Daily News (Los Angeles)

What it took for free-agent Judge to stay with Yankees

- By James O'Connell New York Daily News

One moment can change the course of history. For the New York Yankees, that proved to be true in their pursuit of resigning Aaron Judge.

If not for the infamous late-night phone call — 3 a.m. PT — from Hal Steinbrenn­er in Italy to Judge in California, the Yankees could still be stuck on just 15 captains in franchise history as the possibilit­y of the MVP taking his talents elsewhere was very real.

The Yankees had an eight-year offer on the table and with the San Francisco Giants and San Diego Padres in hot pursuit of the 2022 AL MVP, that wasn't going to be enough.

“Yeah (I was prepared to leave if Steinbrenn­er didn't offer a ninth year), that was really a big thing for me,” Judge told reporters after his introducti­on as the 16th Yankee captain on Wednesday. “I wanted to get that ninth year.

“All it really took was getting on the phone with Hal and him saying `all right, let's do it, what's the holdup here?' Because there was some pretty good offers out there. It would've been a tough financial decision to turn down some things. Ultimately, it came down to hearing Hal say we want you here, if (that takes) nine years, here's nine years.”

Judge — who slashed .311/.425/.686 while mashing an AL-record 62 homers last season — confirmed that he had received more than one formal offer from other teams in his testing of the free-agent waters.

The Yankees' owner was heavily involved in the negotiatio­ns to retain his franchise player. The pursuit involved multiple in-person meetings and phone calls where the message was relayed to Judge that in his opinion, he was not a free agent and there were no doubts that he would be a Yankee.

“I think it was on a Tuesday night and we (Judge) had a conversati­on,” Steinbrenn­er said. “I woke up the next morning and talked about a lot of the things we talked about (in our first meeting after the season).

“That's when I told him, you're not a free agent as far as I'm concerned, you're a Yankee. We just need to do what we can do to make sure that stays the same.”

Steinbrenn­er started feeling a little uneasy about the negotiatio­ns after that phone call, despite having felt that the Yankees had communicat­ed well, however, he just felt that something wasn't going right — industry speculatio­n at the winter meetings indicated that his intuition was correct.

That's when he made the call to Judge directly to secure the deal from across the globe, dropping the hammer with a ninth guaranteed year totaling $360 million, the largest contract given out in Yankee history.

General manager Brian Cashman and Judge's agent Page Odle were involved every step of the way in between the process. However, Cashman stated that this was the most involved he had ever seen Steinbrenn­er in negotiatio­ns and got a little reminder that Hal is the son of George with an attitude of refusing to be denied.

“George had a real charm about him and a real way that when he was in that recruiting mode that could connect and sell and I saw a lot of that with Hal Steinbrenn­er during this process,” Cashman said.

“From start to finish, I think he personaliz­ed it with Aaron, he engaged Aaron right out of the gate. We got knocked out of the playoffs by Houston and the next morning Hal and I got on the phone with Aaron directly and Hal spoke to Aaron about how important it was that he was a Yankee.

“It reminded me a lot of how his dad went about business too.”

On the other end of this was manager Aaron Boone. After reports surfaced that “Arson Judge,” appeared to be heading to the Giants, a sort of panic settled in with the Yankees' skipper as he immediatel­y called Cashman who was told by Odle that the report was “bulls---.”

Boone asked a roundtable of Yankees' brass if they thought it was a good idea for the manager to hop on the phone with Judge one last time which was answered with a resounding yes.

Aside from reiteratin­g how much No. 99 means to the organizati­on, Boone pleaded with Judge to give Steinbrenn­er a final call before he makes any drastic decisions as he knew the owner would not let him get away which proved to be true.

In the end, a legacy in pinstripes meant more to Judge than a potential $400 million offer from the Padres or an enticing offer to return close to home. Throughout the process, the captain knew where he wanted to be and where he thought he belonged.

“In my heart, I knew where I wanted to be,” Judge said. “I think going through this process was a valuable lesson and just see what organizati­ons are about. It was a tough situation going through free agency.

“Ultimately, it gave me a clearer answer that I belong here in pinstripes and I need to finish my career here in New York.”

 ?? SETH WENIG – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Yankees owner Hal Steinbrenn­er looks on as Aaron Judge addresses the media after finalizing a $360million, nine-year contract.
SETH WENIG – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Yankees owner Hal Steinbrenn­er looks on as Aaron Judge addresses the media after finalizing a $360million, nine-year contract.

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