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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Sport
Kristie Ackert

Aaron Judge hits 61st home run of season, ties Roger Maris’ AL and Yankees single-season record

TORONTO — After seven games and eight days without a home run, Aaron Judge made history Wednesday.

After 34 plate appearances, which included being walked 13 times, Yankees slugger hammered his 61st home run of the season off Blue Jays’ lefty Tim Mayza at the Rogers Centre to tie the American League single-season home run record.

Judge reached the plateau 61 years after Roger Maris’ record-setting season with his mother Patty sitting next to Maris’ son right behind home plate. The two-run shot in the seventh inning came on a 3-2, 94-mile an hour sinker. Like Judge has been throughout this chase, he was understated in his celebration. His teammates came out of the dugout, there were hugs and then the game continued.

Judge’s two-run shot gave the Yankees back the lead after Gerrit Cole had coughed up a three-run lead in the bottom of the sixth.

That snapped the second-longest home run drought of Judge’s season, second only to the 41 plate appearances he went without a homer in August.

He’s homered off 55 different pitchers following his shot off Wil Crowe in the ninth inning of the Yankees’ Sept. 20th walkoff win over the Pirates. . Maris homered off 46 different pitchers in 1961 while facing 101 pitchers over the course of his historic season.

With seven games remaining in the Yankee season, he has time to build his own number in the AL record books. The MLB record of 73 set by Barry Bonds in 2001, which many consider tainted by the suspicion of performance enhancing drugs, may be out of reach. Judge has 19 more home runs than Kyle Schwarber, who leads the National League. No player other than Babe Ruth has out-homered the rest of the league by at least 20 homers in a season before. The largest gao was Babe Ruth’s 54 to George Sislers’ 19 in 1920. Ruth also had 59 in 1921 to Ken Williams’ 24 in 1921 and 54 to Hack Wilson and Jim Bottomly’s 31 in 1928.

Like Maris in 1961, Judge was consistent no matter where he was hitting. He split his first 60 homers of the season evenly between Yankees Stadium and the road.

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