Category Archives: Sports

Chess.com investigation alleges ‘likely’ cheating by Hans Niemann

In a 72-page report released Tuesday, a major online chess platform found that Hans Niemann “likely cheated” on its site more frequently and at a later age than he has publicly acknowledged.

A 19-year-old American grandmaster, Niemann has been at the center of a storm in the chess world since early last month, when an upset victory over world No. 1 Magnus Carlsen was followed by Carlsen hinting that something nefarious had occurred. Niemann subsequently said he had cheated in matches on Chess.com when he was 12 and 16 years old but insisted he had not since then repeated what he described as “an absolutely ridiculous mistake.” Niemann added he had never cheated “in a tournament with prize money.”

Carlsen, a Norwegian grandmaster, then staged a protest of Niemann by withdrawing from a rematch after playing just one move. Late last month, Carlsen gave voice to his actions and accused Niemann of having “cheated more — and more recently — than he has publicly admitted.” Tuesday’s report from Chess.com, which bills itself as “the No. 1 platform for online chess,” added some backing to Carlsen’s unspecific accusations.

Pointing to its “best-in-class” cheating-detection system, the website claimed Niemann “likely cheated” in more than 100 online games, including some that occurred after he had turned 17 and took place in prize-money events.

In chess, a long history of cheating, chicanery and Cold War shenanigans

At the same time, Chess.com said its investigation failed to turn up an abundance of “concrete statistical evidence” that Niemann cheated in his over-the-board (i.e., in-person) win over Carlsen or in a number of other OTB games. However, the site added that it found “suspicious” certain aspects of that victory, which broke Carlsen’s 53-game OTB winning streak despite Niemann playing from the slightly disadvantageous black position and noted his “statistically extraordinary” rise in the sport.

Niemann has not publicly commented on the Chess.com findings, which were first reported by the Wall Street Journal on Tuesday. He is set to compete in the U.S. Chess Championships beginning Wednesday in St. Louis. Officials with the Saint Louis Chess Club, which is hosting the OTB tournament, did not specifically address Niemann in response to a request for comment but expressed the club’s commitment to preventing cheating more generally.

“We take great pride in being able to host the top chess players from across the world at the Saint Louis Chess Club,” executive director Tony Rich said in a statement Wednesday morning. “As with all events, it’s imperative that we maintain high standards for fair tournament play. We always have — and will continue — to implement extensive anti-cheating measures.

“As we prepare for the upcoming U.S. Chess and U.S. Women’s Chess Championships, we anticipate hosting another successful event, complete with rigorous protocols to ensure the best chess players in the country can continue to compete on an even playing field.”

Jenkins: When chess is hard and cheating is easy, the next move is complicated

Chess.com said it removed Niemann from its platform and disinvited him from a major competition it is staging. The site said it dealt with him confidentially, keeping with its regular policy, and only began to make public statements on his situation after he spoke about their dealings. Niemann served an earlier suspension from the site and admitted to cheating, Chess.com said, after its “cheating-detection software and team uncovered suspicious play” at that time.

“We believe Hans is an incredibly strong player and a talented individual,” Chess.com stated in its report. “That said, given his history on our site, we did not believe we could ensure that he would play fairly in our online events until we could re-evaluate the evidence and our protocols. Nevertheless, and to be clear, it is not our position that Hans should be limited or banned from OTB chess.”

The International Chess Federation (FIDE), the sport’s governing body, announced in late September that it was launching an investigation of Carlsen’s accusations of cheating and Niemann’s comments on the matter. FIDE said its probe would be led by members of its Fair Play Commission and would include “the possibility to call for a consultation with external experts wherever analysis is required.” Chess.com indicated it was prepared to cooperate with FIDE’s investigation should it be asked to do so.

Cheating by a chess player, particularly in an online game, probably would involve connecting to a chess computer, or engine, capable of playing at a higher level than any human has been able to attain.

“Most chess engines use neural nets which have been trained on millions of top level chess games to capture the deepest of chess strategic understanding,” Chess.com noted. “They also have nearly infallible tactical calculation, as they can look more than 40+ moves deep into the position and calculate potential outcomes.”

Niemann has been alleged to have used such an engine in OTB matches, although his means of possibly doing so remain in the realm of speculation.

