Aaron Boone Says He Awarded Aaron Judge the Game Ball After First Ejection

Aaron Boone Says He Awarded Aaron Judge the Game Ball After First Ejection

New York Yankees superstar Aaron Judge was ejected for the first time in his career during Saturday's clash with the Detroit Tigers after voicing his displeasure with a called third strike to home plate umpire Ryan Blakney.

During an appearance on the Talkin' Yanks podcast on Tuesday, Yankees manager Aaron Boone, who is no stranger to being ejected from ballgames, weighed in on the incident and revealed what he said to Judge after the game.

"It was surprising. I don't think he should've got ejected," Boone said. "He's walking away, he's not in an aggressive stance or anything, like, come on, man."

Boone said that he rewarded Judge with the game ball after New York's 5–3 win over the Tigers, and joked that he gave him a, "Welcome to the club."

Boone was ejected seven times last season, which was tied with Cincinnati Reds skipper David Bell for the most in MLB. Already with two ejections under his belt in 2024, Boone paces the American League, a feat he's stunningly achieved in each season since 2021, a span during which he's been tossed 24 times.

Judge, who had gone 869 games without getting ejected in his career, was the first Yankees captain since Don Mattingly in 1994 to get thrown out of a game.

Judge didn't elaborate when asked what was said between him and Blakney, telling reporters that he preferred to leave it out on the field.

Aaron Boone Changed His Mind on Alex Verdugo's Role in Lineup in Record Time

Aaron Boone Changed His Mind on Alex Verdugo’s Role in Lineup in Record Time

Year one with the New York Yankees has been good to outfielder Alex Verdugo thus far. The veteran is slashing .267/.358/.446 with four home runs and 13 RBIs a month into the season—all while riding the highest OPS+ of his career.

Verdugo has been good enough, in fact, to both get a lofty assignment from manager Aaron Boone and quickly have it yanked away.

In a Tuesday conversation with Talkin' Yanks, Boone was asked whether Verdugo would hit cleanup when he returned from paternity leave. He responded in the affirmative while implying Verdugo would likely only hit fourth against right-handed pitchers.

On Thursday, the Yankees were scheduled to tussle with the Baltimore Orioles. Where in the order, dear reader, was Verdugo in his return against right-handed Orioles pitcher Kyle Bradish?

Sixth.

In an even funnier twist, first baseman Anthony Rizzo—who Boone said he'd explicitly alerted about the lineup change—was tabbed to hit cleanup.

Don't be surprised if Boone changes his mind again, especially if Verdugo continues his tear at the plate following his return from paternity leave.