Judge’s 60th homer sparks Yankees’ comeback win over Pirates | CBC Sports
Aaron Judge hit his 60th home run and Giancarlo Stanton followed with a game-ending grand slam, completing the New York Yankees’ stunning five-run, ninth-inning rally to beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 9-8 on Tuesday night.
Judge moved within one of Roger Maris’ American League record when he turned on a sinker from right-hander Wil Crowe (5-10) leading off the inning and drove it 430 feet into the left-field bleachers, pulling New York to 8-5.
Judge took a rare curtain call, forced by his teammates.
“I really didn’t want to do it,” he said.
No. 60 ties The Sultan of Swat for 2nd all-time in American League history!<a href=”https://twitter.com/TheJudge44?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw”>@TheJudge44</a> ????⚖️ <a href=”https://t.co/DNwFXsJFMC”>pic.twitter.com/DNwFXsJFMC</a>
—@Yankees
Judge matched the 60 home runs Babe Ruth hit for the 1927 Yankees to set a big league record that stood for 34 years. It came off a pitcher whose great, great uncle, Hall of Famer Red Ruffing, was Ruth’s teammate on the Yankees in the 1930s.
“He did what he was supposed to do with it,” Crowe said, “3-1 count, I’m not going to put him on. I felt like I wanted to go after him. Started away, came back in. He put a good swing on a bad pitch.”
Anthony Rizzo doubled, Gleyber Torres walked and Josh Donaldson singled to load the bases. Stanton, mired in a 9-for-72 slump, sent a changeup half a dozen rows into the left-field seats to set off a raucous celebration among what remained of the crowd of 40,157 at Yankee Stadium.
Stanton’s low drive was measured at 118 mph.
Grand Slam Stan. <a href=”https://t.co/GpdUztMQvM”>pic.twitter.com/GpdUztMQvM</a>
—@Yankees
“I kind of lost my mind,” Judge said. “That’s a signiture Giancarlo Stanton 10-foot laser.”
Roger Maris Jr. and Kevin Maris, sons of the former player, were both on hand. Specially marked balls were used each time Judge walked to the plate. Fans in the outfield seats stood and many groaned with each foul ball.
Aroldis Chapman (3-3) pitched a 1-2-3 ninth.
Bryan Reynolds tied it 4-4 with a seventh-inning home run off Lou Trivino and had a go-ahead single off Jonathan Loaisiga in the eighth for his fourth hit.
Holmes, an All-Star who has slumped in the second half, was pitching against his former team for the first time.
Harrison Bader had a pair of go-ahead singles and drove in three runs in his debut for the Yankees. First baseman Anthony Rizzo made a key error that led to the four-run eighth inning for the already-eliminated Pirates.
Reynolds also had a three-base error on a dropped fly in centre, one of two errors by a team that leads the major leagues with 108.
Nestor Cortes stopped his leg twice in a double hesitation windup to Reynolds in the third but gave up a single to centre.
Father-son ceremonial 1st pitch
Former Yankees 3B Charlie Hayes, who caught the final out of the 1996 World Series, threw a ceremonial first pitch to his son, Pirates 3B Ke’Bryan Hayes.
Pittsburgh promoted six players to Triple-A Indianapolis following the end of the season at Double-A Altoona.
“Now we have another 10 days of at-bats we can get them,” manager Derek Shelton said. “Losing 2020 was so vital for organizations like ours. The more reps we can get them, the better it is.”
Luis Severino (5-3, 3.45) starts Wednesday for the Yankees after recovering from a lat strain that has sidelined him since July 13. Roansy Contreras (5-4, 3.24) pitches for the Pirates.
Thank you to former Yankees 3B and World Series Champion Charlie Hayes for throwing out tonight’s ceremonial first pitch, which was caught by his son <a href=”https://twitter.com/KeBryanHayes?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw”>@KeBryanHayes</a> ???? <a href=”https://t.co/BNF03cXS7l”>pic.twitter.com/BNF03cXS7l</a>
—@Yankees
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