Carlsen said that during his loss last month, he “had the impression that [Niemann] wasn’t tense or even fully concentrating on the game in critical positions, while outplaying me as black in a way I think only a handful of players can do.”

Arousing suspicion from others was Niemann’s adroit counter after Carlsen made a relatively unusual opening. Niemann said afterward that “by some miracle” he had looked into the possibility of that sequence earlier in the day, adding, “It’s so ridiculous that I checked it.”

In its report, Chess.com pointed to other postgame comments by Niemann, in which he proposed a move that could have been made and then requested to see an engine’s evaluation of the move.

“This analysis and dependence on the engine,” the report stated, “seem to be at odds with the level of preparation that Hans claimed was at play in the game and the level of analysis needed to defeat the World Chess Champion.”

Chess.com claimed its cheating-detection system — which uses comparisons to both engine-recommended moves and a given player’s competitive profile, as well as input from “a panel of trained analysts” — had led to confessions of wrongdoing from four players in the FIDE top 100. In addition, the system was said to have resulted in the closure of online accounts of “dozens” of grandmasters, plus those of hundreds of other notable players.

The site reiterated that it was “unaware of any concrete evidence proving that Hans is cheating over the board or has ever cheated over the board.” Chess.com added that while some of Niemann’s recent online play appeared suspicious, it was not aware of evidence that he had cheated after August 2020. Chess.com also downplayed the possibility of widespread cheating on its platform, saying it estimated fewer than 0.14 percent of its users engage in such behavior.

“Our events are by and large free from cheating,” Chess.com said in the report. “We firmly believe that cheating in chess is rare, preventable, and much less pervasive than is currently being portrayed in the media.”



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2022 MLB playoff field is set with seeds locked: Wild Card Series schedule and format explained

USATSI

With the action from Tuesday, Oct. 4 between playoff teams concluded, we know now for certain that the games on the final day of the regular season are all meaningless in terms of the playoff field. Each of the 12 teams was already clinched heading into Tuesday, then the Braves clinched the NL East and results for the last two wild-card teams on both sides of the bracket settled the matchups. 

Here’s how it’ll look. 

American League

The Wild Card Series will be three games all in the same ballpark with no travel. There won’t be re-seeding, either, so the winner of the Rays-Guardians series faces the Yankees in the ALDS while the Mariners-Blue Jays winner heads to Houston. 

For a full breakdown of the new format, we’ve got you covered

National League

As noted, there isn’t re-seeding after the first round. It’s a locked bracket, so the winner of the Padres-Mets gets the Dodgers in the NLDS while the winner of the Phillies-Cardinals series gets the defending champion Braves. 

The individual game times haven’t been assigned yet, but we know all four Wild Card Series will be played Friday, Saturday and, if necessary, the clinching Game 3 would be played Sunday. 

Wild Card Series schedule (best-of-three)

Friday, Oct. 7

Game 1: Mets vs. Padres

ESPN

Game 1: Cardinals vs. Phillies

ESPN

Game 1: Guardians vs. Rays

ESPN

Game 1: Blue Jays vs. Mariners

ESPN

Saturday, Oct. 8

Game 2: Mets vs. Padres

ESPN

Game 2: Cardinals vs. Phillies

ESPN

Game 2: Guardians vs. Rays

ESPN

Game 2: Blue Jays vs. Mariners

ESPN

Sunday, Oct. 9

Game 3: Mets vs. Padres (if nec.)

ESPN

Game 3: Cardinals vs. Phillies (if nec.)

ESPN

Game 3: Guardians vs. Rays (if nec.)

ESPN

Game 3: Blue Jays vs. Mariners (if nec.)

ESPN

Game 1 of all four divisional series will take place on Tuesday, Oct. 11. Check out the full schedule here

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Fan on destiny of Aaron Judge’s record-setting home run ball

ARLINGTON, Texas — As he walked through a concourse in the outfield at Globe Life Field, high-fiving other fans and surrounded by a sea of cameras, it was almost as if Cory Youmans had hit a huge home run.

Instead, he had hit the jackpot.

Youmans made the catch of a lifetime Tuesday night, snagging the ball New York Yankees slugger Aaron Judge launched for his American League-record 62nd homer.

