Aaron Judge's 350th career home run
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Yankees superstar Aaron Judge is in a home run flurry that has rarely been seen in MLB history. Through his age-29 season, he had 158 career home runs and on Saturday, at age 33, he hit his 350th career home run.
Judge reached 350 in the ninth inning Saturday, his 1,088th game. McGwire hit No. 350 in his 1,280th game, on June 2, 1997, bettering Harmon Killebrew in his 1,319th game.
Slugger Aaron Judge became the fastest player to hit 350 home runs in MLB history Saturday, but it wasn't enough for the Yankees, who lost to the Cubs 5-2.
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Aaron Judge didn’t just become the fastest player to hit 350 home runs, he did it in 192 fewer games than Mark McGwire.
Judge has been pretty great as well. With a 3-for-4 performance on Saturday, the All-Star and reigning MVP is leading the league with a .358 average and a 1.204 OPS. He also has 81 RBI. His 35 home runs, meanwhile, are second in baseball – Seattle’s Cal Raleigh has 38 – and the most ever by a Yankee prior to the All-Star break.
Aaron Judge hit his 350th career home run Saturday, reaching the milestone in just 1,088 games—the fastest pace in Major League history.
Aaron Judge became the fastest player to hit 350 career home runs, hitting with a two-run shot for the Yankees in the 9th inning vs. the Cubs.
Judge made three outstanding catches in right field on Friday night, saving three runs in an 11-0 rout of the Chicago Cubs that extended the New York Yankees’ winning streak to five following a six-game slide.
Aaron Judge became the fastest player to hit 350 home runs, reaching the mark with a two-run drive for the New York Yankees in the ninth inning off the Chicago Cubs' Brad Keller on Saturday. Judge hit his 35th home run of the season,
Despite Aaron Judge going hitless in the Yankees' big win over the Cubs on Friday, his defense played a big part in helping Carlos Rodon.