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Aaron Judge

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Aaron Judge
Judge with the Yankees in 2017
New York Yankees – No. 99
Right fielder
Born: (1992-04-26) April 26, 1992 (age 32)
Linden, California
Bats: Right
Throws: Right
MLB debut
August 13, 2016, for the New York Yankees
MLB statistics
(through October 1, 2017)
Batting average.270
Hits169
Home runs56
Runs batted in124
Teams
Career highlights and awards

Aaron James Judge (born April 26, 1992) is an American professional baseball outfielder for the New York Yankees of Major League Baseball (MLB). Judge played college baseball at Fresno State.

The Yankees selected Judge in the first round of the 2013 MLB draft. After making his MLB debut in 2016 and hitting a home run in his first career at bat, Judge went on to have a record-breaking rookie season in 2017. He was named an All-Star and won the Home Run Derby, the first rookie to do so. He broke the Yankees' record for home runs by a rookie (besting Joe DiMaggio's 29 with 30 before the All-Star break). He won the American League's (AL) Rookie of the Month Awards for April, May, June and September, as well as the AL's Player of the Month Award for June and September. Judge hit 52 home runs as a rookie, breaking Mark McGwire's MLB rookie record of 49. He also hit 33 home runs at Yankee Stadium, breaking the record of 32 set by Babe Ruth in 1921.

Early life and amateur career

Judge was born and raised in Linden, California and was adopted the day after he was born by Patty and Wayne Judge, who both worked as teachers. When he was 10 years old, his parents told him that he was adopted; he recalls, "I knew I didn't look like them."[1] (He is African-American.)[2][3] He telephones his parents every day.[1] He has an older brother, John, who was also adopted.[4]

Judge attended Linden High School, where he was a three-sport star. He played as a pitcher and first baseman for the baseball team, a wide receiver for the football team, and as a center for the basketball team. He set a school record for touchdowns (17) in football and led the team in points per game (18.2) in basketball. In baseball, he was part of the Linden High School team that made the California Interscholastic Federation Division III playoffs.[5][6]

Various colleges recruited Judge to play tight end in football, including Notre Dame, Stanford, and UCLA, but he preferred baseball. The Oakland Athletics selected him in the 31st round of the 2010 Major League Baseball draft, but he opted to enroll at California State University, Fresno (Fresno State), to play for the Fresno State Bulldogs baseball team in the Western Athletic Conference (WAC). Louisville Slugger named him a Freshman All-American. He won the 2012 TD Ameritrade College Home Run Derby.[7] In his junior year, Judge led the Bulldogs in home runs, doubles, and runs batted in (RBIs).[8] Judge was named to the all-conference team in all three of his seasons for the Bulldogs—in the WAC in his first two seasons, and the Mountain West Conference (MW) as a junior (the Bulldogs joined the MW in July 2012, between his sophomore and junior seasons).[8]

Professional career

Minor leagues

Judge during Yankees' spring training in 2015

The Yankees drafted Judge in the first round of the 2013 Major League Baseball draft with the 32nd overall selection,[9][10] a pick the team received as compensation after losing Nick Swisher in free agency.[11] Judge signed with the Yankees, receiving a $1.8 million signing bonus.[12] He tore a quadriceps femoris muscle while participating in a base running drill, which kept him out of the 2013 season.[7][13] He made his professional debut with the Charleston RiverDogs of the Class A South Atlantic League in 2014.[7] He had a .333 batting average, .428 on-base percentage (OBP), .530 slugging percentage (SLG), and hit nine home runs with 45 RBIs in 65 games for Charleston. The Yankees promoted him to the Tampa Yankees of the Class A-Advanced Florida State League during the season, where he hit .283 with a .411 OBP, .442 SLG, eight home runs, and 33 RBIs in 66 games for Tampa.[8]

The Yankees invited Judge to spring training as a non-roster player in 2015.[14] Judge began the 2015 season with the Trenton Thunder of the Class AA Eastern League.[15] After Judge batted .284 with a .350 OBP and 12 home runs in 63 games for Trenton, the Yankees promoted Judge to the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders of the Class AAA International League in June.[16] He was chosen to represent the Yankees at the 2015 All-Star Futures Game.[17] The Yankees decided not to include Judge in their September call-ups.[18] Judge batted .224 with eight home runs in 61 games for Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.[19] The Yankees invited Judge to spring training in 2016, and he began the season with Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. Judge was named to the International League All-Star Team in 2016, but did not play in the 2016 Triple-A All-Star Game after he spent a month on the disabled list due to a knee sprain.[20][21] In 93 games for the RailRiders, Judge had a .270 batting average, 19 home runs, and 65 RBIs.[22]

