The Maui News

Judge walks it off for Yankees a day after Astros’ no-no

- By JAKE SEINER

NEW YORK — Aaron Judge walked over to the stands and gave his bat to Spike Lee, a Yankees fan famous for scripting Hollywood dramas.

This weekend’s Astros-Yankees series had all the ups, downs and twist endings audiences could handle. And when baseball’s award season arrives, bet on critics taking a hard look at Judge’s leading role.

“I told him I have to quit taking him for granted,” manager Aaron Boone said.

Judge drove a three-run homer in the 10th inning for his second walk-off hit against the Astros in four days, and New York recovered after nearly being no-hit for the second consecutiv­e game to beat Houston 6-3 Sunday.

“These guys, they never waver,” Judge said. “They stick to their plan, stick to their approach and continue to grind it out. And then Big G hit one about 120 to center, so it was all good.”

Giancarlo Stanton ended a historic hitless drought for New York with a one-out, 111 mph homer in the seventh inning, and DJ LeMahieu followed with a tying two-run drive in the eighth as New York split a four-game series between the AL’s top teams.

“Ended up Judge 2, Us 2,” Houston manager Dusty Baker said.

After Michael King stranded the bases loaded in the 10th, Isiah Kiner-Falefa dropped a two-strike bunt that moved automatic runner Aaron Hicks to third. Right-hander Seth Martinez (0-1) intentiona­lly walked pinch-hitter Matt Carpenter and struck out LeMahieu, setting up a two-out showdown with the Judge.

Just like on Thursday, when he broke a 6-all tie with a single in the ninth, Judge lifted the major league-leading Yankees. His 112 mph rocket to leftcenter on a slider landed in the visiting bullpen for his big league-high 28th home run.

“What I marveled at was just how easy he swung,” Boone said. “It’s like he’s just trying to touch the ball.”

With their 10th walk-off win this year — and third from Judge — the Yankees improved to 53-20 and matched the third-best 73-game start in the majors since 1930, trailing only the 2001 Mariners and 1998 Yankees.

“We got the best team on the planet,” Judge said.

They hardly hit like a juggernaut most of the weekend.

Jose Urquidy was eight outs from Houston’s second straight no-hitter before Stanton connected, cutting the Astros’ lead to 3-1. The Yankees had been 0 for 52 since the eighth inning of a 3-1 loss Friday night — a stretch including a combined no-hitter by Cristian Javier, Hector Neris and Ryan Pressly on Saturday.

“You could tell they were coming at us with everything they had,” LeMahieu said.

New York’s 16 1/3-inning hitless drought was the longest by any team since at least 1961, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. No team has ever been no-hit in consecutiv­e games, although the 1917 Chicago White Sox were nohit on consecutiv­e days by the St. Louis Browns — the second gem came in the second game of a doublehead­er.

King (5-1) had to wriggle out of trouble in the 10th after New York’s defense slipped up twice. Shortstop Kiner-Falefa booted Jose Altuve’s grounder, and catcher Jose Trevino’s attempt to pick off Jason Castro at second base backfired when Castro took third.

King walked Alex Bregman with one out to load the bases, then retired Kyle Tucker and Yuli Gurriel.

 ?? AP photos ?? RIGHT PHOTO: The Yankees’ Aaron Judge celebrates with teammates after his walk-off home run in the 10th inning Sunday. LEFT PHOTO: Astros starting pitcher Jose Urquidy delivers in the first inning.
AP photos RIGHT PHOTO: The Yankees’ Aaron Judge celebrates with teammates after his walk-off home run in the 10th inning Sunday. LEFT PHOTO: Astros starting pitcher Jose Urquidy delivers in the first inning.
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