The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

JUDGE HITS NOS. 40, 41 VS. TEXAS

Yankees score 16 in victory over Rangers

- By Stephen Hawkins

ARLINGTON, TEXAS » Aaron Judge became the second major league rookie with a 40-homer season, going deep twice as the AL wild card-leading New York Yankees got a series clinching 16-7 win over the Texas Rangers on Sunday.

Gary Sanchez also hit two solo homers for the Yankees, giving him 30 this season and 50 in his 161 games since his 2015 debut.

With Judge’s AL-best 40th homer in the fourth, the 25-yearold joined Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Joe DiMaggio and Mickey Mantle as the only Yankees to hit 40 homers at age 25 or younger. Judge added No. 41 two innings later, a drive that would have gone 463 feet unimpeded, according to MLB’s Statcast.

Mark McGwire hit a leaguehigh 49 homers as a rookie for Oakland in 1987.

REDS 10, METS 5 » On the last day of tough road trip in New York, Reds manager Bryan Price just wanted to listen to “God Bless America” and pay his respects.

Price put his argument with a pair of umpires on pause for the singing of the patriotic song, then resumed the dispute as Cincinnati beat the New York Mets 10-5 Sun-

day on Tucker Barnhart’s career-high five RBIs.

“Well, I believe in honoring the flag,” Price said.

Cincinnati had rallied for three runs in the seventh to make it 5-all. Scooter Gennett then was called out on strikes by plate umpire Shane Livensparg­er to end the inning, slammed down his bat and helmet, and was ejected.

Price came out to argue, contesting the call with Livensparg­er and crew chief Jerry Layne. As they went at it, New York firefighte­r Makiah Brown and the Mets’ on-field entertainm­ent staff halted their steps before walking over to the dirt area near home plate for the performanc­e.

The Cincinnati skipper stood in between both umpires, their hats off, during Brown’s rendition of “God Bless America.” When she finished, Price and the two umps put their caps back on and resumed the dispute.

“‘God Bless America’ gave me a time to realize that it was not a time to get ejected,” Price said. “I had an opportunit­y before the song began to make my point to the home plate umpire, and Jerry Layne did a good job of just kind of cooling things off like a veteran umpire. . It was probably good timing for the song.”

The Reds had lost the first three games of the series at Citi Field, getting outscored 18-4. Cincinnati had dropped nine in a row on the road against the Mets, dating to 2015.

Jackson Stephens (2-0) pitched 1 1/3 scoreless innings. Raisel Iglesias got six outs for his 26th save of the season.

The Reds, who a day earlier sealed their fourth straight losing season and 14th in the last 17 seasons, were on their way to getting swept before New York ace Jacob deGrom was pulled after 102 pitches in six innings.

“I would say I used my changeup more today, had a good feel for it, which I think made the slider that much better,” deGrom said.

DeGrom struck out 10 and allowed two hits and three runs. He rebounded from a bad start Tuesday against Philadelph­ia in which he lasted a careerlow 3 2/3 innings and allowed a personal-worst nine runs, six of them earned.

Mets reliever Paul Sewald took over with a 5-2 lead to start the seventh.

 ?? PHOTOS BY LM OTERO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? New York Yankees Aaron Judge runs the bases after hitting a solo home run during the sixth inning of a baseball game against the Texas Rangers in Arlington, Texas, Sunday.
PHOTOS BY LM OTERO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS New York Yankees Aaron Judge runs the bases after hitting a solo home run during the sixth inning of a baseball game against the Texas Rangers in Arlington, Texas, Sunday.
 ??  ?? New York Yankees' Gary Sanchez, right, celebrates his solo home run with teammate Starlin Castro (14) during the eighth inning of a baseball game against the Texas Rangers in Arlington, Texas, Sunday.
New York Yankees' Gary Sanchez, right, celebrates his solo home run with teammate Starlin Castro (14) during the eighth inning of a baseball game against the Texas Rangers in Arlington, Texas, Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States