Aaron Judge, an All-Star outfielder for the New York Yankees, started the day atop Major League Baseball's home run leaderboard with 59 home runs, and he's on the edge of creating history as soon as tonight, when the Yankees visit the Pittsburgh Pirates at Yankee Stadium.
Judge needs one more home run to tie the Yankees' all-time single-season record established by Babe Ruth in 1927, and two more to match the American League's all-time single-campaign record set by Yankees great Roger Maris in 1961. Tom Stevens, Ruth's 70-year-old grandson, recently spoke with Ian O'Connor of the New York Post, and throughout their conversation he drew comparisons between Judge and Ruth, the Great Bambino.
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Stevens made the statement, "I would say Judge's soaring shots are reminiscent of the Babe's," during the discussion. That's an elegant way of saying things.
Julia Ruth Stevens, the daughter of Babe Ruth, passed away in 2019, making Stevens her son.
Like Ruth, Judge towers above regular people with his superhuman stats of 6-foot-7 and 282 pounds. In spite of this, Stevens remarked that he was more struck by what he had learned about Judge the person than by Judge the record-setter.
Everything I've heard about Judge has been positive, and you want somebody as lovely as him to succeed, Stevens said. "His golf stroke is quite good. Despite his massive size, he is surprisingly agile and coordinated on the field. They believe that when Babe or Judge struck the ball, it made a distinctive sound, unlike that of any other batter. Nobody, however, will ever come close to Babe Ruth's lifetime slugging percentage of.690."
If we look at Judge, his career slugging percentage is.584.
Before the final full week of September, Judge will have plenty of opportunities to hit at least 61 home runs in front of adoring audiences at Yankee Stadium, where the team plays a game every day from Tuesday afternoon through Sunday evening.
Tom Stevens, a retired civil engineer from New Hampshire who, like his mother, became a fan of the Babe's two employers (the Yankees and the Red Sox), has been following Judge's quest for baseball immortality and a new contract. Stevens told The Post, "He's a free agent, so he picked a nice year." When his grandfather played, he made barely more than $80,000 per season, but Judge is set to get a long-term contract worth well over $300 million.
The scale of modern home run heroes reflects the general trend toward ever-greater dimensions in all aspects of life. Ruth is 5 inches shorter than Judge, and 67 pounds lighter, but Judge is a towering 6 feet 7 inches and 282 pounds. When he was alive, however, Ruth was a legend, the original American sports superstar.
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With that heavy hickory lumber in his hands, the Babe virtually developed the home run and the idea that a ballplayer could be one of the top three or four most famous individuals in the world.
His daughter Julia remarked, "He was always swinging for the fences." My father used to frequently say, "The fans didn't come out to see me hit singles. Home runs are a must for me right now... He belonged in the large city since he had a huge personality. This city was Daddy's playground, New York.
Ruth's second wife Claire gave birth to Julia, whom the Babe adopted after the couple wed in 1929. Ruth accompanied her on a variety of outings, including bowling, golfing, a trip to Japan, and more. Even before he gave her a transfusion of his blood when she was a young patient, Julia was very much the Babe's own. She told her son Tom and others, "I had Daddy's blood in me." I'm the daughter he never had.
Content Source.
- https://www.yardbarker.com/mlb/articles/grandson_compares_yankees_aaron_judge_to_babe_ruth/s1_13132_37900792
- https://nypost.com/2022/09/20/babe-ruths-descendant-aaron-judge-is-the-bambino-of-his-time/
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