Why Aaron Judge may soon be getting Barry Bonds treatment

Aaron Boone said if Aaron Judge continues to hit at his current pace, he may get a bit of the “Barry Bonds treatment,” with opposing teams choosing to walk him intentionally rather than watch him do more damage.“There will be stretches where that probably happens,’’ Boone said before Wednesday’s 3-2 loss to the Reds in The Bronx.Perhaps the better question is why it hasn’t started already, especially with the Yankees lineup in disarray beyond Judge and Juan Soto.On Wednesday, though, Judge was set up to tie the game — or more — with runners on the corners and one out in the seventh inning and hit into an inning-ending double play against right-hander Fernando Cruz.The grounder to third traveled at 106 mph, but still ended the Yankees’ best chance to erase the deficit.It was a rare off night at the plate for Judge, who may see teams pitch him more carefully, something Boone noted they did frequently during the latter part of his historic 2022 season, when parts of the offense was slumping.In his first 121 games that season, Judge was walked intentionally eight times.In his final 36 games, he drew 11 intentional walks.One such occasion seemingly came up Tuesday, when Judge was at the plate with the Yankees down by two runs with two outs in the bottom of the seventh.Left-hander Sam Moll was tasked with facing Judge with the slumping lefty-swinging Alex Verdugo on deck.Moll threw one pitch to Judge and it ended up in the left-field seats for his 32nd homer of the season.Moll recalled his approach to the at-bat on Wednesday and even though Moll had never pitched to Judge, the two were teammates in the Cape Cod League in 2013 with the Brewster Whitecaps, both heading into their junior seasons at college.“I’ll usually let the bench decide if we want to intentionally walk someone,’’ Moll said.

“And then there’s some level of pitching around him.I felt [Tuesday] the best thing to do was to get to 0-1 as fast as possible — which we did and ...

Read More 
PaprClips
Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by PaprClips.
Publisher: New York Post

Recent Articles