torpedo, Yankees and Aaron Judge
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Judge said he can hit the bell just as well without one. “What I’ve done the past couple of seasons speaks for itself," he said, per MLB.com's Bryan Hoch.
From Bleacher Report
New torpedo bats drew attention when the New York Yankees hit a team-record nine homers that traveled a combined 3,695 feet on Saturday.
From Dallas Morning News
Aaron Judge homered in his first at-bat, Jazz Chisholm Jr. homered twice and the New York Yankees went deep four more times in a 12-3 victory over the visiting Milwaukee Brewers on Sunday, a day after...
From CBS News
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Aaron Judge homered in his first at-bat, Jazz Chisholm Jr. homered twice and the New York Yankees went deep four more times in a 12-3 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers
Aaron Judge became the first player in Yankees history to hit at least four homers in the team’s first three games.
The torpedo bats, designed by former Yankees staffer and MIT physicist Aaron Leanhardt, are engineered to redistribute weight closer to the hands, giving hitters the feel of a lighter swing while maintaining barrel mass. That combination, in theory, boosts barrel consistency without sacrificing power.
New York Yankees slugger Aaron Judge continued his torrid start to the season on Sunday against the Milwaukee Brewers (GameTracker), launching his fourth home run (a two-run shot) in his first three games.
The Yankees hit four first-inning home runs off former teammate Nestor Cortes on Saturday en route to a 20-9 drubbing. They added five more long balls during the game for a team-record nine, one short of the major league record.
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In just their second game of the season, the New York Yankees hit nine home runs and scored 20 runs en route to a 20-9 drubbing of the Milwaukee Brewers at Yank
MLB player prop bets and odds for Aaron Judge on Sunday, March 30, 2025, as the New York Yankees take on the Milwaukee Brewers.
NEW YORK — Every last fan in the Stadium was on their feet in the eighth inning on Saturday, sensing history was about to be made. Aaron Judge walked to the plate, and suddenly nothing else mattered.
New York's first three homers came off the first three pitches of the game -- an MLB record -- as Judge later hit a grand slam and finished with eight RBI