The historic souvenir came sailing into the front row of Section 31 in left field, a drive Judge hit to lead off the second game of a day-night doubleheader against the Texas Rangers. Youmans snared it on the fly.

Youmans, from Dallas, works in the financial world, and there is no telling what the ball could be worth. With security personnel around him as he took the ball to be authenticated, Youmans was asked what he planned to do with the prize.

“Good question. I haven’t thought about it,” he said.

After the Yankees lost 3-2, Judge said he didn’t have possession of the home run ball.

“I don’t know where it’s at,” he said. “We’ll see what happens with that. It would be great to get it back, but that’s a souvenir for a fan. He made a great catch out there, and they’ve got every right to it.”

Soon after a local TV station posted a brief interview with Youmans in a walkway, Bri Amaranthus tweeted: “THIS IS MY HUSBAND.” Amaranthus works in local media and is an alum of ABC’s “The Bachelor.”

Youmans was among the crowd of 38,832, the largest to watch a baseball game at the 3-year-old ballpark.

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Tom Brady and Gisele Bündchen have hired divorce attorneys, source says



CNN
 — 

Tom Brady and Gisele Bündchen, who have been living separately from each other in recent weeks, have each hired divorce attorneys and are “exploring their options” regarding their marriage, a source close to the estranged couple told CNN on Tuesday.

CNN reported last month that Brady, a seven-time Super Bowl champion quarterback who currently plays for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and his wife, Bündchen, a fashion model, have been dealing with “marital issues,” according to a source close to the couple.

The two, who married in 2009, have been “living separately,” a source close to Bündchen told CNN in September.

Brady, 45, had retired from the NFL in February, only to later reverse that decision. He took an 11-day leave of absence from training camp in August to “deal with personal things,” according to his head coach Todd Bowles.

In an interview with Elle magazine published last month, Bündchen, 42, said she had “concerns” about her husband returning to the field after initially retiring last winter.

“This is a very violent sport, and I have my children and I would like him to be more present,” Bündchen told the publication. “I have definitely had those conversations with him over and over again. But ultimately, I feel that everybody has to make a decision that works for [them]. He needs to follow his joy, too.”

In a recent conversation on his podcast, Brady talked about some of the personal costs of playing in the NFL for two decades.

“I haven’t had a Christmas in 23 years and I haven’t had a Thanksgiving in 23 years, I haven’t celebrated birthdays with people that I care about that are born from August to late January. And I’m not able to be at funerals and I’m not able to be at weddings,” Brady said. “I think there comes a point in your life where you say: ‘You know what? I’ve had my fill and it’s enough and time to go on, to move into other parts of life.’”

CNN has reached out to representatives for Brady and Bündchen for comment.

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Fantasy Football Rankings Week 5: Sleepers, starts, sits — Devin Singletary, Terry McLaurin and more

Week 5 fantasy football rankings and sleepers might be the most important yet with injuries mounting. Although, byes are coming, and things will get even dicier, so why not have some more fun (and likely incite your hatred for me) with a Top 10 rankings of “fast food” burgers. Before that, though, we’ll hit those fantasy football ranks, sleepers, buys and sells, all starting with Tyler Allgeier, Terry McLaurin and more.

#CheckTheLink-ageWaivers | True SOS (APA — Wednesday update)Fantasy Football 101 (weather, lineups, trading, etc)All in Football (video pod)

2022 Week 5 Fantasy Football Sleepers

🚨 HEADS UP 🚨 These are sleepers. They will not mimic my rankings 100%. This is chasing upside and often carries more risk, but based on APA matchups, you can “go for broke” if needed.

QUARTERBACK

POSSIBLY START: Ryan Tannehill, TEN — The Commanders have allowed 10 passing touchdowns, including Cooper Rush going 223/2 last week. Tannehill isn’t passing a ton — heck, even a half-ton with 117 in Week 2 and 137 last week — but he has netted two touchdowns in two different games (versus Giants and Colts) and ran for a score in Week 3. This is a matchup play obviously.

