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Aaron Judge shatters Mark McGwire's MLB record during Yankees loss
Aaron Judge shatters Mark McGwire's MLB record during Yankees loss

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Aaron Judge shatters Mark McGwire's MLB record during Yankees loss

The New York Yankees lost 5-2 to the Chicago Cubs on Saturday. Despite the loss, Aaron Judge made some history in the ninth inning of the contest. Judge hit a two-run home run with one out in the bottom of the ninth inning. It was the 350th home run of his already phenomenal career. He became the fastest player in MLB history to reach 350 home runs. Advertisement According to MLB's Sarah Langs, Judge passes Mark McGwire to become the fastest player to reach the mark. Not only did Judge pass him, but he did it by a wide margin. McGwire hit his 350th home run in his 1,280th game. Judge did it in his 1,088th game. There's almost a 200-game difference between when Judge and McGwire reached the 350-homer mark. McGwire was in his 12th season and had been named an All-Star nine times in that span. He also had two Silver Sluggers and a Gold Glove. Judge is in his 10th season and has been named an All-Star seven times. He has four Silver Sluggers and two MVP Awards already. Judge is on track to be one of the all-time great home run hitters. At his current pace, Judge could finish his career alongside the likes of Barry Bonds, Henry Aaron and Babe Ruth in terms of home runs. Follow The Sporting News On WhatsApp Judge did not make much of his achievement after the game. When asked about the feat, he noted that he wishes the team had found a way to win today. More MLB: Yankees make Anthony Volpe decision following DJ LeMahieu release

Cubs' Kyle Tucker robbed Yankees' Cody Bellinger of a 4-homer game with amazing catch
Cubs' Kyle Tucker robbed Yankees' Cody Bellinger of a 4-homer game with amazing catch

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Cubs' Kyle Tucker robbed Yankees' Cody Bellinger of a 4-homer game with amazing catch

They couldn't have known it at the time. Because when Cody Bellinger ripped a rocket line drive deep to right field in the seventh inning at Yankee Stadium, he had only hit two home runs to that point. So when Cubs superstar Kyle Tucker leaped at the wall to rob a homer, it denied an incredible night but didn't yet appear to be historic. Advertisement Only later, when Bellinger actually left the yard for his third HR of the night, did it become clear exactly what Tucker had done. He had prevented a fourth homer in the same game for Bellinger. Only 19 players have ever done that. MORE: Cal Raleigh puts up stats never before seen in MLB history There is an obvious caveat here: There's no telling how the pursuit of a fourth homer might've changed Bellinger's approach in his next at bat. Would Chicago have pitched him differently? Would he have felt a different amount of pressure that would've caused a different kind of swing? Advertisement It's impossible go back and replay those moments. But Tucker's catch denied even the chance at that history. Bellinger probably didn't feel too bad about it, though. He went to bed having homered three times in the same game against his former team, and his swing is clearly locked in. He'll take that every night even with the robbery thrown in. MORE MLB NEWS:

With Jameson Taillon on the injured list, Cubs should turn to this reliever to start
With Jameson Taillon on the injured list, Cubs should turn to this reliever to start

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

With Jameson Taillon on the injured list, Cubs should turn to this reliever to start

The Chicago Cubs have been dealt a tough hand in terms of pitching injuries, the latest being Jameson Taillon. Taillon was having a great season up mid-June. He allowed 15 earned runs over 12.2 innings in his last three starts. Advertisement Manager Craig Counsell announced Taillon would miss 'a pretty significant amount of time' with a right calf strain. The 33-year-old is 7-6 with a 4.44 ERA and a 1.11 WHIP in 17 starts this season. Taillon is the third Cubs starting pitcher on the injured list, joining Justin Steele and Javier Assad. With this in mind, the Cubs need to act quickly to fill Taillon's void. Chicago is rumored to target starting pitching aggressively at the trade deadline, but in the meantime, Taillon's possible replacement is already on the team. Follow The Sporting News on WhatsApp FanSided's Christopher Kline thinks the Cubs should stretch out long-reliever Chris Flexen, especially considering the pitching market is an uncertainty. Advertisement 'Before stints with Colorado and Chicago (x2), Flexen put a couple of strong seasons together with the Seattle Mariners in 2021 and '22 (3.66 ERA, 317.1 IP, 220 K in 64 games),' wrote Kline. 'Now we are seeing Flexen get back to his winning ways. He is 5-0 through 16 appearances and 29.0 innings out of the bullpen this season, with a 0.62 ERA and 0.83 WHIP. Pound for pound, very few relievers have operated at Flexen's level this season. It's not the largest sample size for the most high-leverage of roles, but the 31-year-old is generating tons of soft contact.' After pitching the bulk of a bullpen game on Saturday, Flexen now has a 0.83 ERA after allowing one run in 3.2 innings. Instead of just doing bullpen games, which Flexen pitches the bulk of anyway, it makes a lot of sense to let the 31-year-old start. More MLB: How likely is a Luis Robert Jr. trade, and where could he land?

