USA TODAY US Edition

Bright dawn in Bronx

Yankees wake up to news that Judge will sign their nine-year, $360M offer

- Bob Nightengal­e Columnist

SAN DIEGO – New York Yankees manager Aaron Boone, fearing that they were going to lose Aaron Judge, came back to his hotel room Tuesday night and decided to telephone Judge one last time.

Judge was in San Diego, just a few blocks away from the baseball winter meetings headquarte­rs, but he wasn’t in town to meet with the Yankees.

“I had a pit in my stomach all day,” Boone said. It was about 11 p.m. when Boone called. He told Judge how he felt about him, reminded him what he means to the Yankee organizati­on, but when the conversati­on ended, Boone had no hints where Judge was headed.

“I really didn’t know,” Boone told USA TODAY Sports on Wednesday morning before a breakfast gathering with managers. “He didn’t tell me. All I knew is that the Padres were now involved, along with the Giants.

“I went to bed and really just hoped for the best.” Boone woke up about 5 in the morning Wednesday. He checked his phone.

There were several text messages, including one from Yankees general manager Brian Cashman. Judge was staying with the Yankees.

The Yankees’ greatest power hitter since Babe Ruth, Judge agreed to the most lucrative free agent contract in baseball history: nine years, $360 million. Boone exhaled.

Yankee fans wildly celebrated.

And the San Francisco Giants and San Diego Padres grieved.

“Congratula­tions,” Giants manager Gabe Kapler told Boone upon seeing him at 9 in the morning.

Kapler then thumped his chest with his right arm and said, “But this one hurts.”

The Giants also offered Judge a nine-year, $360 million contract, giving him the opportunit­y to come home to Northern California, two hours from where he grew up in Linden, California, and become their greatest attraction since Barry Bonds.

“I think we pulled out all of the stops,” one highrankin­g Giants official said. “We left it all on the field, as they say.”

The Padres, who entered the Judge sweepstake­s late, sent a private plane Tuesday for Judge and spoke with him for more than two hours at Petco Park, just a few blocks from the Grand Hyatt winter meeting hotel.

Judge and his representa­tives met with Padres owner Peter Seidler, GM A.J. Preller and manager Bob Melvin.

The Padres didn’t submit an official offer in writing but informed Judge they would pay him $400 million over 10 years.

Judge and his representa­tives left Petco Park, went back to their hotel, when the Yankees made one final push.

Yankees owner Hal Steinbrenn­er, who was in Italy, telephoned Judge and asked him directly:

“Do you want to be a Yankee?”

Judge reiterated it was still his desire, and Steinbrenn­er responded by asking just what it would take to sign him.

Judge asked the Yankees to at least match the Giants’ offer.

Steinbrenn­er quickly agreed.

And the Yankees got their man.

Cashman spent the night working out the details –

which includes a full no-trade clause – and will be finalized once the contract language is complete and Judge takes a physical.

Cashman arrived at a press briefing Wednesday morning with no sleep but elated, calling Steinbrenn­er the Mariano Rivera of the negotiatio­ns.

“Our owner spearheade­d efforts, as he stated he would do everything in his power to retain Aaron Judge,” Cashman said. “Rest assured, he’s putting his money where his mouth is.

“The Steinbrenn­er family has consistent­ly allowed us to pursue or retain some of the greatest that are available on a year in and year out basis.”

Steinbrenn­er, of course, is a businessma­n, too, and he realized the financial consequenc­es of losing Judge. Judge is easily the Yankees’ biggest marquee attraction, and the leader in all merchandis­e sales. Simply, Steinbrenn­er was going to do everything possible to make sure he didn’t get away.

It didn’t matter if the Yankees had pivoted and spent $1 billion on the free agent market, it wasn’t going to replace Judge, the lineage of past Yankee sluggers from Ruth to Gehrig to DiMaggio to Mantle to Maris.

“Clearly, I never had to negotiate and try to retain somebody that just broke Roger Maris’ American League home run record,” Cashman said. “But I have been heavily involved of engaging many a great players, and this speaks to the Steinbrenn­er family that we have been in the position that they have allowed us to engage the planet’s best players.

“We’re in a position to try to secure great players with the ultimate goal of having a great team.”

Still, despite their financial clout, the Yankees were scared to death that they nearly lost their man. Team officials were sent into a sheer panic Tuesday afternoon when an erroneous report circulated that Judge was signing with the Giants.

“(Tuesday) was a long rough day in a lot of ways,” Boone said. “I was concerned all day.

“It’s a weird time (when) a guy you spend a lot of time with, the face of your team, as important as a player he is, out there playing the free agent game. It’s an awkward time, especially at the winter meetings. Things get sped up, and you know a decision is probably coming soon, it definitely made a very uncomforta­ble day.”

Then again, the Yankees made life stressful for Judge this season, too. He rejected a seven-year, $213.5 million contract offer before opening day and was angry that the the Yankees revealed their offer.

So Judge, 30, decided to bet on himself.

And walked away from the poker table with $360 million worth of chips, receiving an extra $146.5 million by waiting a year.

“You’re talking about one of the game’s great players,” Cashman said, “and as his career develops over the course of time, hopefully he’s going to be one of the game’s greatest players.”

Judge’s deal exceeds Francisco Lindor’s 10-year, $341 million free agent contract with the New York Mets.

The only bigger commitment­s in baseball are Mike Trout’s 12-year, $426.5 million deal with the Los Angeles Angels and Mookie Betts’ 12-year, $365 million deal with the Los Angeles Dodgers. Trout added a 10-year, $360 million extension to his previous deal, and Betts’ was merely an extension as he never reached free agency.

Judge’s $40 million average salary is the highest by a position player in history.

“I always felt like he certainly belongs in pinstripes,” Boone said. “He’s an amazing player, an amazing person, that certainly has the respect of everyone in that room.

“When you have a player of that caliber that is beloved and important as he is on a daily basis, you want to do your best to hang onto that.

“This is an enormous boost to us.”

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 ?? TIM HEITMAN/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Aaron Judge has hit 220 home runs in seven seasons in the majors with the Yankees.
TIM HEITMAN/USA TODAY SPORTS Aaron Judge has hit 220 home runs in seven seasons in the majors with the Yankees.

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