HAIL MARY START: Zach Wilson, NYJ — Yes, the Dolphins have played a Murderer’s Row of quarterbacks since Week 1 — Lamar Jackson, Josh Allen and Joe Burrow. So, no, I don’t expect Wilson to simply walk on the field and go for 300/2 or more.



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Kyle Shanahan thinks Nick Bosa is getting held a lot, 49ers have addressed it with the league

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San Francisco defensive end Nick Bosa is having another strong season, leading the NFL with six sacks through four games. But 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan thinks Bosa could do even more if offensive linemen wouldn’t get away with holding him so much.

When a reporter on Shanahan’s conference call said Bosa appears to be getting held on many plays, Shanahan replied, “I couldn’t agree with you more.”

Shanahan said Bosa has been getting held since his rookie of the year-winning season in 2019, and the 49ers often send plays in to the league office to ask why Bosa isn’t drawing more flags.

“It’s something I’ve seen a lot with him since he’s been here, going back to his first year in the Super Bowl. So it’s always been tough. We turn everything in every week. Sometimes they agree, sometimes they don’t,” Shanahan said.

Shanahan said there’s not much the 49ers can do other than continue to point out to the league that Bosa is getting held.

“You just hope it improves,” Shanahan said.

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Aaron Judge hits home run No. 62 to pass Roger Maris

New York Yankees star Aaron Judge hit his 62nd home run of the year against the Texas Rangers on Tuesday night, passing Roger Maris for the most in a season by an American League player and punctuating a late stretch of breathtaking drama that only once-in-a-generation pursuits can create.

The home run record has long been sacred, measuring the most uncomplicated feats of baseball strength that even the sport’s unpredictable bounces and unforeseen variables cannot interrupt. Tuesday’s homer gave Judge a complicated, unofficial and uncomfortable title: the most prolific single-season home run hitter who did not play during the game’s steroid era.

Only record-holder Barry Bonds (73), Mark McGwire (70 and 65) and Sammy Sosa (66, 64 and 63) have hit more than 62 homers in a season. All three played at a time when MLB did not test for performance-enhancing drugs as stringently as it does now.

So Judge, with his iconic No. 99, has emerged as a new modern prototype, a new home run hero for a new era, the latest in a long line of Yankees legends. Like all the Yankees legends before him, Judge proved himself capable of withstanding all that New York throws at its most treasured sports stars. But even the stoic 30-year-old, known for a team-first demeanor that does not wax and wane with his performance, had begun to show the strain of his pursuit by the time the Yankees’ last series of the season began.

Cameras normally have no trouble catching Judge wearing a smile. But with each at-bat that went by, the smiles became fewer and farther between, his brow a little more furrowed. For so long he seemed to have so much time. Suddenly, he didn’t.

“It’s a big relief,” Judge told reporters Tuesday night. “Now everybody can probably sit down and watch the ballgame.”

When Judge hit his 60th homer Sept. 20, he had plenty of at-bats left to catch and pass Maris, whose family began to follow him from city to city. For days, fans fell silent every time a pitcher delivered a ball to Judge, who went seven games between hitting Nos. 60 and 61, a drought that must have felt like eons to the slugger before he ended it last week.

Examining Albert Pujols’s magical season with the St. Louis Cardinals

The Yankees played their last home series of the regular season, with their division title already sealed, through rain and cold this past weekend. Fans packed the stands anyway, but the Baltimore Orioles walked Judge five times in three games and struck him out six times.

So Judge was left to take his pursuit to Texas. The Maris family went home. Judge went 1 for 4 in Monday night’s game and 1 for 5 in the first game of Tuesday’s doubleheader. Manager Aaron Boone told reporters earlier in the day that Judge, who might normally play just one game of a doubleheader for a team with a first-round bye locked up on the penultimate day of the season, would play both if he did not homer in the first.

He didn’t, and the largest paid crowd in the brief history of Globe Life Field packed the stands for the night game. The 38,832 in attendance for Texas’s 3-2 win were not there to bid goodbye to another disappointing Rangers season. They were there to see Judge.

Stephen Strasburg gave his body to baseball. Now his future is a mystery.

He led off the second game with No. 62, a blast to left-center off a 1-1 slider from right-hander Jesus Tinoco, a classic Judge swing that looked more comfortable than many of the in-between hacks he took since reaching 61. He flashed a smile rounding first base before restoring the all-business look he has made his own. And when his teammates hurried to meet him at home plate, Judge made sure to give a hug to each of them.

