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.

Judge
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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Aaron Boone still believes in struggling Gerrit Cole for playoffs

Asked if he still “trusted’’ Gerrit Cole in the playoffs following another outing ruined by a pair of home runs, Aaron Boone said, “Yeah, what’s the alternative?”

On Saturday, Boone again defended Cole’s performance in Friday’s win, when he allowed a game-tying homer to Alex Verdugo in the sixth and then got ejected for yelling at home plate umpire Brian Knight as he walked off the mound.

“I thought he threw the ball awesome [Friday] night,’’ Boone said.

Cole has allowed 10 homers in his last six games and has matched his career-high with 31 home runs.

“It is remarkable,’’ Boone said. “A pretty dominant outing and one pitch at the end wrecks the line. We’re doing all we can to avoid those certain things.”

Gerrit Cole gave up four runs in six innings against the Red Sox on Friday.
Charles Wenzelberg / New York Po
Aaron Boone
John Angelillo/UPI/Shutterstock

“It’s crazy that has happened,’’ Boone said. “The bottom line is we’ve got a guy throwing the ball incredibly well right now, with every capability to go out there and dominate.’’

“If he executes at a high level, he can shut down anyone,’’ Boone said. “He’s in that place to do that. We’ve got to get [over] that hump. The only thing to change that narrative is to go out and avoid that one big one. That’s all it’s been is one big one here and there.”


Aaron Hicks wasn’t in the lineup Saturday after homering on Friday.

“There will be some opportunities there for Aaron,” Boone said of Hicks, who will likely play on Sunday. “I liked him [Friday] from the right side [against left-hander Rich Hill] and he had good at- bats, too, later in the game.”

Aaron Hicks’ playing time remains “fluid,” said Aaron Boone.
Getty Images

Hicks recently complained about his playing time and Boone said recently there would be competition for time in left field after the arrival of Harrison Bader.

Of Hicks’ playing time Boone said Saturday, “It’ll remain fluid each and every day… He has to be ready to make the most of his opportunities.” 

In his last four games, Hicks is 7-for-15, with a double and two homers, as well as three RBIs.

Hicks hasn’t walked in the stretch and has struck out six times.

“He’s worked hard all year on his hitting,’’ Boone said. “For him to get results the last couple times out has been big.”

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Pirates’ Eric Stout prepared for boos after Aaron Judge walk

How do you tick off 46,175 New Yorkers in the middle of an eight-run Yankees eighth inning? You walk Aaron Judge.

Judge’s fourth at-bat Wednesday night came and went anticlimactically in the seventh inning, when he grounded out on the first pitch to him from the Pirates’ Miguel Yajure. The main reason most of the fans at Yankee Stadium had stuck around was to watch Judge attempt to match Roger Maris’ American League record of 61 home runs.

After that groundout, the assumption was that the chase would continue for another night. Then, however, the Yankees came up in the eighth and started hitting. And all of a sudden, Judge — the eighth batter due up when the inning began — got to the plate for a fifth time.

Cue the standing, the buzz, that anticipation. Who cared about the score, which ended up 14-2? The Pirates were falling victim to an avalanche, with six Yankees runs already having scored in the inning, a man on second and one out. It looked to be Judge’s moment.

Eric Stout, though, didn’t let that happen. The lefty reliever said afterwards he wasn’t thinking about 61, Maris or any of that. But he sure did pitch as if he were, walking Judge on four pitches that weren’t especially close to the zone.

Aaron Judge got one last shot at hitting No. 61 on Wednesday, but got a walk instead.
Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post
Eric Stout heard the boos rain down from the Yankee Stadium crowd after his eighth-inning walk of Aaron Judge.
John Angelillo/UPI/Shutterstock

“The changeup’s been a good pitch for me this season,” Stout said. “I think that was the game plan going into the at-bat. Regardless of nobody on, bases loaded, doesn’t really matter. I got [Anthony] Rizzo behind him as a lefty. With a base open, I’m very good versus lefties this year. That was more of the approach.

“I’m not gonna give in [on] 2-0, 3-0, throw him something, regardless of who it is, especially with a lefty on deck. So that was the approach.”

The crowd responded accordingly, booing as few crowds have ever booed in the latter stages of a blowout by the home team.

