Aaron Judge Agrees to $360 Million Deal to Stay With the New York Yankees
Time
12/7/2022
In the end, the allure of Pinstripes won out.
Aaron Judge, the American League single-season home-run record holder and the TIME’s 2022 Athlete of the Year, will sign a nine-year, $360 million contract with the New York Yankees, the franchise that drafted him out of Fresno State University back in 2013 and called him up to the big leagues back in 2016. It’s the largest contract ever awarded to a free agent in Major League Baseball history. The deal allows him to continue his Hall of Fame trajectory for one of the most valuable franchises in American sports, and potentially join the pantheon of baseball greats—Lou Gehrig, Joe DiMaggio, Mickey Mantle, Derek Jeter, Mariano Rivera—who spent their entire careers in the Bronx. The deal, first reported by MLB Network early Wednesday morning and confirmed by TIME with baseball sources, capped off a wild 24 hours at baseball’s winter meetings in San Diego. Baseball’s “hot stove”—the term given to describe the sport’s annual off-season free-agent frenzy—overtook the NFL, NBA, and even the World Cup as the day’s epicenter of sports intrigue. And it was all about Judge. Read More: Aaron Judge Is TIME’s 2022 Athlete of the Year On Tuesday, reporting emerged that Judge, who set a rookie home-run record for the Yankees in 2017, may or may not make an appearance at the winter meetings, ramping up speculation that his free-agency decision was imminent. Then reporters, pundits, and fans seized on two comments Judge made to TIME in our Athlete of the Year piece, published early Tuesday morning. In our exclusive interview, which took place in early November, Judge expressed unhappiness that the Yankees publicly revealed, back in April, that Judge had turned down a seven-year, $213.5 million deal to remain in the Bronx. “We kind of said, Hey, let’s keep this between us,” Judge told TIME. “I was a little upset that the numbers came out. I understand it’s a negotiation tactic. Put pressure on me. Turn the fans against me, turn the media on me. That part of it I didn’t like.” (The New York Daily News ran a back-page headline—”Judge’s Verdict: Cashman Guilty!—based on the TIME report). I also asked Judge if potentially coming home to play for the San Francisco Giants, his favorite team as a boy growing up in tiny Linden, Calif.—about 75 miles east of San Francisco—held appeal. He paused to consider, before admitting that it did. He even brought up a prediction he made in his senior of high school, to 2010, to his now-wife, Samantha Bracksieck. “I said, in 10 years, I’ll be married to Sam,” says Judge, “and playing for the San Francisco Giants.” Judge smiled. “I was like, that’d better not get out.”New York awaits Judge’s parade. The Yankees open up their 2023 season on March 30. At home. Against the San Francisco Giants.