Yankees’ Aaron judge is “no-brain” for Hall of Fame after 1,000 games, says the manager

PITTSBURGH – The strong rains started to go down late at PNC Park, and expected much more for the rest of the weekend. Saturday, the New York Yankees may find themselves separated in their nearby hotel instead of facing the Pittsburgh Pirates. If this happens, many of them probably spend time watching movies or playing video games – and fearing a possible double double door before flying over the night in Detroit.
Will Aaron Judge not do? He will not think if a bust deserves a bust in Coperstown after playing in his 1,000th game on Friday.
“I have things to do,” said the judge following a 9-4 victory over the pirates. “I have a lot of work to do. We will talk about it in a couple of years.”
For Aaron Boone, it’s easy. He called the judge “one of the greatest players” of his generation.
“I mean,” said Boone, “I think it’s a kids game.”
Aaron Judge has played seven games this season.
Aaron Judge hit six racing at home this season! pic.twitter.com/yx9pqzgix4
– MLB (@mlb) April 4, 2025
The whole judge did on Friday was added to his case, going 1 by 5 with three Strikeouts but also a seventh two -sleeved house race. He also did a couple of impressive catches in the right field.
He became the first player in the history of MLB with six races in the house and 17 RBI through the first seven games of his team’s season.
His 321 races in the house are the first 1,000 games of a player in the history of MLB. In addition, it has two MVP prizes of the American League and a beginner trophy of the year. He is playing his tenth season in the majors and is only three seasons in a nine -year contract and $ 360 million.
The judge seems at least on the right way to a place in the Hall of Fame, especially if he continues, according to the Jaffe War score system. Better known as Jaws, the metric, developed by the baseball writer Jay Jaffe, takes the career war of a player and combines it with a player’s first seven seasons of war.
The Juds Jews score on Friday was 52.5 – right in front of Ichiro Suzuki (51.8), which was voted in the room during his first year in the vote this year. Suzuki has never won a World Series, and even if the judge has not yet done so, he still has a long time to change it. The 15 right -wing fielders with higher jaw scores than the judge are in the Hall of Fame or are Mookie Betts (still active) or Joe Jackson (permanently prohibited). The judge had the longest ninth war (52.2) among the active players who enter on Friday, according to Fangraphs.
“It’s the best,” said the third Baseman Oswaldo Cabrera. “There are no more words than this. It’s the goat. He is one of the best players ever and not just as a player, he is one of the best (people) we have. It deserves everything that happens to him.”
But is the judge a hall of fame?
“You always try to stay present and try not to think in the future,” said Cabrera, “but thinking about the judge, yes.”
Thursday, the judge marked his 500 ° extra-basic career success, becoming the third fastest player in the history of Yankees (in terms of games) to achieve the mark, dragging a pair of legends: Joe Dimaggio (853 games) and Lou Gehrig (874 games).
On Friday, the judge saved Max Fried when Ke’Bryan Hayes torn a tour in line for the field on the right to lead the game and the judge torn him up while he was running into the video card on the wall of the field on the right. The judge said he read the depth of the warning track badly and thought he would jump against the wall. Instead, he hit him hard with the right side of the face and the left arm. He was fine, even if Boone was worried.
“I jumped immediately,” said Boone. “He said there was a little more space on the track than he thought. So he probably lost a little in the space right there. Definitely a small moment stretched right there.”
“Just a bad reading from me,” said the judge.
In seventh place, the judge took a quick ball suspended of 94 miles from the left-handed breeder Tim Mayza and torn him on the wall in the right center to extend the advantage of the Yankees to 9-1.
“It’s incredible,” said Fried, who gained his first victory with the Yankees. “Game in, game out. Just what is able to do. Being able to change a game with a swing at any time, and moreover, making a little really play, really beautiful tonight on the field.
Judge was told that Boone said he is already a Hall of Famer in his book. He called him “great praise”.
Does the judge ever think if one day will end up in Coperstown?
“At this moment, no,” he said, “because I’m worried about the game we have just had. It’s something we’ll talk about the way.”
(Photo: Charles Leclaire / Image Images)