New York Post

Judge making big mark in center

- By JOEL SHERMAN

TORONTO — Aaron Judge starting in center field is a big deal mainly because he is a big deal — and, of course, just plain big.

Six-foot-7 guys play center in Division III basketball, not the majors.

But Aaron Boone was faced with a puzzle, and the solution was simple — and 6-foot-7. Boone’s two main center fielders — Aaron Hicks and Jacoby Ellsbury — are on the DL. And the Yankees manager was determined not to overtax his 34year-old third option, Brett Gardner, with four straight starts on the unforgivin­g turf at Rogers Centre.

So because Gardner’s numbers were poor against Toronto starter Marco Estrada (6-for-39, .154), Saturday’s game was the one he asked Judge to make his major league debut in center and become just the second 6-7 player in history to start in center (Walter Bond did it 11 times for the Indians and Astros in early 1960s).

Two batters into the bottom of the first, Boone encountere­d a different puzzle. Billy McKinney crashed into the left-field wall chasing a Josh Donaldson double. He stayed in for one more batter before his throw into the infield after a Justin Smoak RBI single was revelatory. McKinney was pulled, ultimately diagnosed with a shoulder strain and is heading to the DL.

Gardner, thus, was forced into action. But Boone decided to put him in left and keep Judge in center. The calculus to do that was about not wanting to ask Giancarlo Stanton — playing his first game in the field this year — to shift from right to left.

It all was basically a nonissue. Judge handled the only fly ball hit his way in center, and outfield defense was not an issue in the Yankees’ first loss of the season, 5-3 to Toronto.

“It will be a sight to see,” Gardner said. “He will be the biggest guy on the field, but one of the most athletic, too.”

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