“Yeah, I kind of figured that’s what the crowd reaction was gonna be,” Pirates manager Derek Shelton said. “I’ve been to Yankee Stadium a lot of times. I don’t think I’ve ever seen anybody stay when the score’s like that, but you know, there was everybody in the ballpark.”

Even though the crowd left disappointed not to have witnessed history, fans did see Judge double twice, reach base three times and score twice. Following his 60th home run on Tuesday, that added up to this assessment from Shelton when asked about how his 55-94 ballclub handled Judge:

“I mean,” Shelton said, “he hit the one home run. … You have to be able, not only with him, but with the entire lineup, you have to be able to execute pitches.

“We didn’t.”

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Yankees’ Jose Trevino exits after taking foul ball to knee

MILWAUKEE — Catcher Jose Trevino left the Yankees’ 7-6 loss to the Brewers in the seventh inning Friday night with a right knee contusion after he took a foul ball off his right knee in the bottom of the fifth.

Trevino initially remained in the game and caught the sixth before Kyle Higashioka came up to pinch hit for him leading off the top of the seventh.

“He was compromised,’’ manager Aaron Boone said of Trevino.

Marwin Gonzalez also was removed to start the bottom of the sixth with dizziness, Boone said.

Gonzalez started the game at first base and when he came out, Oswaldo Cabrera moved from right field to first, making his first appearance at the position in his professional career.

“That’s a tough spot, but he’s got that makeup that he’s gonna handle himself,’’ Boone said. “Not ideal, but that’s where we are right now from an injury standpoint.”

Jose Trevino
AP

Harrison Bader could make his Yankees debut soon, manager Aaron Boone said, adding the center fielder could be in The Bronx as Tuesday after rehabbing from the plantar fasciitis that has sidelined him since before he was acquired from St. Louis in exchange for Jordan Montgomery.

Boone made it clear prior to the game what Bader’s role will be: “Center fielder.”

“He’s a premium, maybe the best, defensive outfielder in the league,’’ Boone said. “I think we’re adding a significant player to our lineup.”

Bader was off Friday and scheduled to play minor league rehab games Saturday and Sunday. If he and the Yankees decide he’s ready, the Bronxville native will be with the Yankees when they open their homestand against the Pirates.

The right-handed hitting Bader has had a rough season at the plate, with a .673 OPS in 264 plate appearances for the Cardinals, but he has swung the bat well during his rehab assignment.

He was acquired, though, for his defense and speed.

Harrison Bader
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg

Bader will give the Yankees some much-needed outfield depth, as Aaron Judge has been forced into playing center, with the slumping Aaron Hicks in left and Cabrera in right.

Boone didn’t rule out the possibility of moving Cabrera to left when Bader is in the lineup in center, with Judge back in right.

Giancarlo Stanton is not an option in the outfield and won’t be for the foreseeable future, as he returns from the injury suffered when he fouled a ball off his foot.

Boone said Stanton’s return to the outfield was “on pause,” but didn’t rule it out down the road, pointing to the fact he stayed healthy last year while playing some outfield.


Luis Severino is scheduled to rejoin the rotation on Wednesday after another solid rehab outing with Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre on Thursday. Boone said the right-hander, sidelined since mid-July with a strained lat, isn’t completely built up, but he expects Severino to have an immediate impact.

“It’s Luis Severino,’’ Boone said. “He’s Severino. He’s having an excellent year for us and can match up with a lot of really good pitchers.”


Anthony Rizzo took batting practice against rehabbing Scott Effross and continues to feel good in his return from lower back tightness and headaches following an epidural.

Boone said there’s a “chance” Rizzo will be in the lineup Sunday against the Brewers and he believes the time off will have served the first baseman well.

“What’s exciting is that he was grinding with the back even before he went on the IL,’’ Boone said. “That’s he’s feeling good is encouraging. It allows him to impact us.”


Oswald Peraza entered Friday having not played in a week, with Isiah Kiner-Falefa performing well, though he made a big error in the eighth inning of the Yankees’ loss. Boone said Peraza might be at shortstop on Saturday.

Jasson Dominguez was among the Yankees prospects selected to play in the Arizona Fall League following the season.

