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MLB

Aaron Judge hits 62nd homer to break Roger Maris’ record

ARLINGTON, Texas — Aaron Judge is the new home run king — at least to some people.

The Yankees outfielder made history Tuesday, hitting his 62nd home run of the season in the Yankees’ 3-2 loss to the Rangers in Game 2 of a doubleheader to break Roger Maris’ American League and franchise record set in 1961 — and, some would say, the legitimate MLB record.

He reached the landmark number against Jesus Tinoco of the Texas Rangers, leading off in the second-to-last regular season game on the season.

In the first game of Tuesday’s doubleheader, Judge went 1 for 5 as the designated hitter, singling and scoring the eighth inning. The frustrations of his homerless drought began to show as he was caught slamming his helmet in the dugout after a fifth inning pop-out.

He appeared to take out his frustrations early on the second game, sending a 1-1 pitch from Tinoco 391 feet into the left field bleachers at 100.3 MPH for No. 62.

Aaron Judge connects on a Jesus Tinoco pitch for No. 62. AP
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Aaron Judge socks his record-setting 62nd home run against the Rangers.
Aaron Judge socks his record-setting 62nd home run against the Rangers.Charles Wenzelberg / New York Po
Aaron Judge socks his record-setting 62nd home run against the Rangers.
Aaron Judge socks his record-setting 62nd home run against the Rangers.Charles Wenzelberg / New York Po
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Aaron Judge socks his record-setting 62nd home run against the Rangers.
Aaron Judge socks his record-setting 62nd home run against the Rangers.Charles Wenzelberg / New York Po
Aaron Judge socks his record-setting 62nd home run against the Rangers.
Aaron Judge socks his record-setting 62nd home run against the Rangers.Charles Wenzelberg / New York Po
Aaron Judge socks his record-setting 62nd home run against the Rangers.
Aaron Judge socks his record-setting 62nd home run against the Rangers.Charles Wenzelberg / New York Po
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Aaron Judge socks his record-setting 62nd home run against the Rangers.
Aaron Judge socks his record-setting 62nd home run against the Rangers.Charles Wenzelberg / New York Po
Aaron Judge socks his record-setting 62nd home run against the Rangers.
Aaron Judge socks his record-setting 62nd home run against the Rangers.Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post
Aaron Judge socks his record-setting 62nd home run against the Rangers.
Aaron Judge socks his record-setting 62nd home run against the Rangers.Charles Wenzelberg / New York Po
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Aaron Judge socks his record-setting 62nd home run against the Rangers.
Aaron Judge socks his record-setting 62nd home run against the Rangers.AP
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Judge struck out in the top of the second inning and was pulled from the outfield by manager Aaron Boone in the bottom half of the frame.

It’s the most homers hit in a season since Barry Bonds set his PED-tainted record of 73 home runs in 2001 with the Giants. Sammy Sosa, another slugger disgraced by his attachment to steroids, hit 64 that season with the Cubs. Sosa’s career-high of 66 came in 1998 during his chase with Mark McGwire, who finished with 70 home runs.

While many consider Bonds’ record to be illegitimate because of his connection to steroids, Judge said he still believes Bonds is the home run champ.

“The record’s the record,” Judge said earlier in September. “That’s what I go by. I watched him as a kid flip the ball into the bay with ease. That hasn’t changed.”

Judge first expressed the sentiment in an interview with the San Francisco Chronicle, saying, “No one can take that from him.”

But Judge said he hasn’t been focused on Maris’ milestone.

Everything to know about Aaron Judge and his chase for the home run record:




“I’m not really chasing or looking at anything,” Judge said of his move up the home run leaderboard. “It’s just happening.”

And Judge, who grew up in California rooting for Bonds and the Giants, added he doesn’t plan on gunning for Bonds’ 73, either.

“Not really,” Judge said. “That was a pretty unreal year. That’s a hard number to catch.”

Roger Maris holds up a 61 jersey after hitting his 61st home run in 1961. Diamond Images/Getty Images
Barry Bonds watches his 73rd home run of the season on Oct. 7, 2001. Getty Images
Barry Bonds acknowledges the crowd after hitting his 500th career home run on April 17, 2001. AFP via Getty Images

This year, nothing seems out of reach for the 30-year-old Judge, who started the season by rejecting the Yankees’ seven-year, $213.5 million contract extension offer and chose to gamble on himself and head to free agency, unwilling to negotiate during the season.

That’s shaping up to be one of the best bets of all-time. Judge has responded with a season for the ages, set to lead the majors in homers and RBIs.

He is almost certain to win his first AL MVP award, despite Shohei Ohtani’s two-way brilliance with the Angels.

Making Judge’s achievement even more remarkable is that he got off to a relatively slow start, hitting just one home run in his first 54 plate appearances.

Aaron Judge homers Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

His pace through the heart of the season was extremely consistent, with 12 homers in May, 11 in June and 13 in July.

Now, the baseball world will wait and see how many home runs Judge ends up with — and how much it will cost the team that gets him in the offseason.