资讯

There is no sugarcoating it: Judge's legacy took a hit in the World Series. A big hit, too. Come up that small in the World Series and yeah, you don't get looked at the same way.
Appearing on MLB Central, DeRosa dropped a bold comparison, lining up Judge’s last 154 games against Barry Bonds’ legendary 2001 season, where he smashed 73 homers. “I just, on a nightly ...
Another week goes by, and Aaron Judge delivers impact stats (10-for-24 with seven runs, three home runs, and seven RBIs). He is not on pace to hit .414 over 620 at-bats with 154 runs, 55 home runs ...
Context matters in any Juan Soto vs. Aaron Judge comparison Soto blows Judge out of the water when looking at accomplishments at 26 years of age, but when looking at games played, it's a different ...
The post Yankees’ Aaron Judge downplays historic start with Albert Pujols comparison appeared first on ClutchPoints. Aaron Judge is playing at an MVP level once again in 2025. The 33-year-old ...
Judge didn’t revel in the moment; it was the second-fastest home-to-home speed of his career, according to Statcast (only his home run against José Berríos in the 2017 Wild Card Game was quicker).
Another week goes by, and Aaron Judge delivers impact stats (10-for-24 with seven runs, three home runs, and seven RBIs). He is not on pace to hit .414 over 620 at-bats with 154 runs, 55 home runs ...
ESPN Analyst Makes Bold Aaron Judge-Juan Soto Comparison That Will Make Yankees Fans Angry . May 22, 2025, 2:54am EST By Cresswell McCoy. Follow Us 26.
Judge is putting up numbers that would make even the ghosts of Yankee Stadium take notice. According to Baseball Savant, he's averaging an exit velocity of 95.5 mph, with a hard-hit rate of 56.6% ...
Aaron Judge entered Friday night’s game in Boston hitting .392. ... The Ted Williams comparisons aren’t fair to Aaron Judge By . Mike Vaccaro. Published June 14, 2025, 5:51 p.m. ET.
Aaron Judge is the best hitter on the planet. Shohei Ohtani is something else entirely By . Ethan Sears. Published June 17, 2025, 7:51 a.m. ET.
Aaron Judge (218, last season). That slash line — Do you remember watching the last right-handed hitter to beat Judge’s .314/.439/.682/1.121 line over any span of games this long?