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What we still don’t know about the Mets’ trade deadline

I want to revisit the deal that brought Edwin Diaz to the Mets as a vehicle to discuss the club’s first trade deadline with Billy Eppler as general manager.

There are three items to drill down upon:

1. I am not sure if we were always this impatient as a society in general and in sports in specific or if social media/confrontational sports-talk shows conditioned us to race to the quickest hot takes, but trades do need time to fully gestate to see how they turn out.

I direct this at myself, too, because I criticized the Mets multiple times for under-selling Jarred Kelenic and taking on the contract of Robinson Cano — an easier case when Diaz was struggling.

2. Having said that, I still think the trade is not some slam-dunk winner for the Mets (oh, how recency bias causes such shifts). What were the opportunity costs of taking on Cano’s money and trading Kelenic before he fully had established his minor league value?

Recently, on our podcast, “The Show with Joel Sherman and Jon Heyman,” Steve Cohen, in speaking about his 2023 budget, noted Cano is still on the Mets’ books for roughly $20 million next season. So the downside of the trade still will be felt because Cohen insinuated not even he will have a payroll that erases all sins with unlimited spending.

In addition, don’t think of Kelenic’s value today, which is way down after major league cameos the past two years covering 500 plate appearances in which he hit .167 with a .575 OPS and struck out 30.6 percent of the time. Kelenic did not even have his first full season in the minors until 2019 with the Mariners after being drafted No. 6 overall in June 2018 by the Mets, and by the end of that terrific 2019 farm season he was generally viewed as among the 10 best prospects in the game. He is the kind of player who easily, for example, could have fronted a trade for Mookie Betts after that season.

Steve Cohen admitted that the $20 million the Mets still owe Robinson Cano next year will factor into some of their decisions this winter.
AP

3. Which brings us to the most important first element for a team when it comes to entering the trade market: honest self-examination. Delusion is the enemy. Are you a contender? If so, where in your contention cycle are you? What does your prospect base look like going forward, etc.?

The Mets were 77-85 in 2018. They might have been underachievers because they had talent. But not enough — even with dubious free-agent injections (Jeurys Familia, Jed Lowrie, Wilson Ramos, Justin Wilson) — to justify trading away their most recent first-round pick plus taking on five years and around $100 million on Cano’s contract in the immediate aftermath of his suspension for failing a PED test. Not for a closer. You trade big for a closer when you have certainty of being good, as the Cubs (Aroldis Chapman) and Cleveland (Andrew Miller) did at the 2016 trade deadline.

This is where I connect to the most recent trade deadline. Because by this July — as with the Cubs and Cleveland in 2016 — these Mets would not have been delusional to see themselves as the kind of team that should have been willing to go all-in. That was about them being a first-place team, yes, but it was more than that. Max Scherzer is still pitching at an elite level, but he is 37. You can’t bet on that to continue. Diaz, Jacob deGrom, Chris Bassitt, Taijuan Walker, Brandon Nimmo, Seth Lugo and Adam Ottavino can be free agents after this season, as could Carlos Carrasco if his option is not picked up. Who knows how quickly and how successfully you can re-sign or replace all of that talent?

But the Mets did not have a go-for-it trade deadline. They obtained complementary pieces in Mychal Givens, Tyler Naquin, Darin Ruf and Daniel Vogelbach. Givens began poorly as a Met before compiling seven straight scoreless appearances going into Thursday. The hitters, though, have been central to an offensive malaise that has overcome the Mets this month, endangering the club’s chances of outdueling the Braves for the NL East title.

It has left a growing sense that Eppler and the Mets did not do enough to fortify a title contender. So I called Eppler to go down that path. But first, this proviso harking back to the points about the Diaz trade:

After posting an inconsistent first month with the Mets, Mychal Givens has yet to give up a run in the month of September.
Michelle Farsi

1. If Vogelbach hits the winning homer in a game closed out by Diaz to secure the Mets’ first championship since 1986, then no fan of the team is going to care much about how Diaz performed in 2019 or how Vogelbach hit in September 2022 nor the hot takes associated with either.