“At home, if I look up, I look right into our dugout so I can see all the guys just sitting there on the top step waiting for this to happen,” Judge said. “Here on the road, they were behind me, so I didn’t see the 40-plus people sitting there in the dugout. I think finally seeing them run out on the field, getting a chance to hug them all and say congratulations, that’s what it’s all about for me.”

After getting a second at-bat in the second inning — he struck out — Judge returned to the field for the bottom half. Boone then made the move to replace him, drawing raucous cheers from the Texas crowd.

Judge entered Tuesday leading the AL in home runs and RBI, with a batting average that trailed that of only one AL player, Minnesota’s Luis Arraez. Not only is he having one of the greatest all-around offensive seasons in baseball history, he is hitting for power at a pace unparalleled by anyone in the sport. Judge has 62 homers. The next-closest player entered Tuesday with 46. Not since the days of Babe Ruth has the gap between No. 1 and No. 2 been so vast. Judge even has a chance to become the AL’s first Triple Crown winner since the Detroit Tigers’ Miguel Cabrera in 2012 — and just the second since Boston Red Sox great Carl Yastrzemski in 1967.

“Getting the chance to have my name next to someone as great as Roger Maris, Babe Ruth, those guys,” Judge said, “it’s incredible.”

But Ruth, Maris, Yastrzemski and the rest didn’t have to face pitches like the ones Judge sees regularly. He is compiling these numbers at a time when offense, at least as measured by batting average, is at record lows, at a time when pitchers have never thrown harder and in a city where his every move is scrutinized.

MLB’s new postseason format, explained

He is putting them together months after turning down a contract offer worth more than $200 million and weeks before he will become a free agent for the first time. And he is doing it all for a sputtering Yankees team so picked apart by injuries that Judge all but held the offense together as they clung to their lead in the AL East. They recently clinched the division title in Toronto, a late September celebration that did nothing to alleviate the tension of a superstar and a fan base waiting for something much rarer.

Unlike Maris and Ruth, Judge is making history a generation after widespread use of since-banned drugs complicated the home run record. McGwire later admitted to using steroids when he broke Maris’s record by hitting 70 homers in 1998. Bonds, whose murky legacy has kept him out of the Hall of Fame, followed with 73 homers in 2001 to establish the single-season record.

Maris’s son Roger Jr. had been in attendance to watch Judge’s chase. After Judge tied Maris with No. 61, Roger Jr. told reporters that he believes Judge should “be revered for being the actual single-season home run champ.”

“That’s really who he is if he hits 62,” he said. “And I think that’s what needs to happen. I think baseball needs to look at the records, and I think baseball should do something.”

Judge is compiling his numbers not only against the highest velocity in MLB history but under the most stringent drug testing policy the sport has had. He has said he considers Bonds’s 73 the record — in other words, 62 is something but not the whole thing. But that he has surpassed the number that no one surpassed for more than 30 years until the steroid era does mean he is now an intractable part of the conversation about the greatest single-season showings of all time — just in time for him to hit the free agent market.

“Congrats @TheJudge44 on 62!” tweeted Derek Jeter, the last Yankee to write his name into history so emphatically. “Postseason next!!!”

After all, in the Bronx, careers are measured in championships. Ruth and Maris have them. Judge will get another chance to win his first.



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Hans Niemann: American chess star accused of cheating by rival Magnus Carlsen has likely done so in more than 100 games, report claims

An American chess star who has been accused of cheating by world champion Magnus Carlsen has likely done so in more than 100 games, a report has claimed.

Hans Niemann, 19, has previously admitted cheating twice in games when he was aged 12 and 16, but an investigation by chess.com has allegedly found more occasions, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Mr Carlsen, the number one player in the world, branded his rival a cheat last month after he withdrew from a tournament after losing to him, then resigned from an online match against him after one move.

The newspaper states that the report by chess.com, a platform where many of the world’s top chess players compete in online matches, alleges “that Niemann likely received illegal assistance in more than 100 online games, as recently as 2020. Those matches included contests in which prize money was on the line.”

