Aaron Judge hits 2 homers in his return to the Sacramento area

West Sacramento, California – Aaron Judge celebrates returning to the Sacramento region on Saturday by two home runs, losing to the New York Yankees against Athletics to defeat its top five in the Major League.

The judge is playing for the first time in the Sacramento region after college on New York’s first visit to the California capital near the capital of California.

The judge was born in Sacramento and grew very far away in Linden, and there were many friends and families in the crowd of 12,113 at the Minor League Park in the hosting.

The judge said after the Yankees win on Friday night, “It felt just like staying home.” “Anytime we play it, it’s always something that is familiar with me and close to the house, to me. It was special.”

Walking with the series opener 1 by 4 wickets 1 and two nearest Homer, the judge granted John Fisher’s 11-7 losing his desire to John Fisher on Saturday.

He led the fourth innings with a Homer in JP Sears, and then the Justin Starner appeared to lead the Yankees to the sixth place for fans, many of whom “MVP! MVP!”

“Not surprisingly,” Yankis Starter Carlos Rodon said. “Continue as great as he always does as he always does really good player really good player.”

The second Homer gave the judge 14 in the season and gave him a 41-career multi-homor games-the fourth in the history of Yankis.

The judge led the batting average (.396), on-base percentage (.486), sluggling percentage (.772) Homer and RBI (37).

When he announced their plans to play in this small league park last season, Fisher said that players like judges could do what he could do at a stadium known for the crime.

“We are glad to play in this beautiful Bolpark for the next three years, but have been able to see some of the best players in the baseball, they are athletics players or Aaron Judge and others launch home runs from this very intimate, the most intimate Bolpark of the big league bases,” he said.

The ball was well carried for the six Homer with the combined teams-a pitcher Fernando Cruz with a three-run shot of Langeliers was shocked to take the wall on the wall.

Cruise said he went back up to the home plate, assuming that it would only fly to see the ball by seeing the ball.

Cruise said, “It’s the same for all of us.” “It’s the same for the other team, the same for me, the same for my other teammates. I have to do the same thing tomorrow, to do the same, pitch and identify a bit better.”

The games of this stadium that were previously used in the Pacific Coast League were used in the Pacific Coast League, which had a combined 2.75 home run-more than 40% of the hit rates last season at the Ouckland Collizium.

“I am sure that the summer is increasing as the heat is rising, the PCL is known to him,” the director of the Yankees said about the way the ball carries the ball. “If I said that I knew that this place was about to play the whole place. It was a bit different throughout today.”

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AP MLB: https://apnews.com/mlb

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