Aaron Judge lifts Yankees with homer, highlight-reel catch at wall, Aaron Judge outdoes himself again

 

LOS ANGELES - - Aaron Judge slugged his nineteenth homer of the time Saturday, however it was his dynamite running catch at the wall that had individuals talking after the New York Yankees' 6-3 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Judge, the reigning American Association MVP, put a line crash into the short left-field patio in the 6th inning for the Yankees, who bounced back from a 8-4 misfortune Friday night in the opener of the great profile interleague series.

The homer, off Dodgers reliever Shelby Mill operator, voyaged just 360 feet, yet Judge's 113.7 mph line drive got into the low stands before left defender David Peralta could attempt to make a play on it.

Then in the eighth, Judge could have saved a run for the Yankees with his sprinting catch on J.D. Martinez's liner into the right-field corner with Max Muncy on a respectable starting point and no one out. Judge made the catch an instant prior to running into the warm up area entryway, which came mostly open when he hit it.

"I assumed I got an opportunity off the bat, yet no one can say with any certainty," Judge said. "I realized it would have been near the wall there, however fortunately I caught it."


Judge hung on to the ball and stayed upright while putting one foot in the bullpen, but Muncy was allowed to advance to second apparently because Judge technically left the field of play.

Judge said he wasn't injured by his latest fearless fielding feat.

"I'm feeling good," Judge said. "The fence got most of it. Thankfully, it was that part of the wall where it had some give, so I think that saved me quite a bit. If it was a solid wall, it might be a different story, but [I] made the play."

Yankees manager Aaron Boone said he didn't mind Judge's heedless run into the corner for a difficult catch, saying it's the only way Judge knows how to play. The Yankees were fairly sure the bullpen door had been latched closed, but it wasn't strong enough to contain Judge.

"Honestly, I feel like it probably softened the blow a little bit," said Yankees starter Gerrit Cole, who improved to 7-0. "For him to just blow through it, I think it took a little bit of the kinetic energy out of just slamming up against the wall, but it's still very concerning when such a great player has to go so hard into the wall. He's got a lot of guts."

Boone briefly argued the umpires' decision to send Muncy to second, but only after detouring out to right field to check on Judge. Boone had been worried about Judge's right foot, which kicked the concrete ledge below the swinging door fairly hard.

"When we got halfway out there, he was pushing us back, like, 'I'm fine, fine,'" Boone said with a grin. "I just ran out and said, 'I just wanted to tell you what a great catch that was.'"

The catch was Judge's second spectacular fielding play on the Yankees' West Coast trip. On Monday night in Seattle, Judge leaped at the wall and used every inch of his 6-foot-7 frame to take away a home run from the Mariners' Teoscar Hernández.

"I keep trying to tell myself every now and then to appreciate what we're watching," Boone said. "He's just one of the great players we'll see, and he does it in so many ways, and he's the best person."

Read More: Yankees’ Aaron Judge Breaks Through Outfield Wall to Make Catch


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