The platform reportedly used a string of tools to detect the alleged cheating, including an analytics programme that compares human moves to those recommended by chess engines, “which are capable of beating even the greatest human players every time.”

The report states that some of the alleged cheating took place as recently as 2020, when Mr Niemann was 17 years old.

The Journal says that Mr Niemann “privately confessed to the allegations” and that he was “subsequently banned from the site for a period of time.”

The report noted that Mr Niemann’s improvement had been “statistically extraordinary” but did not make any conclusion as to any irregularities in his in-person games.

But it said that some of Mr Niemann’s strongest events “merit further investigation based on the data.” An investigation into Mr Carlsen’s claims is also being carried out by the sport’s governing body, FIDE.

“Outside his online play, Hans is the fastest rising top player in Classical (over-the-board) chess in modern history,” the report states.

“Looking purely at rating, Hans should be classified as a member of this group of top young players. While we don’t doubt that Hans is a talented player, we note that his results are statistically extraordinary.”

Mr Carlsen won the Julius Baer Generation Cup despite resigning against Mr Niemann, after which he said that he understood that his “actions have frustrated many in the chess community.”

“I’m frustrated. I want to play chess. I want to continue to play chess at the highest level in the best events,” he stated.

“I believe that cheating in chess is a big deal and an existential threat to the game. I also believe that chess organizers and all those who care about the sanctity of the game we love should seriously consider increasing security measures and methods of cheat detection for over-the-board chess.”

Mr Carlsen stated that he had considered pulling out of the event when Niemann was invited to take part and was blunt in his allegations against his opponent.

“I believe that Niemann has cheated more — and more recently — than he has publicly admitted.”

Mr Niemann has insisted that he has never cheated in a live-streaming game. “I would never, could even fathom doing it, in a real game,” he said.

The chess.com report states that of the more than 100 suspect games, 25 were live-streamed and that there were several prize-money events.

The Independent has reached out to Mr Niemann for comment.

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Justin Verlander punctuates Cy Young campaign with 5 no-hit innings in season finale

Justin Verlander is in postseason form.

The Houston Astros ace pitched five no-hit innings against the Philadelphia Phillies on Tuesday before manager Dusty Baker ended his night. The Astros bullpen failed to bring the no-hitter home as Will Smith allowed three hits in the ninth. But the Astros ran away with a 10-0 win and a stellar effort from their Cy Young favorite with their postseason slated to start on Oct. 11.

Verlander had his best stuff in his brief stint while recording 10 strikeouts and a single walk as his only baserunner allowed. But with the postseason looming and the AL’s No. 1 seed secure, Baker declined to tax his ace’s arm. He pulled Verlander after 77 pitches, 51 of which went for strikes.

Justin Verlander was in postseason form against the Phillies. (Troy Taormina/Reuters)

Hunter Brown and Hector Neris took over on the mound and kept the Phillies off the hit column through eight innings. But Phillies catcher Garrett Stubbs broke up the bid with a leadoff single off Smith in the ninth.

The effort puts an exclamation point on another stellar season for Verlander that ends with an 18-4 record, 1.75 ERA and 185 strikeouts in 175 innings pitched. If he does win the Cy Young at 39 years old, it will be the third of his career. And he’s probably not too upset about losing out on the combined no-hitter. He has three of his own already.

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Aaron Judge sets AL home run record: Yankees slugger hits No. 62 to top Roger Maris, break single-season mark

There is a new American League single-season home run king. Tuesday evening New York Yankees slugger Aaron Judge swatted his 62nd home run of 2022, breaking a tie with Roger Maris.

Maris of course hit 61 homers with the 1961 Yankees. 

Judge hit his 62nd homer against Texas Rangers righty Jesus Tinoco in the first inning of Game 2 of their doubleheader at Globe Life Field in Arlington. Here is Judge’s milestone blast:

“It’s an incredible honor to get a chance to be associated with one of the Yankee greats, one of the baseball greats,” Judge told MLB.com after hitting his 61st homer. “To be enshrined with them forever, words can’t describe it. That’s one thing that’s so special about the Yankee organization, all the guys that came before us and paved the way, played the game the right way.”

