logo
Yanks' Cody Bellinger hits 3rd home run of game against Cubs, an inning after being robbed

Yanks' Cody Bellinger hits 3rd home run of game against Cubs, an inning after being robbed

NEW YORK (AP) — Robbed an inning earlier, Cody Bellinger wasn't sure his first three-homer game had been swiped away again.
'I didn't know at first,' he said. 'For that third one to finally get over feels pretty good.'
Bellinger hit three two-run homers against his former team and was denied a fourth by a spectacular catch, leading the Yankees to an 11-0 rout of the Chicago Cubs on Friday night.
Aaron Judge made a trio of outstanding grabs in right field for the Yankees, who have won fifth straight games following a a six-game losing streak.
Bellinger, whose dad Clay played for the Yankees from 1999 to 2001, is a two-time All-Star and 2019 NL MVP.
He spent 2023 and '24 with the Cubs, hitting .266 with 18 homers and 78 RBIs in 130 games last year while missing time because of a broken right rib. The Cubs traded him to New York in December with $52.5 million remaining on his contract and agreed to pay the Yankees $5 million.
He homered in a three-run third off Chris Flexen and in the fifth against Caleb Thielbar for this 18th multi-homer game. Bellinger nearly went deep in the seventh but was robbed by Kyle Tucker on a drive above the right-field wall.
'I was watching it. He timed it up perfect, so I was a little sick about it, honestly,' Bellinger said. 'But it was a good catch.'
'Boys were giving me a hard time after he robbed it. Boonie was giving me hard time,' Bellinger added.
A four-time All-Star and a Gold Glove winner, Tucker snatched the ball as a fan tried for it, the spectator clasping both sides of the outfielder's glove.
'I caught the ball and he caught my glove, so I figured even if I dropped it they'd probably look at it and get it overturned,' Tucker said. 'I've probably had some encounters with me trying to go into the stands and catching a ball and me hitting someone's hand or whatever but I don't know if anyone's ever actually kind of caught my glove while doing it.'
Bellinger homered in the eighth off Jordan Wicks, just above the red glove of leaping center fielder Pete Crow-Armstrong and into the dark glove of a kid in the front row.
'The fan just beat to the spot,' Crow-Armstrong said. 'He just had a better chance of catching it higher than I did.'
Bellinger, who had rounded first, watched and then smiled when he saw he had hit No. 3.
'Glad the fan caught it before PCA could grab it,' said Bellinger, who met the boy after and got the ball back. 'I've seen PCA rob so many homers. He's a freak athlete out there.'
Bellinger is batting .406 over a career-high 16-game hitting streak, raising his average to .285 with 16 homers and 54 RBIs.
He had spoken with his Cubs ex-teammates during batting practice.
'No, no, no revenge,' he said. 'Honestly, ultimately it was just fun to be out there. I saw a bunch of guys I hadn't seen in a while and I shared a bunch of good memories with them for these past two years.'
Jazz Chisholm Jr. and manager Aaron Boone encouraged Bellinger to emerge from the dugout for a curtain call.
'He was a little reluctant, but then the Bell-lin-ger' over the dugout got pretty loud. So I think he succumbed to it,' Boone said. 'Belly's loved being here and loved playing here in a meaningful place to him, going back to his childhood.'
Thursdays
Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter.
Bellinger turns 30 on Sunday and can opt out of the final season of his contract this fall. With long balls and wide smiles, he seems to have found a home in the Yankees clubhouse.
He tried not to make much of getting the three homers against the Cubs, but Bellinger's teammates could sense the significance.
'It's always good to go against your old teammates that you spend a lot of time with, you know, you respect,' Boone said. 'To perform right away against them I'm sure probably is a little cherry on top for him.'
___
AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Roberts, Murphy defend Misiorowski ‘s selection to NL All-Stat roster
Roberts, Murphy defend Misiorowski ‘s selection to NL All-Stat roster

Winnipeg Free Press

time24 minutes ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Roberts, Murphy defend Misiorowski ‘s selection to NL All-Stat roster

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The addition of Milwaukee Brewers rookie phenom pitcher Jacob Misiorowski to the National League All-Star team drew mixed reactions around Major League Baseball. Some players and fans quickly took to social media to express their frustrations over a player with only five starts in the majors being added to the NL roster instead of other players who have put up as good, if not better, numbers during the first half of the season. Dodgers manager Dave Roberts, who will manage the NL squad Tuesday in Atlanta, is on the opposite end of the spectrum. Roberts made it clear that he had no voice in selecting Misiorowski but sees the move as a positive, given the entertainment value of the Midsummer Classic. 'The All-Star game is about the fans,' Roberts said. 'Yes, this kid hasn't pitched a whole lot in the big leagues but I do think it sparks some more excitement, seeing the velocity.' The 23-year-old, who is 4-1 with a 2.81 ERA, quickly gained attention when he threw a 100.5 mph fastball for his first pitch in the big leagues. Brewers manager Pat Murphy said he understood the backlash from around the league but sees it as giving fans what they want. 'People want to see Miz pitch,' Murphy said. 'He's the new shiny toy in the league. It's not deserving, that has nothing to do with it. He's been given this opportunity. It's not his fault. 'This wasn't a fly by night decision. This is something they thought through. I think it would be really tough for the kid to say no to that.' Murphy likened Misiorowski to former Detroit Tigers pitcher Mark 'The Bird' Fidrych. Thursdays Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter. Fidrych was an All-Star his first two seasons in the majors, a unique player who would often talk to his glove while on the mound. Fans embraced Fidrych and his eccentricities because he had the stuff on the mound to back it up. He pitched 24 complete games as a rookie in 1976, including back-to-back games when he logged 11 innings each time. 'From what I know of The Bird, it just seems that he was really authentic and really super talented,' Murphy said. 'There's some parallels there for sure.' ___ AP MLB:

