NEW YORK — As Aaron Judge jumped above the wall and tumbled to the turf, Carlos Rodón worried.
''I'm like, `Pplease don't dive. Please stay on your feet,''' the New York Yankees pitcher said. ''Obviously, I wanted him to dive there and he made the play and I'm grateful he got up because that's a big body.''
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. Cody Bellinger hit a trio of two-run homers against his former team.
A two-time MVP at age 33, Judge gets attention for his offense: a major league-best .354 average with 34 homers and 79 RBIs. His defense is just as striking.
The 6-foot-7, 282-pound Judge leaped at the right-field wall to catch a 327-foot drive by Peter Crow-Armstrong against Rodón in the fourth inning, preventing would have been Crow-Armstrong's 26th home run.
''I think robbing a homer is probably the best, just to keep a run off the board,'' Judge said.
When Judge caught the ball, it was about 15 inches over the top of the wall. PCA waved an arm at him in frustration and acknowledgement.
''He knows we work hard for our hits and our homers,'' Crow-Armstrong said. ''He's having an unbelievable year and that was me just being like, come on man, like you got to take them away too?''