New York Yankees

2016

Judge batting in 2016

Judge made his MLB debut on August 13, 2016, starting in right field against the Tampa Bay Rays.[23] In his first at-bat, Judge hit a home run off Matt Andriese; the previous batter, Tyler Austin, also making his MLB debut, had done the same. This marked the first time that two teammates had hit home runs in their first career at bats in the same game.[24] Judge also hit a home run in his second MLB game, becoming the second Yankees player to do so, after Joe Lefebvre in 1980.[25] Judge's debut season, in which he batted .179 and struck out 42 times in 84 at-bats (95 plate appearances), ended prematurely when he was placed on the 15-day disabled list with a grade 2 right oblique strain on September 13, 2016 against the Los Angeles Dodgers.[26]

2017: All-Star season

The Yankees named Judge their right fielder for Opening Day against the Tampa Bay Rays.[27] He had his first multi-home run game on April 28 against the Baltimore Orioles to help the Yankees win 14–11, coming back from a 9–1 deficit.[28] One of the home runs had a measured exit velocity of 119.4 miles per hour (192.2 km/h), the fastest exit velocity for a home run measured by Statcast since it was adopted in 2015.[29][30] Judge ended the month of April with 10 home runs, tying the rookie record set by José Abreu and Trevor Story.[31] He was named the American League's (AL) Rookie of the Month for April.[32] In April, he had a .303 batting average, 10 home runs, 20 RBIs, and a .411 OBP in 22 games.[33]

On May 3, Judge hit his 13th home run of the season, becoming the youngest player to hit 13 home runs within the first 26 games of a season.[34] On May 21, 2017, Judge earned his first career Golden Sombrero in a game played against the Tampa Bay Rays. [35]

The Yankees debuted a cheering section in the right-field seats of Yankee Stadium on May 22, called "The Judge's Chambers", three rows in section 104, containing 18 seats.[36][37] Fans are chosen by the team to sit there and are outfitted with black robes, wigs, and foam gavels.[37][38] In a game against the Oakland Athletics on May 28, Judge hit his first career grand slam.[39] Judge was named AL Rookie of the Month once again for May. In May, he had a .347 batting average, seven home runs, 17 RBIs, and a .441 OBP in 26 games.[40]

On June 10, Judge hit a home run that had an exit velocity of 121.1 miles per hour (194.9 km/h), again setting a new record for the hardest ever measured by Statcast.[41] The following day, Judge went 4-for-4 with two home runs, one of which traveled 495 feet (151 m), which was the longest in MLB in the 2017 season.[42] On June 12, Judge was named the AL Player of the Week. His week ended with him leading the AL in all three Triple Crown categories.[43] Judge was named the AL Player of the Month for the month of June, batting .324 with 10 home runs, 25 RBIs and a .481 OBP. His performance in the month of June also earned him his third consecutive AL Rookie of the Month award, the longest streak since Mike Trout won four in a row in 2012.[44] Judge had a 32-game on-base streak, including reaching base in every game in the month of June.[45] On July 2, Judge was voted as a starting outfielder to the 2017 MLB All-Star Game, receiving 4,488,702 votes, the most out of any player in the AL.[46]

Judge broke Joe DiMaggio's record for most home runs hit in a Yankees' rookie season with his 30th on July 7.[47] He became the second rookie to hit 30 home runs before the All-Star break after Mark McGwire in 1987,[48] the first Yankee to do so since Alex Rodriguez in 2007[49] and the first player in baseball since Chris Davis and Miguel Cabrera in 2013.[50] Before the All-Star break, Judge hit .329 with 30 home runs and 66 RBIs.