2. There always is a bit of blindness in evaluating a trade deadline because as kind as Eppler was with his time and insight, he was not going to publicly reveal all the trade permutations and possibilities the Mets had in front of them before the 6 p.m. deadline on Aug. 2. So this piece includes an alchemy of reporting, common sense and — yes — supposition. For example, it would have been terrrific for the Mets to push to the front of the line to get Juan Soto, but every person I talked to said there was no way the Nationals were trading him within the NL East, especially once the Padres showed how far they would go in piling top prospect after top prospect to get him.

3. We do not have a full picture, and we won’t for a while. The Mets traded seven prospects plus J.D. Davis for Givens, Naquin, Ruf and Vogelbach. None of the prospects were well-regarded. But, for example, when the Yankees acquired James Paxton after the 2018 season, Justus Sheffield was the prospect there was a lot of concern about giving up. In 2022, Erik Swanson — another Yankees prospect packaged with Sheffield — has emerged as one of the AL’s best relievers for Seattle.

So now that I offered those three points, let’s delve into Eppler/the Mets’ deadline behavior through 3Up:

1. More than anything else, Eppler stressed several times: “We’re trying to build something year in and year out that stands the test of time.”

Beyond a trade for Bassitt, the Mets mainly used Cohen’s money to upgrade in the offseason, thus protecting their farm system. At this deadline, Eppler said, according to their internal list, the Mets did not trade any of their top 19 prospects.

J.D. Davis has hit five homers in his first 33 games with the Giants after he was dealt by the Mets as part of a package for four solid, if unspectacular, veterans at the trade deadline.
Getty Images

But, he insisted, that is not because they didn’t try. They had offers out that included prospects from their internal top 10 and top five. But Eppler said the club was not going to trade a top-seven prospect for a rental player who would be a free agent after this season.

“This wasn’t an exercise in hoarding [prospects],” Eppler said. “This was about putting it on paper and being willing to go above our comfort level. But let’s not get reckless because we are trying to build a culture of sustainability and everything that comes with that.”

Eppler did not make this point, but it is worth pointing out that the Mets were not the only team seeking a difference-making bat or lefty reliever. But the industry (not just the Mets) probably saw the prices as too high. Walk-year hitters such as the Red Sox’s J.D. Martinez and the Cubs’ Willson Contreras were not traded, nor were potential walk-year southpaw relievers with the ability to get out righty hitters (a Mets priority) such as the Tigers’ Andrew Chafin and Rangers’ Matt Moore.

Eppler said of his dialogues: “It was like, ‘Hey, we would do this and this [with his prospects],’ but it didn’t match or they didn’t like the player and they felt they were getting a better [prospect elsewhere]. Great, [the other team would counter], ‘For you to match this deal, you have to give this one [prospect].’ I wouldn’t do that one. Are they bluffing? Maybe, maybe not. But discipline [in sticking to long-term goals of sustainability]…you know, it’s gonna be the pain of this discipline or the pain of disappointment, and the disappointment lasts longer.”

2. Eppler also said deadline trades “don’t move it [percentage chances of a championship] that much.” If you look at the projection system or casino odds immediately after the deadline, the percentages do not rise significantly even with big deals. So, Eppler asked, how much are you willing to sacrifice in prospect collateral to, say, gain a percentage point or two of a greater chance to win?

Billy Eppler said whatever transactions the Mets make at this time are done with an eye toward building a sustainable winner.
Corey Sipkin

“There’s no certainty in these things,” Eppler said.

To that end, I dug into the Padres, who were widely seen as the biggest trade deadline winners after obtaining Soto, Josh Bell, Brandon Drury and Josh Hader. Hader pitched so badly, he briefly lost his closing job. He was one of four lefty relievers dealt in a market in which the Mets were shopping. Taylor Rogers, who was dealt to the Brewers for Hader, also has pitched poorly, as has Jake Diekman. Will Smith has been fine for the Astros, but that was one iffy contract (Jake Odorizzi) for another — and Smith was coming from the Braves, not a likely trade partner for the Mets.

Going into Thursday night’s games, Soto, Bell and Drury had combined for 414 plate appearances since joining the Padres in which they had a .211 average and .673 OPS with 11 homers and 38 RBIs. Naquin, Ruf and Vogelbach, in 287 Mets plate appearances, had a combined .211 average, .687 OPS, eight homers and 34 RBIs — and that was before Vogelbach had a single, a double and three RBIs in the Mets’ win over the Pirates.

