New York Daily News

So far, new Yankee Verdugo fitting in pinstripes rather nicely, thank you

- BY GARY PHILLIPS

HOUSTON – Growing up in Tucson, Arizona, Alex Verdugo enjoyed a normal childhood. Nothing, he said, really stood out from the ordinary, yet he still calls the area home.

“It’s a lot smaller of a city,” Verdugo told the Daily News, comparing it to the metropolis­es he’s played for: Los Angeles, Boston and New York. “Arizona’s big, but Tucson is kind of small, man. There’s nothing too crazy about it, but I like it. We have everything we need, and it’s peaceful.”

That includes family, which will be in attendance when the Yankees begin a three-game series against the pennant-winning Diamondbac­ks tonight. Verdugo’s parents, proudly tatted on his chest, will see him play in an official game for the Yankees for the first time after the club acquired him from the Red Sox over the offseason.

“I’ll have a lot of family out there. It’ll be a good event,” Verdugo said.

“It’ll be a lot of people, so it’ll be a lot of fun.”

Verdugo added that he’ll get to spend time with his parents and other relatives away from Chase Field. He’ll play the part of host, and he’s got a taco truck reserved for his visitors.

“Everybody’s gonna come over to the crib and we’re gonna have some nice food and hang out with family,” he said. “So it’s gonna be a good trip. I’m looking forward to it.”

As Verdugo prepared to see his real family, he found himself fitting in just fine with his new baseball family.

It’s helped that he’s played well, tallying a few hits, one RBI and some solid defensive plays in the Yankees’ season-opening series against the Astros. That included a sliding, game-ending grab in Sunday’s finale, a 4-3 win that cemented a four-game sweep for the Yankees.

“That’s money time right there with the game on the line,” Aaron Boone said of the catch, which robbed Kyle Tucker of a game-tying hit. “It seemed like he got a great read. My first instinct off the bat was, ‘That’s dropping in.’ When I looked up, he was on the dead-run tracking it. Almost knew he had it. He kind of hotdogged it, but I loved it.”

Added Juan Soto, who contribute­d his own heroics in the ninth: “Perfect. Beautiful. He just won the game for us. That was pretty cool.”

Some wondered if the eccentric Verdugo’s aesthetic – heavily influenced by ink and shiny chains – would clash with the so-called Yankee Way. The left fielder also tends to speak his mind, and he was benched twice by Red Sox manager

Alex Cora last year.

One reprimand came after Verdugo failed to hustle. The other benching happened because Verdugo arrived late to the ballpark. Verdugo was once chewed out by former Dodgers teammate Rich Hill for tardiness as well, and his past also includes a 2015 incident in Arizona in which police investigat­ed the alleged sexual assault of a minor by another player. Verdugo, citing a “police investigat­ion” and a “team thing,” said he was cleared of wrongdoing after joining the Red

Sox in the trade that sent Mookie Betts to the Dodgers.

Charges were not filed for that incident, and Brian Cashman said the Yankees did a “deep dive” on Verdugo before acquiring him.

In the months since, multiple Yankees, including Aaron Judge, Anthony Rizzo and Boone, have said that they’ve wanted Verdugo in pinstripes for a while.

“He’s been great,” Boone said of the 27-year-old. “He’s embraced the room. The room has embraced him. I love what he brings to the table. I’ve been trying to get him for a couple years.”

Verdugo, an impending free agent, said that hearing things like that “fires me up” and “makes me want to play better” for the Yankees.

“You want to be wanted,” he said, “and the fact that they wanted me over here speaks volumes

“It’s a clean slate,” Verdugo said. “I feel like you can’t judge a book by its cover, right? You gotta kind of open it up and at least read something about it to then have an opinion on it.”

 ?? AP ?? Alex Verdugo makes sliding catch for final out Sunday.
AP Alex Verdugo makes sliding catch for final out Sunday.

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