1. I miss watching Juan Soto play for the Yankees every day, but Ben Rice is doing all he can to fill that void. Rice hit his 10th home run of the season on Monday night in Arlington to give the Yankees a two-run lead in the third inning in an eventual 4-2 win over the Rangers.
“It’s must-watch TV at this point, when he steps to the plate,” Aaron Judge said of Rice. “He’s going to put something in play hard, or he’s going to take his walk and pass the baton. It’s impressive to watch.”
2. Rice is up to 10 home runs, 23 RBIs and a .322/.447/.744 slash line with 21 walks in 28 games. He has become what Soto was for the Yankees in his lone season in pinstripes. He has become the offensive force to complement Judge that the Yankees were missing before Soto arrived and again last year after he left.
“I get a front-row seat hitting right behind him now,” Judge said. “It makes my job easy.”
3. Judge followed Rice’s two-run homer with a solo shot of his own as part of a 3-for-3 night that also included a pair of doubles.
“I couldn’t let him catch me in homers,” Judge said of his 11th immediately following Rice’s 10th. “I had to make sure I got one after that.”
Judge is tied for second in the majors in home runs with Yordan Alvarez and Rice is right behind them. They have the most home runs of any two teammates in baseball and are second (Rice) and third (Judge) in OPS behind Alvarez.
“I’m glad I don’t have to face them,” Max Fried said. “Those are two of the best hitters in the game.”
4. Fried put together another scoreless start (6 IP, 4 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 2 BB, 5 K) to lower his ERA to 2.09 and extend his league-leading innings total to 47 1/3 innings. He continued pitching out of the stretch after abandoning his windup in Boston last Wednesday.
“It’s not like I’ll never do it again,” Fried said of his windup, “but we’ll give it some time.”
5. Camilo Doval entered in relief of Fried for the seventh and allowed a home run to make it a 4-1 game. Doval has allowed earned runs in three of his last four outings and home runs in those three outings. A four-run game is too close of a score for him to be pitching in.
Tim Hill pitched the eighth and walked two — his first two walks of the year — before eventually getting out of a bases-loaded jam.
6. David Bednar closed it out in the ninth but made it uncomfortable the way he seems to always do, though he did need to get four outs in the inning, thanks to a Jazz Chisholm error. Michael Scott describing Andy Bernard is how I would summarize my confidence level with Bednar: “Pros: I trust him … Cons: I don’t really trust him.” The Rangers scored an unearned run off Bednar.
7. Trent Grisham went 1-for-4 with a walk, Jazz Chisholm added his third home run of the season (all coming over the last five games), Cody Bellinger went 0-for-4 (he has a .488 OPS over the last eight games), Jasson Dominguez went 1-for-4 in his return to the majors, Austin Wells went 0-for-3 with a walk and Ryan McMahon and Jose Caballero both had singles. As long as Rice and Judge recreate what Soto and Judge did two years ago, there’s no need for anyone else to do much, and they haven’t, other than chipping in here and there. But aside from Bellinger who hasn’t hit much since the Saturday blowout of the Royals, everyone is the lineup is trending in the right direction.
8. It was good to see Dominguez back in the bigs. He ripped a line drive just foul down the right-field line in his first at-bat before eventually picking up a single in his third at-bat. Dominguez belongs. He belongs playing every day in the majors and batting leadoff (at least against right-handers), but instead, he’ll likely go back to Triple-A after Wednesday’s game.
9. Caballero went into Saturday’s game against the Astros 9-for-9 in stolen base attempts before getting caught twice in that game. He had a steal on Sunday and then got caught twice again on Monday. He’s now 11-for-15 this season, but for 1-for-5 since Saturday. The opposition seems to be aware he’s going to run on the first pitch and they’re getting him. Jack Leiter’s pickoff of him was the first of Leiter’s career.
10. Tuesday’s game features Cam Schlittler against Jacob deGrom. Schlittler is off to a deGrom-like start to his career, while deGrom is having a typical outstanding season as he approaches his 37th birthday. The Rangers have never faced Schlittler, and while it hasn’t mattered if a team has faced Schlittler or not so far in his career as he has been dominant against everyone, teams that have yet to face him really struggle against him. There are a few Yankees with decent numbers against deGrom: Bellinger, McMahon and Randal Grichuk have all homered off him twice and Chisholm has also homered off him. It’s too bad Giancarlo Stanton is now on the injured list as he is 9-for-27 with four home runs in his career against deGrom.