“I think when you look at results in smaller samples that can become dangerous,” Eppler said.

Since Aug. 3 — the day after the deadline — the player traded prior to the deadline who had the best OPS (minimum 50 plate appearances, going into Thursday) was Rangers catcher Mark Mathias (obtained from the Brewers), whose 1.214 OPS actually led the majors over Aaron Judge’s 1.212. Had you even heard of Mark Mathias before reading that sentence? The next best were Phillies infielder Edmundo Sosa (.961) and Red Sox catcher Reese McGuire (.903).

Naquin’s .777 OPS as a Met was almost exactly his career mark (.776), as was Vogelbach’s .750 (career: .745). They are, in bulk, performing to their career norms. But they have slumped concurrently with the Mets’ downturn in play, which has led to greater criticism of the Mets’ trade deadline moves. Their worst look right now is Ruf, especially because the fourth-best OPS since Aug. 3 among traded players belongs to the Giants’ Davis (.840), whom Ruf was traded for and replaced. Meanwhile, of the 343 players who have batted at least 50 times since Aug. 3, the only player with a worse OPS than Ruf’s .397 was Aaron Hicks at .394.

Darin Ruf has struggled at the plate since his arrival from the Giants, though some of the other options the Mets may have pursued are not hitting much better.
Noah K. Murray

So the Mets’ inability to revive Davis or to find a strong supplementary righty bat is haunting them — at least in the small sample size. As noted earlier, neither Contreras nor Martinez was traded. The player the Mets were most strongly associated with, Trey Mancini, was hitting .200 with a .718 OPS for the Astros after being obtained from the Orioles. He does have the luxury in Astros home games of the tantalizing Crawford Boxes in left field, which he would not have had at Citi Field, and in Mancini’s first 64 road plate appearances for Houston, he was hitting just .158 with a .585 OPS.

3. The team that Cohen wants his Mets to emulate most is the Andrew Friedman Dodgers. When Friedman took over after the 2014 season, his top three prospects were Corey Seager, Joc Pederson and Julio Urias. He never traded Seager or Pederson before they left via free agency, and Urias is still a vital Dodgers starter.

Even when acquiring star walk-year players at the trade deadline in Yu Darvish (2017) and Manny Machado (2018), Friedman never gave up his better prospects. It was not until the 2021 deadline — to obtain Scherzer and Trea Turner from the Nationals — that Friedman went to the top of his prospect list in dispatching catcher Keibert Ruiz and starter Josiah Gray. And neither Ruiz nor Gray has yet made that a painful decision (again, it takes a long time to assess a trade).

In Friedman’s time running the Dodgers, they have been superb at keeping homegrown difference-makers, such as Cody Bellinger, Walker Buehler, Tony Gonsolin, Gavin Lux, Dustin May and catcher Will Smith, and at dealing off prospects touted in the industry who have yet to justify the hype, such as Jose DeLeon and Grant Holmes. It has not been perfect. Frankie Montas was included in a trade for Rich Hill and Josh Reddick, and notably Yordan Alvarez was flipped for Josh Fields.

But the decision-making around prospects by the Friedman Dodgers has been exemplary. This is the standard the Eppler Mets hope to emulate. And, at least initially, they are (like those initial Friedman Dodgers teams) trying to let the system mature before using perceived better prospects in trades. Longtime MLB executive Dan O’Dowd, my colleague at the MLB Network, has an insight he voices often that I particularly like: “Patience is the only asset routinely rewarded in our sport and the one that is yet in shortest supply.”

The Dodgers’ ability to build a consistent contender while keeping prized talents, such as catcher Will Smith, has made them a model for the Mets to emulate.
AP

It is not often that reporters or fans cheer patience in real time.

With time, we will see whether protecting the top of the system, such as Francisco Alvarez, Brett Baty and Alex Ramirez, was smartly played, though it is all with the caveat of what was actually available to the Mets in potential trades and also trying to come to peace (as with Kelenic) with what the future value of the prospects is.

