It is, of course, unfair to blame any part of this dog's breakfast of a season on Aaron Judge. For much of the summer, he was our only hope and sustenance, putting together one of the most marvelous major-league seasons ever—especially considering how little help he had. It goes without saying (but I'll say it anyway): if every Yankee played like Aaron Judge, it wouldn't much matter who was meandering out of the bullpen late in the game.
That said, this is his last chance.
There are 22 games remaining in the Yankees' season, plus who knows how many (or how few) in the playoffs. For all that he has accomplished, for as great as his career has been, Judge needs to play those games as even he has never played before—or his legacy is likely to be much more one of failure than triumph.
Is this fair? Of course it isn't. But it's what we can expect to happen.
The feeling was already in the air, even before this season, that—great as he is—Aaron Judge is not "clutch."
There's that .211 batting average in 44 postseason games, and the lack of some huge, signature, game-winning home runs in the late innings. There are the whispers that too many of his homers come in garbage time. And falling into the worst slump of his career now, as he has, just as the glimmering bauble of a ring seems there for the taking...doesn't help.
This is unfair, too, of course. Judge this year just set a record for first-inning dingers. And considering the Yankees' bullpen can any time really be considered garbage time?
"Clutch," is the most ineffable of qualities in baseball. The Sabremetricious don't believe it exists at all. And certainly, even the very greatest have failed in the clutch.
Carl Yastrzemski made the last out in the three most important games of his career. Willie Mays never had a good postseason at the plate; Ted Williams hit .200 in his only World Series. Dave Winfield was labeled "Mr. May" for years, until he found redemption in Toronto. Reggie Jackson got fanned by Bob Welch (the first time around).
Ty Cobb, Mickey Mantle, Barry Bonds, and Derek Jeter have all failed—sometimes—in the clutch. Even Babe Ruth and Mariano Rivera have come up small when it counts big. Hey, it happens.
Still.
The fact is that Aaron Judge—always susceptible to injury—will be 33 at the beginning of next season. The fact is that his window of opportunity with this Yankees team is swiftly closing.
Gerrit Cole may not be on this team next year. It is more and more likely that Juan Soto, his companion in crime, will be gone. Still worse, Gleyber Torres and Alex Verdugo probably won't be. And who knows what Cashie will do to undermine Jasson Dominguez next?
For all that Hal & Pal might want to keep the Yankees in a steady state, always contending for a wild-card spot but never quite winning it all, we are getting close to the point where the team will crumble, and the dreaded "rebuild" will be announced—Brian Cashman's last-ditch move to save his job.
Seeing how Cashman has handled draft picks and minor-league development over the last 25 years, the rebuild is likely to take a lot, lot longer than even the eight years that Judge has remaining on his contact. And you can bet dollars to crypto doughnuts that, sooner or later, both the Knights of the Press Box and then the fans—all egged on by the front office—will start blaming Judge's huge, "albatross" of a contract for that.
That won't be fair, either. But it will happen.
What can Judge do to escape all this calumny?
Well, he can play. He can turn in a pennant race and an October like we have rarely if ever seen before. He can play like Yaz down the stretch in 1967, like Jeter in the 2000 Subway Series, like The Babe and Larrupin' Lou Gehrig in the 1928 Fall Classic.
He can play like there is no tomorrow—because there isn't, not really, not for him. He can play like everything in the world depended on it—because it does, at least in this crazy little corner of the Yankeeverse, where only a grand, glorious, thrilling ride to a ticker tape parade is likely to bring back Soto and Cole, and get Hal & Pal to grudgingly give us maybe the greatest outfield ever assembled.
He can play like his entire legacy—and all of our future hope and enjoyment in this silly game to which we have already invested so much—are at stake. Because it is.
It's all on him.
Is that fair?
Of course not. Who said anything was fair? Now go out and make yourself a legend.
24 comments:
Hoss you just said the quiet part out loud. He does seem to come up short in big moments or when he is trying too hard. Still without him the Yankees are less than nothing.
Love all this - but, who am I to Judge ?