Judge hit his 61st home run to tie Maris last Wednesday and he went 3 for 17 with five walks and seven strikeouts in the five games between Nos. 61 and 62. That includes going 1 for 5 in Game 1 of Tuesday’s doubleheader, during which Judge slammed his helmet in frustration in the dugout after popping up a hanging slider.

The No. 62 ball landed in Section 31, Row 1, Seat 3, and the fan who caught it was led by security to a safe location where it could be authenticated by MLB. It’s unclear whether the ball will be turned over to the Yankees and Judge, or something else.

Here’s more on Judge becoming the AL’s single-season home run king.

Mom was there (but Maris Jr. wasn’t)

Judge’s mother, Patty, has attended every Yankees game since her son hit his 59th home run on Sept. 18. She went from Yankee Stadium to Toronto, back to Yankee Stadium, then to Texas for this final regular season series. And when Judge hit the milestone homer Tuesday, his mother was left speechless.

Not at the ballpark Tuesday: Roger Maris Jr. The predecessor’s son did not travel to Texas to watch Judge chase his 62nd homer, though he did attend New York’s previous 12 games as Judge chased home runs No. 60 and 61 (and 62). For what it’s worth, Maris Jr. has not been shy about saying he would consider the Judge the “clean” home run king once he hit No. 62.

“I think (Judge breaking the record) means a lot not just for me, but for a lot of people,” Maris Jr. said about Judge hitting his 61st home run. “He’s clean, he’s a Yankee, he plays the game the right way. I think he gives people a chance to look at somebody who should be revered for hitting 62 home runs and not just as a guy who did it in the American League. He should be revered for being the actual single-season home run champ. That’s really who he is if he hits 62 and I think that’s what needs to happen. I think baseball needs to look at the records and I think baseball should do something.”  

The new AL home run leaderboard

As noted, Judge has now hit more home runs than any player in the American League’s 122-year history. Here is the new AL single-season home run leaderboard:

  1. Aaron Judge, 2022 Yankees: 62 (and counting)
  2. Roger Maris, 1961 Yankees: 61
  3. Babe Ruth, 1927 Yankees: 60
  4. Babe Ruth, 1921 Yankees: 59
  5. Hank Greenberg, 1938 Tigers: 58
  6. Jimmie Foxx, 1932 Athletics: 58

Only Barry Bonds (73 in 2001), Mark McGwire (70 in 1998 and 65 in 1999) and Sammy Sosa (66 in 1998, 64 in 2001 and 63 in 1999) have hit more home runs in a season than Judge, and they all played in the National League.

As for 2022, Judge is lapping the field in home runs. Phillies outfielder Kyle Schwarber is a distant second in baseball with 46 homers. No player has led baseball by as many as 16 home runs since 1932, when Foxx hit 58 and Ruth was the runner-up with 41. Simply put, this is one of the most dominant home run seasons in the history of the sport.

The Triple Crown watch

Oh by the way, Judge is also chasing a Triple Crown, and the focus now shifts there with No. 62 out of the way. Judge has massive leads in home runs and RBI, as you’d expect. He is chasing Twins infielder Luis Arraez for the batting tile. Here’s the batting race entering play Tuesday:

  1. Luis Arraez, Twins: .315
  2. Aaron Judge, Yankees: .311
  3. Xander Bogaerts, Red Sox: .305
  4. Several tied at .304

Catching Arraez will be a real challenge with only one game remaining in the regular season. Just the fact Judge is in the running for the Triple Crown — that he’s batting well over .300 while hitting 60-plus homers — is remarkable. Miguel Cabrera won baseball’s last Triple Crown in 2012.

No. 63?

Judge was removed from Tuesday’s game in the bottom of the second inning. He had started 55 consecutive games, a Ripkenian streak by the standards of the Yankees and their load management approach, and manager Aaron Boone recently said he hoped to give Judge a day off before the end of the season. He was even noncommittal about playing him in Game 2 of the doubleheader before Judge landed in the lineup.

The Yankees do have one game remaining, however, and Judge could pad his home run total in the season finale Wednesday. The Rangers are scheduled to start righty Glenn Otto, a former Yankees prospect who went to Texas in the Joey Gallo trade, in Wednesday’s game. Judge is 0 for 3 against Otto in his career. 

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