“You have to look at the process by which you acquire players,” Eppler said. “We can go all the way back to when I first started and we go through free agents and what happened after the lockout and then go through the deadline and think about what were the opportunities. What was real and what was fantasy? What was the process driving that? So, we try to evaluate that. I get the sense of urgency [in the moment]. I’m aware of that and aware that you have to start asking questions with players. …

“Those are the decisions you make. This could affect three or four years of this goal of this organization — to crush any urge to make short-term investments that only give marginal gains but give up large portions of future gains.”

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Mets turn back clock to their summer of fun

Somehow, it is as if September has represented an anticlimax for the Mets following a thrilling summer replete with full houses, dramatic moments, blaring trumpets, Jacob deGrom’s return and signal victories including two straight at Citi Field against the Yankees, four out of five against the Braves, two out of three from the mighty Dodgers and a rally to remember in Philadelphia. 

The temperature has cooled, the crowds have gotten smaller, the opposition is playing for nothing but pride and future employment opportunities. The Mets have not been able to rise above the elements even while in the midst of a pennant race and seeking to nail down the club’s first postseason invite since 2016. 

“You don’t want to be Captain Obvious,” manager Buck Showalter said. “Our guys don’t have to be reminded about what’s going on and what’s at stake. This is not, ‘Woe is me.’ It’s just the opposite.” 

The lead-in to this one was as opposite from the way the Mets had played through the guts of the season while at one point building a seven-game division lead over Atlanta.

Losing seven of 11 against a motley crew of Nats, Bucs, Marlins and Cubbies had cut the lead to one-half game. The Mets hadn’t been able to get Edwin Diaz into a game with the lead since Sept. 1. 

Everyone wants to give the Mets the benefit of the doubt, but there is no recent foundation of success that facilitates generosity of spirit. Has this been a lull? Has this been a slide? Has this been the beginning of an unthinkable 2007- or 2008-type catastrophic collapse? 

Francisco Lindor celebrates in the dugout after his two-run homer.
Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

Or maybe this has represented just a slice of a season in which all but the most exceptional teams endure the ebbs and flows of the 162-game marathon. Check out the Yankees and their parabolic 2022. 

“We’re all trying to solve that riddle. You’re never as good as someone may portray us, so you’re never as bad,” Showalter said as the Mets restored some sort of order with Thursday’s 7-1 victory over Pittsburgh on Roberto Clemente Night — shouldn’t the Pirates have been at home? —while extending their lead to one game over Atlanta. “There are three or four teams that were painted as the ’27 Yankees at some point this year. 

“You want to shorten the bad times and stretch out the good. We’ve done a good job shortening the challenges. This is one. There are a lot of teams that struggled in September and were real good in October. Right now, we’ve got to get to October.” 

If the Mets can cut if off now, the route becomes less treacherous and with fewer potholes. There is no question that the clearest path to the World Series is winning the division, avoiding the best-of-three wild-card round, and setting up a rotation that features deGrom and Max Scherzer at the top. This is what is at stake for the Mets, who are tied in the loss column with the Braves, New York with 17 games remaining and Atlanta 19, including three at their place in the penultimate series of the season. 

Pete Alonso celebrates in the dugout.
Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

The Mets looked like they were playing the summer game on Thursday. Carlos Carrasco struck out a season-high 11 batters in six innings in his second straight start in which he allowed just one run. This was noteworthy for the Mets, whose starters had pitched as many as six innings in just five of the 11 immediately preceding games and whose team trailed by at least three runs after three innings in all three of their defeats this week to the Cubs. 

After the right-hander fanned three in the top of the first, the Mets immediately put two on the board on a two-out double from Daniel Vogelbach, who might have experienced whiplash in going from folk hero to zero in 60. That’s what going 5-for-42 with a .119/.260/.119 slash line over a 16-game stretch will do for you. 

Vogelbach was one of three bats added by GM Billy Eppler at what recently has appeared like a Bizarro Deadline. Tyler Naquin entered Thursday 8-for-45, with a .178/.278/.289 slash line over his last 22 games before going 1-for-4. Darin Ruf, who needs hits more than consonants, was 2-for-35 at .057/.125/.057 in his last 17 games. 

The Mets got a couple of hits from Pete Alonso, and another RBI from Vogelbach. Mark Vientos, who later pinch hit for Vogelbach, ripped a run-scoring single for his first major league hit in his 11th at-bat. Francisco Lindor, who idolized Clemente and a number of the previous Clemente Award winners introduced on the field that included Carlos Beltran and Carlos Delgado, hit his 24th home run to establish a single-season record for Mets shortstops. 