Judge won the 2017 Home Run Derby, besting Minnesota Twins third baseman Miguel Sanó 11–10 in the final round to become the first rookie to ever win the Derby outright.[51] Judge hit four home runs over 500 feet, one of which travelled 513 feet, the farthest in the Derby.[52] After his performance, MLB commissioner Rob Manfred stated that Judge is a player "who can become the face of the game."[53] On July 21, Judge a hit a home run that almost travelled out of Safeco Field. The ball was hit so hard that Statcast could not measure the details on the home run.[54]

On July 27, Judge lost a portion of his front left tooth during a celebration circle after Brett Gardner hit a walk-off home run.[55][56] The next game, Judge hit his 33rd home run of the season, for 37 home runs total through his first 125 career games, third-most in MLB history.[57] On August 17, Judge hit a 457-foot home run at Citi Field that reached the third deck but also struck out in the game, which marked 33 consecutive games with a strikeout, breaking Adam Dunn's record for a position player.[58][59] On August 20, Judge tied pitcher Bill Stoneman's streak of striking out in 37 consecutive games.[60][61]

On September 4, Judge became the first AL rookie to record 100 walks in a single season since Al Rosen (1950), and the first player in MLB to do it since Jim Gilliam (1953). During a game on September 10, Judge received his 107th walk, the most walks by a rookie in a season since Ted Williams in 1939.[62] During the same game, he also became the second rookie in MLB history to hit 40 home runs in a season since McGwire (1987).[63] He joined Babe Ruth (1920), Lou Gehrig (1927), Joe DiMaggio (1937) and Mickey Mantle (1956) as the only Yankees to hit 40 home runs in a season at age 25 or younger.[64] On September 20, Judge became the first player since José Bautista in 2010 and the first rookie to record 100 runs, 45 home runs, 100 RBIs, and 100 walks in a single season.[65]

On September 25, Judge hit his 49th and 50th home runs, tying and surpassing Mark McGwire's single season rookie home run record.[66] On September 30, Judge hit his 52nd home run of the season and his 33rd at Yankee Stadium, beating Babe Ruth's record for the franchise set in 1921.[67] After the conclusion of September, Judge won Player of the Month for the second time and Rookie of the Month for the fourth time, slashing .311/.463/.889 with 15 homers, 32 RBIs, 28 walks and 29 runs scored. Entering September, Judge's second-half batting average was .179, but he managed to raise it to .228 by the end of the month.

Judge finished the 2017 season with a .284 batting average, 154 hits, 114 RBIs, a .422 on-base percentage, a .627 slugging percentage and 9 stolen bases. He led the American League in three categories, with 128 runs scored, 52 home runs, and 127 walks (11 intentional). He became the first Yankee to lead the league in home runs, walks and runs scored since Mark Teixeira, Jason Giambi and Curtis Granderson in 2009, 2005 and 2011 respectively. He ranked second in the league in RBIs, on-base percentage and slugging. He also struck out an MLB-leading 208 times[68], breaking the Yankees record previously set by Curtis Granderson in 2012[69] and a rookie record previously set by Kris Bryant in 2015.[70]

With the Yankees finishing the year 91-71, the team clinched a Wild Card spot. During the AL Wild Card Round against the Minnesota Twins, Judge hit his first career postseason home run en route to an 8-4 victory.[71] In the first ALDS game against the Cleveland Indians, Judge struck out four times to earn his first postseason Golden Sombrero.

New York Yankees franchise records

  • Most home runs in a season hit at home: 33 (Babe Ruth held the record with 32).
  • Most home runs in a season by a rookie: 52 (Joe DiMaggio held the record with 29)[72]
  • Fifth Yankee to have 50 home runs in a single season. He joins Babe Ruth (54 in 1920, 59 in 1921, 60 in 1927, 54 in 1928), Mickey Mantle (52 in 1956, 54 in 1961), Roger Maris (61 in 1961), and Alex Rodriguez (54 in 2007).
  • First Yankee with at least 110 walks and 110 runs scored since Mickey Mantle in 1961 (126 walks, 131 runs).[73]
  • Second player in Yankees history to hit a home run in each of his first two games. (Joe Lefebvre was the first Yankee to do so in 1980).[74]
  • Holds the Yankees single season record for strikeouts with 205 (Passing Curtis Granderson's 195)[69]
  • 33 home runs in 36 games at Yankee Stadium in a single season. (Broke Babe Ruth's record, 32 in 1921).[75]
  • First right-handed hitter in Yankees history with at least 100 RBIs, 100 runs scored and 100 walks; in a single season
  • Eighth player in Yankees history with at least 100 runs, 100 RBIs and 100 walks in a season.[76]
  • Fourth rookie in franchise history with 100 RBIs in a season (joining Joe DiMaggio, Tony Lazzeri and Hideki Matsui).[77]
  • Third rookie in Yankees history to hit a homerun in postseason debut after Elston Howard (1955) and Shane Spencer (1998).

