, but he wasn’t the 2022 Aaron Judge, who has 23 more homers than the next guy on the American League list (Mike Trout) and leads the sport in just about everything — WAR, OBP, OPS, runs, extra-base hits, total bases, you name it.


Everything to know about Aaron Judge and his chase for the home run record:


And soon, Judge will be paid accordingly. Before the season, the Yankees made him a contract offer (seven years, $213.5 million) best described as reasonable, but underwhelming. For a guy who insists he wasn’t betting on himself, Judge took a helluva bet on himself, and ran the table for the better part of six months.

It was a staggering performance at a time when seemingly half the league is batting .229, so you almost felt as if you were defacing Judge’s work of art when bringing up his pending free agency. But given that the situation isn’t going away until the slugger calls his shot, this much needs to be said:

World Series title or no World Series title, Judge has given Yankees fans a magical ride and eternal memories. That shouldn’t be forgotten if he makes a different kind of history this offseason — the contractual kind — and decides to go swing his heavy lumber for someone else.

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Aaron Judge’s 61st home run caps his year of owning MLB

When someone writes the story of the 2022 baseball season, Aaron Judge’s name had better appear in the first sentence of the first paragraph. He is the lead character of the 162-game drama. Shohei Ohtani, Paul Goldschmidt, Justin Verlander, Sandy Alcantara and others have played strong supporting roles, but there’s no debate who the top guy is.

From the moment Judge declined the Yankees’ $213.5 million offer prior to Opening Day, he has owned this season. His 2022 is in the conversation for the best season ever, right there with Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig in 1927, Mickey Mantle in 1956, Carl Yastrzemski in 1967 and Bob Gibson in 1968. It’s a once-in-a-generation type season.

Judge bet on himself. He did possess some inside information, as nobody knows him better than himself. He believed, given health, he could be the best player in the league, and he has not only delivered on that promise, but also has put together the best clean season in a generation, maybe two. The 61st home run he hit Wednesday night in Toronto to tie Roger Maris added a historic exclamation to a season so good it didn’t even need that great record, which is the true record.

While it’s no surprise that Judge, as a former San Francisco Giants fan from Northern California, pays homage to Barry Bonds, we keep it real in this space. Bonds’ stats, while extraordinary, are fake news. We know what he was in Pittsburgh and at the start back home in the Bay Area. He was terrific, but he wasn’t Ruthian before he picked up the syringe. We also know no one improves to the point of ridiculousness in their mid and late 30s — not without medicinal aids.

Aaron Judge watches his 61st home run on Wednesday night.
Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

Judge did it with hard work and grace and class. It was not done with the help of Victor Conte or some other behind-the-scenes scoundrel. It is a season to be admired by one and all — no asterisks and no questions asked.

Judge did it on his own, and at times during the dog days that was pretty literal. While the rest of the Yankees were floundering, and threatening to unravel, Judge kept getting better and better. His 19-homer lead in the majors represents the biggest gap since 1928, when Babe Ruth finished 23 home runs ahead of Hack Wilson and Jim Bottomley. Judge also is lapping the field.


Everything to know about Aaron Judge and his chase for the home run record:


Beyond the numbers, he has become a great leadoff hitter, a terrific center fielder, a superb leader, a true captain (even without the title), and by all accounts the best teammate you could ask for.

“He’s a special man having a special season,” teammate Josh Donaldson said.

Ruth practically invented the home run, but Judge has topped The Babe. He has hit 30 home runs at home and 31 on the road. Someone once said Yankee Stadium was a Little League park, but Judge’s numbers are actually slightly better on the road. He had 33 home runs before the All-Star break, 27 since, which actually represents much greater performance, since the All-Star break came late this year after the tardy start while MLB and the players union worked out their own differences.

Once that was done, Judge and the Yankees sat down, and tried to figure it out. But they had a problem. Judge saw himself as comparable to the best in the game, the Yankees saw him as comparable to Mookie Betts, who may be the best in the game, but isn’t quite paid like it. Judge and the Yankees are thought to have been close to $100 million apart. Judge was right, as it turns out. He is the best, bar none.

Aaron Judge is all smiles after hitting home run No. 61 to tie Roger Maris’ mark.
Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

When I recently told a Yankees official they need to pay Judge whatever he wants, he informed me that I would not be a viable candidate to work in the team’s front office. They have said they will pay him something that’s “extremely competitive” or words to that effect. And maybe that will get it done. Because being a Yankee benefits him, as well.

But here’s another idea. Pay him what he’s worth. He has dominated the season with nonstop heroics, he has created more excitement than any Yankee since Mantle, or maybe even Joe DiMaggio or Ruth. He has inspired a whole section of seats and sold a ton of merch. The Judge’s Chambers are as much a part of the scene as the roll call, maybe more.

He is by far the biggest star on the team. Mike Trout has Shohei Ohtani, the miracle two-way player who will finish second in MVP to Judge. Betts has Freddie Freeman, Clayton Kershaw and a legion of greats. This Yankees team has several outstanding players. Gerrit Cole is a workhorse, even if he’s susceptible to the home run. Anthony Rizzo is a savant in the box and at first base. Giancarlo Stanton is a threat every time he comes up. Nestor Cortes is an original and a revelation.

But let’s face it. It’s Judge and everyone else. That’s just like this season, which is all his now. He owns the year.

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Aaron Judge goes homeless in Yankees rain-shortened win over Red Sox

Aaron Judge’s chase for history will go international, after being robbed of at least one more at-bat in The Bronx on Sunday night.

For the fifth straight game — this one shortened by rain — the Yankees slugger remained stuck at 60 home runs, one shy of Roger Maris’ American League and franchise record.

Aaron Judge reacts after flying out in the fifth inning.
Jason Szenes

Judge went 1-for-2 with a double and a walk in the Yankees’ seventh straight win, 2-0 in six innings over the Red Sox. He was set to lead off the bottom of the seventh inning, but the game entered a delay after the sixth inning because of torrential downpours and then got called after more than an hour and a half.

The Yankees (94-58) will begin a three-game series in Toronto on Monday, needing just one win over the Blue Jays to clinch the AL East, though all eyes will continue to be on Judge. He has hit 11 home runs in 34 career games at Rogers Centre.

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