Crow-armstrong homers twice as cubs top twins to deny series sweep
Crow-armstrong homers twice as cubs top twins to deny series sweep

Al Arabiya

time5 days ago

  • Sport
  • Al Arabiya

Crow-armstrong homers twice as cubs top twins to deny series sweep

Pete Crow-Armstrong hit two home runs for his fifth multi-homer game this season, powering the Chicago Cubs past the Minnesota Twins 8-1 on Thursday. Crow-Armstrong, whose first-half breakout earned him a starting spot for the National League All-Star team, went 3 for 4 with three runs and three runs batted in to help the Cubs avoid a three-game sweep. Colin Rea (7-3) won his third straight start with a three-hitter over a season-high seven innings, and Minnesota native Michael Busch added two runs batted in. Rea allowed only a fifth-inning home run by Kody Clemens, as the 35-year-old right-hander turned in his longest start since seven shutout innings for Milwaukee last Aug. 18. Paddack, who considers Rea a mentor dating to their time together with San Diego for his advice on recovery from Tommy John elbow surgery, gave up 11 hits and six runs. He is 1-5 in his last 10 starts, with the Twins winning three. Spencer Steer homered and Nick Lodolo pitched six strong innings as Cincinnati beat Miami to earn a split in the four-game series. Elly De La Cruz singled for his 100th hit of the season, stole second, and scored on Austin Hays's single to put Cincinnati ahead 1-0 in the first. Steer's solo home run, his 11th of the season, made the score 2-0 in the second. Cal Quantrill retired 11 straight following Steer's homer, but the Reds loaded the bases with no outs in the sixth. Lodolo (6-6) allowed only three hits with no walks and four strikeouts. It's the seventh time this season that the Reds' lefty allowed one run or fewer. De La Cruz singled in a run and TJ Friedl raced home on a throwing error by right fielder Dane Myers to make it 4-0 in the sixth. Hays followed with a two-run single. Quantrill (3-8) pitched five-plus innings and allowed five earned runs, the most since April 19 when he allowed seven at Philadelphia. Ceddanne Rafaela hit a go-ahead two-run double during a three-run seventh inning, and Boston earned their season-high seventh straight win by beating Tampa Bay. Boston starter Walker Buehler gave up three runs off five hits, including two home runs, over six innings. Chris Murphy (1-0) and Garrett Whitlock pitched a scoreless seventh and eighth, and Aroldis Chapman struck out two in the ninth to pick up his 16th save and 1300th strikeout. Junior Caminero hit a two-run home run, and Ha-Seong Kim added a solo homer for the Rays. Tampa's Taj Bradley allowed one run off two hits over six innings, striking out five. But reliever Bryan Baker (3-3), who was making his Rays debut after being traded by the Baltimore Orioles, surrendered all three Boston runs in the seventh. Jordan Westburg homered and drove in three runs as Baltimore defeated New York to sweep a doubleheader. Alex Jackson doubled twice and scored two runs in his Baltimore debut to help the Orioles win for the fifth time in six games. They took both ends of a twinbill for the first time since June 2016 against Tampa Bay at home. In the opener, Gunnar Henderson hit a two-run drive in the eighth inning for his first career pinch-hit homer, sending Baltimore to a 3-1 victory. The split-admission doubleheader was scheduled to make up Wednesday night's game, which was postponed due to a forecast of inclement weather.

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