Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

YANKS ARE BACK

Playing before fans for first time in nearly a year, Bombers open exhibition season with loss to Blue Jays

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TAMPA, FLA. » Aaron Judge tossed several balls into the crowd, just like always. Only this year the fans can’t toss them back to the New York Yankees star in a friendly game of catch.

So while the souvenirs stay in the seats because of COVID-19 protocols, the slugging right fielder is still getting something in return.

A reaction, even for making a routine out.

“I hit a groundball but just hearing the fans kind of spark up,” Judge said. “You hear that instant crowd reaction. Kind of had little butterflie­s getting back to your first at-bat.”

On the opening day of the exhibition season, Judge went 0 for 2 in the Yankees’ 6-4 loss to Toronto in a game shortened to seven innings, as Major League Baseball is permitting in these early spring training matchups.

An announced crowd of 2,637 at Steinbrenn­er Field — about 25 percent of capacity — marked the first time the Yankees have played before fans since a spring training game last March 12.

“We’re all excited to finally have some fans even though it wasn’t a packed house, but anything is better than nothing,” Judge said.

The game had most of the normal pomp and circumstan­ce at the Yankees’ spring training

home opener.

New York wore its pinstripe uniforms for the only time during the exhibition season. The jersey top this season has a No. 16 patch on the left sleeve honoring Hall of Famer Whitey Ford, who died last year.

Both teams gathered along the infield foul lines for the announceme­nt of the starting lineups. A moment of silence was held for Yankees co-chairperso­n Hank Steinbrenn­er, who also died in 2020.

The limited crowd size is one of the safety protocols in place due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“We made reference to it a couple times, how nice is it having people in the stands,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. “I saw a highlight before we walked out of BP. A kid chasing a ball going over the fence and those kind of things. It’s been too long.”

But difference­s from the past remain quite evident.

The Yankees’ YES Network play-by-play team of Michael Kay and David Cone both worked from home. Radio announcers John Sterling and Suzyn Waldman called the game remotely as well.

Protocols at Steinbrenn­er Field include a masking mandate, which was flouted by a number of fans.

Judge, meanwhile, eagerly awaits a time when he can again play catch with fans in-between innings. In the meantime, he has a plan to overcome the limited interactio­n.

“Just let my play be the connection,” Judge said. “Put on a show. I think that’s all you can really do. “

Notes

Yankees ace Gerrit Cole and Detroit RHP Kyle Funkhouser are the scheduled starters for Monday’s game at Steinbrenn­er Field. It will be new Tigers manager and former Houston skipper AJ Hinch’s first game against the New York since the Astros’ sign-stealing scandal broke last year — a scheme that many in the New York organizati­on feel cost them a World Series trip in 2017. “We spoke about this at length last year and dealt with it,” Boone said. “I have beyond moved on from it.”

 ?? FRANK FRANKLIN II — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? New York Yankees’ Asher Wojciechow­ski delivers a pitch during the third inning of ?Sunday’s exhibition game against the Toronto Blue Jays on Sunday in Tampa, Fla.
FRANK FRANKLIN II — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS New York Yankees’ Asher Wojciechow­ski delivers a pitch during the third inning of ?Sunday’s exhibition game against the Toronto Blue Jays on Sunday in Tampa, Fla.
 ?? FRANK FRANKLIN II — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Toronto Blue Jays’ Otto Lopez, left, slides past New York Yankees’ Robinson Chirinos, right, to score on a single by Lourdes Gurriel Jr. in the fourth inning of Sunday’s game.
FRANK FRANKLIN II — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Toronto Blue Jays’ Otto Lopez, left, slides past New York Yankees’ Robinson Chirinos, right, to score on a single by Lourdes Gurriel Jr. in the fourth inning of Sunday’s game.

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