Yankees place Aaron Judge on 10-day IL
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Aaron Judge hit the first home run of his MLB career the day after Alex Rodriguez retired. Now, the two are tied on the Yankees’ all-time home run list.
Bad news for some fans hoping to see Aaron Judge in the Home Run Derby — one of the most anticipated sluggers won't be taking part, but he has a pretty solid reason for sitting this one out.
Access the Yankees beat like never before Don’t miss Greg Joyce’s text messages from The Bronx and beyond — he’s giving Sports+ subscribers the inside buzz on the Yankees. Sign Up Now ATLANTA — Aaron Judge is now side by side with Alex Rodriguez.
New York Yankees slugger and reigning American League MVP Aaron Judge notched career home run No. 350 just a few days prior. On Sunday in the rubber match against the Atlanta Braves (NYY-ATL GameTracker),
Aaron Judge expressed excitement about the opportunity to "represent New York" at the All-Star Game after the MLB nixed specially designed All-Star uniforms.
New York Mets star Juan Soto hit a home run on Sunday night as the Mets beat the San Francisco Giants 5-3 at Oracle Park. The blast highlighted how Soto sits at
New York Yankees star Aaron Judge added another impressive accomplishment to his collection in Saturday's loss against the Chicago Cubs (box score), launching his 35th home run of the season and the 350th of his career.
Shohei Ohtani and Aaron Judge have their reasons for not competing in the All-Star Home Run Derby, but MLB should do everything possible to get them in it.
The reigning American League MVP blasted his 36th home run of the season in the New York Yankees' 4–2 win over the Atlanta Braves. That long ball gave him 351 in his career, which tied him with Alex Rodriguez for sixth place on the franchise's all-time list. After the game, the Judge addressed what it felt like to match Rodriguez.
Aaron Judge is injured, NFL stars earn massive new deals, and 'Happy Gilmore 2' finds the wrong crowd. All of that and more in the Weekend Roundup.