
Yankees' Aaron Judge makes three outstanding catches, robs Cubs' Pete Crow-Armstrong
'I'm like, `Pplease don't dive. Please stay on your feet,'' the New York Yankees pitcher said. 'Obviously, I wanted him to dive there and he made the play and I'm grateful he got up because that's a big body.'
Judge made three outstanding catches in right field on Friday night, saving three runs in an 11-0 rout of the Chicago Cubs that extended the New York Yankees' winning streak to five following a six-game slide. Cody Bellinger hit a trio of two-run homers against his former team.
A two-time MVP at age 33, Judge gets attention for his offense: a major league-best .354 average with 34 homers and 79 RBIs. His defense is just as striking.
The 6-foot-7, 282-pound Judge leaped at the right-field wall to catch a 327-foot drive by Peter Crow-Armstrong against Rodón in the fourth inning, preventing would have been Crow-Armstrong's 26th home run.
'I think robbing a homer is probably the best, just to keep a run off the board,' Judge said.
When Judge caught the ball, it was about 15 inches over the top of the wall. PCA waved an arm at him in frustration and acknowledgement.
'He knows we work hard for our hits and our homers,' Crow-Armstrong said. 'He's having an unbelievable year and that was me just being like, come on man, like you got to take them away too?'
Judge's glove avoided the outstretched arms of a fan in a Yankees jersey, who reached over the fence with one hand but missed the ball. After the grab, Judge bowed his head and smiled.
'I've hit a couple fans already this year, so I tried to make sure I didn't get that one,' Judge said.
Two pitches later, Judge rushed in and made a sliding backhand grab on Dansby Swanson's sinking liner for the third out of the inning. By the mound, Rodón held out his hands while shaking his head in amazement.
With runners at the corners, two outs in the eighth and a full count, Judge sprinted to deny Kyle Tucker of an extra-base hit, catching the ball just before the right-field foul line and sliding on his chest across the warning track. His pinstripes were soiled with dirt when he got up.
'It's tough, but it's my job. I got a job to do out there. That's why they got me playing out there,' he said. 'If the ball's hit in your direction, you got to make a play.'
Judge's catch caught Aaron Boone's attention.
'My first thought was a little nervous, just going over there and sliding on the dirt pretty hard, like making sure the big guy was OK,' the manager said.
Judge doesn't think about sprained right big toe sustained when he ran into the Dodger Stadium fence on June 3, 2023, causing him to miss 42 games and hit far from his standard when he returned.
'That was kind of a freak thing,' Judge said. 'You can't let it hold me back.'
He took time after his last catch to gain his composure.
'I felt like I was running a mile to get to that ball,' he said. 'I don't think I'm getting older but sometimes it feels like it after it catches like that.'

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As the Cubs have learned in recent years, having your process is great, but it has to come with results. 'I don't necessarily want to hit myself out of a good swing,' Tucker said. 'With anything, you can get to a point where you start overthinking stuff. Or you can start feeling something kind of different and you start overanalyzing it. Then you go up there with that kind of thought process, and it's a little all over the place and you can't really lock in. 'For the most part, it's like the saying: 'Quality over quantity.'' Even around team officials, Tucker can come across as a little reserved, though still very pleasant. He has that same laid-back demeanor and a dry sense of humor during interviews with reporters. But if you could look into the clubhouse dining room after a game, you would see Tucker at a table surrounded by teammates. Advertisement 'Holding court,' Cubs pitcher Matthew Boyd said. That dynamic was always hoped for, but not necessarily guaranteed when the Cubs traded away a potential Rookie of the Year (Cam Smith), an All-Star third baseman (Isaac Paredes) and a major-league pitcher (Hayden Wesneski, who's now recovering from Tommy John surgery). In giving up 14 potential years of club control over those players, the Cubs got one season to maximize Tucker's talents and make their pitch. The Cubs will enter the last day before the All-Star break in first place. After Sunday afternoon's game at Yankee Stadium, Tucker, Boyd and Pete Crow-Armstrong will travel to Atlanta for the All-Star week festivities. The Cubs won't dominate the event the way the future World Series champs did in 2016 — and the club has experienced some lulls recently — but the offseason plan is coming together with a mix of experienced players and young talent. Tucker's hot start helped give Crow-Armstrong more space to develop offensively near the bottom of the lineup. In watching the rhythm of Tucker's at-bats, Seiya Suzuki recognized how to be more aggressive. Boyd, who threw eight scoreless innings in Saturday's 5-2 win over the New York Yankees, carried the rotation in the absence of multiple starting pitchers and won't pitch in the All-Star Game so that he can preserve strength for the second half. All these elements of the club are connected. In their worst full month so far, the Cubs went 13-13 in June. 'What's special about Tuck is he makes everybody else better,' Boyd said. 'By the way he carries himself, by the way he goes about his business, there's something about having a guy that has no panic, no worry, at least outwardly. That brings a lot of calm and resolve to a team on a day-in, day-out basis. It's really special.' There have been no excuses from Tucker, no prolonged adjustment period after previously spending his entire career in one organization. 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New team — and there's obviously the possibility that he only is one year with a team — but it doesn't change how he goes about any of his business.' For both sides, it probably makes the most business sense to see what the market will bear for an elite player who will be 29 years old next year. 'Not really,' Tucker said when asked if his thinking about free agency has evolved since he was traded to the Cubs seven months ago. But putting together the largest contract in franchise history would always require a leap of faith. Chicago's baseball operations department has verified Tucker's immense value and confirmed his easy-going manner in the clubhouse. The Ricketts family ownership group and the business side of the organization are seeing the reenergized crowds at Wrigley Field. For now, the bottom line is Tucker is having fun playing for a team he thinks can win the World Series this year. 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