Judge torched the Milwaukee Brewers in the opening series, batting .545 (6-for-11) with four home runs, 11 RBIs, and eight runs scored. He added two doubles and three walks, posting an eye-popping 1.818 slugging percentage and a .643 OBP. His performance Saturday was especially absurd: 4-for-6, three homers, and a career-high eight runs driven in.
The New York Yankees' use of a "torpedo" style baseball bat was all the talk around MLB over the weekend, but Aaron Judge is not one of the players using
The Yankees hit four first-inning home runs off former teammate Nestor Cortes on Saturday en route to a 20-9 drubbing. They added five more long balls during the game for a team-record nine, one short of the major league record.
Yankees outfielder and 2024 American League MVP Aaron Judge led the charge over the weekend, hitting three balls over Yankee Stadium's outfield wall while driving in eight of New York's 20 runs in Saturday's blowout win. He added a fourth homer and three walks during Sunday's 12-3 win that saw four more longballs by the pinstripes.
Since multiple key players are on the injured list, it was hard to predict what the Yankees would look like out of the gate. They eased some of those concerns with a massive start to the season. In the three-game set against the Milwaukee Brewers,
“Aaron Judge is the first Yankee in franchise history to hit four home runs in the first three games of the season,” Talkin' Yanks said in a post. Aaron Judge has had an incredible career with the Yankees so far, and he is keeping pace with one of the best to ever do it in the Big Apple: Babe Ruth.
Aaron Judge has no interest in using the New York Yankees' new "torpedo" bats. The Yankees have made noise early this MLB season by using bats that have more wood in the barrel. The new bats are entirely legal,
Cody Bellinger will have a realistic possibility of challenging his new Yankees teammate Aaron Judge for the 2025 AL MVP Award.
Standing in front of his Yankee Stadium locker on Sunday, Anthony Volpe presented two bats for inspection. In his left hand, the Yankees shortstop displayed one he had used last season; in his right,