Felix, Serena go into Team USA HoF along with an icon who paved the way for women: Anita DeFrantz
Felix, Serena go into Team USA HoF along with an icon who paved the way for women: Anita DeFrantz

Winnipeg Free Press

time30 minutes ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Felix, Serena go into Team USA HoF along with an icon who paved the way for women: Anita DeFrantz

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) — In some ways, one of the longest-serving members of the International Olympic Committee, Anita DeFrantz, paved the way for the new president of the IOC, Kirsty Coventry, to get to where she is today. That why Coventry, the first female leader of the IOC, pulled a big surprise Saturday. She traveled to Colorado Springs to watch DeFrantz, a trailblazing Olympic rower in 1976 and IOC member since 1986, get inducted into the Team USA Hall of Fame. 'She opened up so many doors, for me and for so many others,' said Coventry, who took over as president last month, in an interview with The Associated Press before the ceremony. 'I'm extremely grateful for that. I know that I've got to make sure I do that for other women.' The 72-year-old DeFrantz is part of a class that includes eight individual women — among them 11-time Olympic medalist Allyson Felix, four-time Olympic champion Serena Williams, three-time Olympic champion Kerri Walsh Jennings and 2012 all-around gymnastics champion Gabby Douglas. Also inducted Saturday were Bode Miller, Mike Krzyzewski, Phil Knight, Steve Cash, Susan Hagel, Flo Hyman and Marla Runyan, along with the 2010 four-man bobsled team and the 2004 women's wheelchair basketball team. Coventry showed up for DeFrantz, who played an important role in moving votes toward the five-time Olympic swimmer from Zimbabwe in the seven-person race to succeed Thomas Bach earlier this year. This was one of Coventry's first big — albeit low-key — trips in the new role, and DeFrantz was shocked to see the new president standing there as she got out of her car to head into the ceremony at the Broadmoor. DeFrantz described herself as a little lonely when she went to her first IOC meeting in 1986. 'I walked in and I thought, 'This is odd,'' she said. 'It was this cavernous room' and she was one of only five female committee members there. One of her main goals in becoming a shaper of world sports policy: 'We had to help people open their minds a little.' While, in some ways, the Olympics has been ahead of its time in the effort to bring women into big-time sports — 22 women participated in the 1900 Olympics while, for instance, it took until 1981 for the NCAA to sanction women's basketball — it has also shined a global spotlight on some inequities that have existed for decades. Women's rowing didn't debut at the Games until the 1976 Olympics where DeFrantz and her teammates won bronze. Only last year did the Olympics achieve gender parity, with women making up half of the approximately 10,500 athletes, according to the IOC. DeFrantz, a vice president of the 1984 LA organizing committee, helped spark that progress. She served as chair of the IOC's women in sport commission for 20 years. She became a member of the IOC executive board in 1992 and was elected as the IOC's first female vice president in 1997. A generation later, Felix began her own fight to highlight the way women were treated when they became pregnant. She forced a seismic change in contract terms that, for decades, had given little leeway to female track stars who put careers on hold to have babies. Felix is now a member of the IOC, as well — following in the footsteps of both DeFrantz and Coventry as Olympic athletes who now have seats at the decision-making table. 'I feel really blessed to come after Anita and I've told her this many times, she has paved the way,' Felix said. 'She's a game-changer. Just what she's seen and contributed to is incredible. For someone like me, it's just wanting to carry on her legacy.' DeFrantz's honor comes at yet another tenuous time for women in sports, punctuated by headline-grabbing debates about eligibility and gender testing in track, boxing, swimming and other sports that will likely bring leaders like Coventry and DeFrantz into the mix. Thursdays Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter. Coventry said it's important to 'protect the female category,' and has signaled that the IOC will take a more active role in setting guidelines for participation. But for the 41-year-old president, this was a night for celebrating a mentor who made her role in today's debates possible. 'It's all about letting people have opportunities,' DeFrantz said. 'You can't make an Olympian. But you can open the door to possibilities.' ___ AP sports:

Joe Pavelski, Taylor Twellman share lead in American Century celebrity golf tournament
Joe Pavelski, Taylor Twellman share lead in American Century celebrity golf tournament

Winnipeg Free Press

timean hour ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Joe Pavelski, Taylor Twellman share lead in American Century celebrity golf tournament

SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Nev. (AP) — Former NHL player Joe Pavelski birdied the final three holes Saturday for a share of the second-round lead with former soccer player Taylor Twellman in the American Century Championship at Edgewood Tahoe. Pavelski, the first-round leader who finished second last year behind former tennis player Mardy Fish, had a 21-point day in the modified Stableford scoring system to match Twellman at 44. Twellman had a 23-point round. 'Obviously, Twellman has been playing great,' Pavelski said. 'To finish birdie, birdie, birdie and be tied with him, I'll take that all day.' Country star Jake Owen was third at 41 after a 25-point round, and Carolina Panthers receiver Adam Thielen was another point back following a 21-point day. Former LPGA Tour star Annika Sorenstam scored 20 points to reach 37. Three-time champions Tony Romo (18) and Mark Mulder (21) were at 36 with John Smoltz (19). Stephen Curry, the 2023 champion, had a 14-point round to join Fish (18) at 35. Charles Barkley lost 16 points to drop from a tie for 24th to a tie for 61st in the 90-player field. He had minus-7 points overall. Former baseball player Jimmy Rollins had a hole-in-one on the 154-yard, par-3 12th. He won a $325,000 Mastercraft boat. Thursdays Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter. ___ AP golf:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store