MLB records

  • Most home runs by a rookie, 52 (Mark McGwire held record with 49)[78]
  • Became the youngest player to hit 13 home runs within the first 26 games of a season.[79]
  • Measured exit velocity of 119.4 miles per hour (192.2 km/h), the fastest exit velocity for a home run measured by Statcast. (April 28, 2017)[80]
  • Measured exit velocity of 121.1 miles per hour (194.9 km/h), again setting a new record for the hardest ever measured by Statcast. (June 10, 2017)[81]
  • Second rookie to hit 30 home runs before the All-Star break after Mark McGwire (33 in 1987).[82]
  • Holds the MLB record for striking out in 37 consecutive games. (2017)[83]
  • Holds the MLB record for most strikeouts by a rookie with 205.
  • Holds the MLB record for most walks by a rookie with 127.
  • First rookie in MLB history with at least 45 home runs, 100 RBIs and 100 runs scored.[84]
  • Second rookie in MLB history with 100+ RBIs, 100+ runs scored and 100+ walks in a season. (Ted Williams is the other).[76]
  • Fourth rookie to post an OPS of more than 1.000 with a 1.049 mark, only behind "Shoeless" Joe Jackson (1911), Ted Williams (1939) and Albert Pujols (2001).[85]
  • Most Golden Sombreros in postseason play since 1903. [86]

Uniform

Judge has worn the unusual uniform number of 99 since it was given to him during 2016 spring training[87] (higher numbers are often given to young players who are not expected to make the regular-season team). Judge has stated he would prefer either No. 44 (retired by the Yankees to honor Reggie Jackson) or No. 35 (worn by Michael Pineda since 2014), but is not sure whether he would switch if the latter two were to become available.[87]

MLB along with the MLB Players Association, created Players Weekend to let players 'express themselves while connecting with their past in youth baseball'. From August 25-27, 2017, players wore alternate team jerseys inspired by youth league designs. They also had the option to replace their last names with their nicknames on their jersey nameplates, and the vast majority of players did so. Judge chose the nickname "All Rise" (given to him by teammate Todd Frazier) to be worn on the back of his jersey nameplate.[88]

Player profile

Judge is listed at 6 feet 7 inches (2.01 m) and 282 pounds (128 kg). Due to his large size and strength, he has elicited comparisons to Giancarlo Stanton, Richie Sexson,[89] Dave Winfield, and Willie Stargell.[8][4]

Personal life

Judge is a Christian and has posted about his faith on his Twitter account.[90] He keeps a note on his phone that reads ".179", his batting average with the Yankees in 2016, and looks at it daily as a source of motivation.[91] Judge appeared on the cover of the edition of May 15, 2017 of Sports Illustrated.[92] On May 15, 2017, he appeared on an episode of The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon where he posed undercover to ask Yankee fans questions about himself.[93] Judge has earned praise for his humble personality and willingness to be a team player.[94]

See also

References

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  2. ^ "Fourteen alumni from RBI selected in the 2013 MLB Player Draft". Major League Baseball. June 13, 2013. Retrieved October 10, 2017. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |dead-url= (help)
  3. ^ Reid, Alvin (June 15, 2017). "Big week for black players – present and future – in Major League Baseball". St. Louis American. Retrieved October 10, 2017. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |dead-url= (help)
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  5. ^ Apstein, Stephanie (May 9, 2017). "Powerful Yankees slugger Aaron Judge stands out, but all he wants to do is blend in". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved May 12, 2017.
  6. ^ Braziller, Zach (May 6, 2017). "Where Aaron Judge comes from explains who he is". New York Post. Retrieved May 12, 2017.
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  8. ^ a b c d Feinsand, Mark (March 7, 2015). "Yankees prospect Aaron Judge has a huge future in pinstripes". New York Daily News. Retrieved March 13, 2015.
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  85. ^ http://nyp.st/2fIr5pH
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