Hartford Courant

Judge lives for this pressure cooker

- By Matthew Roberson

NEW YORK — With 10 games left in the regular season and his Yankees a half game back of a coveted postseason spot, Aaron Judge says he relishes the opportunit­y to essentiall­y have a playoff game every night. The Yankees need wins in the worst way to avoid missing the playoffs for the first time since 2016. But when asked if this season has been particular­ly taxing, Judge says he wouldn’t have it any other way.

“Yeah, but that’s baseball,” Judge said, his 6-foot-7 frame folded between the top of the Yankees’ bench and the dugout ceiling.

“That’s what I live for, the ups and downs,” the 29-year-old star told the Daily News. “The grind is what makes it fun. We feel great. We hold our own destiny here. I kind of like that.”

In his first four seasons, the Yankees either had the division all but clinched by this point or knew they were destined for a Wild Card game at Yankee Stadium. This season, the division is out of reach, so they could be ticketed for MLB’S dream scenario — a one-game bonanza at Fenway Park — or a trip across the border to Toronto, or the third home Wild Card game of Judge’s career.

“You feel the pressure but that’s a good thing,” he offered. “I want to feel that pressure. When the game’s on the line I want to be in the box.”

In August, when Judge was in the box it usually meant a ball was about to come off his bat at a ridiculous velocity. He hit .355/.430/.627 that month. The back half of July and all of August were a feel-good montage of hugs and high fives for the Yankees.

Then September appeared like the grim reaper.

After losing seven in a row at the top of the month, culminatin­g in a 10-3 clobbering from the Mets, Judge felt the pressure. The Yankees held a team meeting in which he, Corey Kluber, Kyle Higashioka and Andrew Velazquez spoke about the team needing to get their swagger back. Initially, Judge declined to say who called the meeting, but now he says it was in fact him.

“Yeah I started it off, but I won’t get into details,” Judge admitted. “Whenever I call a meeting I like to leave it open-ended. Nobody wants to hear me talk. Sometimes the hardest thing for guys is getting the courage to speak in front of people. So, I like to open the door and say, ‘Here’s what’s on my mind.’ If they have something on their mind they should speak up. We’re all family here.”

Despite being shy of 30 and still in just his fifth full season with the team, Judge has become the Yankees’ de facto leader. That happened naturally, he says. The biggest man in the room is still reticent about rah-rah type speeches or getting in anyone’s face. Rather, he feels like keeping the team focused is just part of a day’s work.

“You never just one day say, ‘I’m the guy, I’m the man.’ For me, I try to lead by example,” Judge said. “If I see something on the field or in the clubhouse that needs to be addressed, I feel like that’s my role as a teammate. If you were my brother and you were messing around I’d say, ‘Hey man, knock it off.’ ”

 ?? SARAH STIER/GETTY ?? The Yankees’ Aaron Judge reacts after hitting a three-run home run during the seventh inning against the Rangers on Tuesday at Yankee Stadium in New York.
SARAH STIER/GETTY The Yankees’ Aaron Judge reacts after hitting a three-run home run during the seventh inning against the Rangers on Tuesday at Yankee Stadium in New York.

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