"Carl Yastrzemski made the last out in the three most important games of his career."
Fun fact: The Bucky Dent brick is in the Carl Yastrzemski section under the bleachers at phenweigh. Thank you Larry Lucchino.
Judge tries too hard at times, and it is not good for his game.
Still, the reason he will not get a championship (if he indeed, does not) is not him. It's Ca$hole.
Per Bryan Hoch on X:
Brian Cashman said today that the organization believes Alex Verdugo gives them the best chance to win games, which is why Jasson Dominguez hasn’t been called up. Cashman said that they will not call up Dominguez unless he can play every day.
I can't take this any longer. JUST MAKE IT STOP!!!
The question is WHY? WHY? WHY? and WHY? (ok that's actually four questions - but I didn't have enough coffee this morning, so sue me)
Best way to handle young stars is to extend them before they hit free agency. Imagine if we had done so with Judge, and his contract had say 3 years @ 20M remaining. Then again cashman and co would simply fumble the financial flexibility away.
Normal RISP failure.
Ranger, Brian Cashman is a lying little prick. But then, you knew that.
999, as I and others have ranted here, that is one of the worst parts of Cashman's performance: his inability or his unwillingness to anticipate. "Players must play to the end of their contracts, and then we'll see!"
Except, of course, when he gives huge contracts to favorites such as Sevvy or Hicks. From which, no doubt, he thinks he's learned a lesson. It's like the great Mark Twain quote: "A cat won't jump on a hot stove twice. But it won't jump on a cold stove, either."
Brian Cashman could not look at Judge and Hicks and say, "Huh, I think this guy is worth the risk, and that guy ain't." That's why he has no business being a baseball general manager.
Plus—he's a lying little prick.
And Rufus, I completely agree that it is not Judge's fault. No one wins championships alone—not even Michael Jordan. But he's the only one who can carry us through the incompetence and money grubbing of Hal & Pal.
Soto and Judge would be a nice combo for the next few years. Even with the Washington Generals bullpen they have.
Ergo nunquam fiet.
You’ll get no argument here, Hoss!
Good to see Gil back pitching very effectively. Next…the bullpen. Be afraid. Be VERY afraid,…😱
Here we go again…
Yankees Win!!!
Dream Weaver! 🛌
Better play to day, even though the lineup went to sleep and there was the requisite little league level infielsplay ar second on that SB attempt. Just rake the win. 😌
Wait...we played this afternoon? Fuck, I missed it.
Goddamn it. And Goddamn Cashman.
I missed the game as well. I blame hard work and clean living
I forgot all about it myself. Was too busy bloviating.
Never stop bloviating, Hoss.
No need to blame, Judge. He has little help. Blame then bald headed geek GM. He is the Yankees biggest problem.
Judge probably regrets re-signing. The money was right, and he was raised well so loyalty is important. And he knows that being "the guy" on a NY Yankees World Series winner guarantees immortality. But "the guy" or not, he's at the mercy of so many others, one man...one over-promoted mediocrity...in particular.
If the Yankees do win a title in the Judge era, and especially if it happens in the next couple years while Judge is a middle of the order monster...and not at the end when he's a part time DH with a .230 BA who Ks a ton but is still capable of hitting 25 HRs and driving in 70...it will be an accomplishment like few others in Yankees history. As Hoss says, truly legendary. Judge will have overcome Cashman. I'm rooting for the big guy.
And, as part of the blog contingent that gets up early - and often - to urinate, let me agree with everyone. I'm also rooting for the big guy, but he may fit more into Mattingly's trajectory - a glimpse of victory on his own last lap. Except for the fact that Brian was just a blip in George's uterus back then. When did Brian even join the Yankees? And Hal is young, vibrant, strong and greedy. Hal is around for a long time. Hal keeping Brian is just like Brian keeping Boone or Stanton or any other waste of space around. To see how long our misery might last, to look into the crystal ball, to divine the whims of the JuJu gods, we must look to what they have in store for Hal. If he is on the throne for another 30 years, we are the Red Sox in the 20th century.
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