“To do it in front of them on this night was special,” Lindor said. “Setting the record is, too, but it would mean a lot more to win the World Series.” 

There is much work ahead. One victory over the Bucs does not a stretch drive make. But though there was a touch of the fall in the air, this seemed like one of those Summer Nights.

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Vladimir Guerrero Jr. hits 100th HR, will give milestone ball to dad

Vladimir Guerrero Jr. just reached a key milestone before his Hall of Fame father did.

Guerrero Jr. hit his 100th home run at age 23, becoming the 10th youngest player in MLB history to reach the mark in the Toronto Blue Jays 5-1 victory over the visiting Tampa Bay Rays on Wednesday night at Roger Centre.

Guerrero Jr. got the Blue Jays off to a quick 1-0 lead by belting a solo home run off Drew Rasmussen in the first inning, his 28th of the season. At 23 years, 182 days, he is the youngest Blue Jays player to reach 100 homers, a mark that had been held by Carlos Delgado at 26 years, 84 days.

Guerrero Jr. said he planned to give the milestone home run ball to his father, who was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2018.

Vladimir Guerrero Jr. belts his 100th homer in the Blue Jays’ 5-1 win over the Rays. He said he will give the milestone ball to his dad, Vladimir Guerrero Sr.
Getty Images; USA TODAY Sports

“He’s going to feel very proud of me,” Guerrero said through a translator. “When your son does something like that, I’m sure any dad would feel proud.”

Guerrero reached the 100-homer mark two years younger than his father, but Guerrero Sr. did it in 438 games to Jr.’s 486. Guerrero Sr. hit 449 homers in his 16-year career with the Angels, Expos, Rangers and Orioles.

Toronto, which has won three of the first four games against the Rays in their five-game set, trails the Yankees by six games in the AL East race.

In the expanded wild-card race, the Blue Jays (81-62) have a one-game lead over the Mariners (80-62) and a two-game edge on the Rays (79-63). The Baltimore Orioles (75-67) are on the outside looking in, four games behind the Rays in the playoff race.

— with AP

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Aaron Judge making chase for Roger Maris’ HR mark look easy

The most important hit at Fenway Park, relative to the game Tuesday night, came later, off the bat of Gleyber Torres. It cleared the bases and gave the Yankees a 7-4 lead in the 10th-inning, and they held on for a 7-6 win that helped nudge the Red Sox a little bit deeper into their deep winter’s sleep.

It was a fine footnote. An afterthought.

That, as much as anything, tells you about the rarefied place that Aaron Judge occupies now. It’s supposed to be anathema, a mortal sin, to hint that any one player is bigger than The Game. But that’s what Judge is now. That’s what Judge has been all across this magnificent season. He is bigger than any game he plays.

Judge clobbered two more home runs, No. 56 and No. 57, inching him closer to Roger Maris. Only four men in the history of the American League — an operation that only dates to 1901 — have hit more home runs in one season than Judge: Hank Greenberg, Jimmie Foxx, Babe Ruth (twice) and Maris. And Judge still has 20 games left to inflate that number and send it into outer space.

But that’s not all. As has been the case most of the year, Judge’s homers were essential, they were oxygen for the Yankees. The first one, a cannon blast hit the other way to the heartbreakingly deep Fenway power alley in right, tied the score at 3-3 in the sixth inning. The second one, splattered over the Green Monster in left, tied the score at 4-4 in the eighth.

Judge’s last at bat came in the 10th inning. There were two outs and a man on third with the score tied, and Red Sox manager Alex Cora raised four fingers before Judge even walked out of the on-deck circle. You wonder if that won’t be a more common occurrence these last few weeks of the season, managers deciding that discretion is the better part of valor.

Aaron Judge hits homer No. 57 during the Yankees’ 7-6, 10-inning win over the Red Sox. It was his second of the game.
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg

You hope not, though.

Because every Judge at-bat the rest of the way is going to be an event. They are going to be must-see TV. If you are a fan of the Yankees — or merely a fan of baseball — it is impossible not to want to see every pitch. Because every time he swings the bat, something splendid and spectacular could be looming.

It’s almost a surprise when he doesn’t go deep.

“However many home runs he ends up hitting, I don’t think it’s that important to him,” Judge’s manager, Aaron Boone, said before the game. “He knows where we are. It’s about going out and winning the ballgame. I think when you have that genuinely simple mindset and approach to it, it makes playing the game a lot easier.”

That’s the most amazing part of Judge’s season, when you think about it. We all know, as a matter of law, that hitting a baseball that well, that far, that often, is maybe the hardest thing to do in sports. Yet when Judge swings, and when he connects, and when he sends his majestic blasts to the far reaches of ball yards all across the game, it really does look …

Well. Easy.

Ridiculously easy. Impossibly easy.

“When we’re winning and in first place, that’s always fun, it’s been a fun year,” Judge said. “The numbers will take care of themselves.”

Aaron Judge celebrates with Giancarlo Stanton after belting his 57th homer in the Yankees’ wins.
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg

It should no longer be a subject for debate if Judge should win the MVP; the only question is if he gets all 30 first-place votes, earns the maximum 420 voting points. Shohei Ohtani, the only name feebly thrown out as competition, did that last year, and as otherworldly as that season was his team still went 77-85.

The Yankees are now 86-56. They are back to 30 games over .500, back to a comfortable lead atop the AL East with days melting off the calendar. There is little mystery why they surged early and have survived lately: because they have Judge as the anchor of their lineup. And nobody else does.

“I’m out of adjectives.” Boone said.

Late in his dream 1961 ride, Roger Maris took the day off in the 159th game of the season, causing a seismic shock. He was sitting on 60 home runs. How could he forfeit four at-bats? The way he’s going, Judge can look forward to a day off or around that time, and nobody will much complain.

Unless by then, Barry Bonds’ 73 is still in sight. It probably won’t be. But would you bet against it?

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Yankees’ Harrison Bader may join Yankees by Sept. 20

If all goes well, the Yankees may be able to dust off a new center fielder on Sept. 20.

Harrison Bader, who has not played a game with the Yankees since he was acquired from the Cardinals in the Jordan Montgomery trade, is expected to start a rehab assignment Sunday with Double-A Somerset.

Manager Aaron Boone said Bader, who has been out since late June with plantar fasciitis, will be Somerset’s designated hitter Sunday in Hartford, Conn., then will begin outfield work Tuesday.

“It’ll probably be at least a week,” the manager said Saturday before the Yankees beat the Rays, 10-3, in The Bronx. “But then if we get through that week, and the build-up is going fine, he could be in play when we start the homestand [Sept. 20 against the Pirates].”

Bader said there is “definitely discomfort” in his right foot, but he has been told he cannot further injure the foot by playing on it. The Yankees acquired the reigning NL Gold Glove center fielder knowing they would have to wait for Bader to get healthy, but they saw his defense as an eventual way to spell Aaron Judge in center.

Harrison Bader works out in the outfield before the Yankees’ 10-3 win over the Rays.
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg

The prolonged struggles of Aaron Hicks — and just about the entirety of the Yankees’ offense aside from Judge — makes any hitter welcome, even if Bader might not be ready yet.

“I’m not trying to get my timing back. I’m not trying to feel comfortable in the box,” said Bader, who posted a .673 OPS in 72 games with St. Louis. “I’m just trying to go and just understand that I can physically do something so I can come up here and play ball.”

Montgomery has gone 5-0 with a 1.45 ERA in seven starts for a Cardinals club that is running away with the NL Central. Bader, who said he only has been getting reps in center field, has had to watch his new club without being able to help.

“It’s definitely frustrating. I would say it’s more challenging than anything though,” said Bader, who was trying to find the bright side. “I’m happy that I now have a new set of tools to learn how to take care of my feet properly to make sure this never happens again.”

The Bronxville native has been a Yankee for nearly six weeks and has not been able to suit up, but he believes the wait will be over soon.

If he returns Sept. 20, he would have 16 regular season games left to make a difference.

“I couldn’t be more excited. I couldn’t be more positive,” the 28-year-old said. “I can’t wait to be in pinstripes finally. It’s been so long.”

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