May 20

PHI9
COL3
Final
KC3
SF1
Final
LAA4
ATH3
Final
ARI9
LAD5
Final
CHC14
MIA1
Final
CIN0
PIT1
Final
ATL3
WAS5
Final
NYM0
BOS2
Final
HOU2
TB3
Final
TEX2
NYY5
Final
SD0
TOR3
Final
SEA0
CWS1
Final
BAL2
MIL5
Final
DET5
STL4
Final

May 21

KC2
SF3
Final
LAA7
ATH5
Final
KC27-23
SF29-20
NBCSBAY @7:45 PM UTC
PHI7
COL4
Final
CLE0
MIN0
Postponed
ARI3
LAD4
Final
CIN25-25
PIT16-33
FDOH @4:35 PM UTC
BAL15-32
MIL24-25
MLBN @5:10 PM UTC
CHC29-20
MIA19-28
FDFL @5:10 PM UTC
HOU25-23
TB22-26
FSUN @5:10 PM UTC
DET32-17
STL27-22
FDMW @5:15 PM UTC
SEA27-20
CWS15-34
RTNW @6:10 PM UTC
CLE25-21
MIN26-21
MLBN @8:10 PM UTC
NYM29-20
BOS25-25
MLBN @10:45 PM UTC
ATL24-24
WAS22-27
MLBN @10:45 PM UTC
TEX25-24
NYY28-19
RASN @11:05 PM UTC
SD27-19
TOR23-24
PDTV @11:07 PM UTC

May 22

LAA22-25
ATH22-27
NBCSCA @2:05 AM UTC
LAA22-25
ATH22-27
NBCSCA @7:35 PM UTC
PHI30-18
COL8-40
NBCSP @12:40 AM UTC
ARI26-23
LAD30-19
DBTV @2:10 AM UTC
TEX25-24
NYY28-19
MLBN @4:35 PM UTC
SD27-19
TOR23-24
MLBN @5:07 PM UTC
PHI30-18
COL8-40
NBCSP @7:10 PM UTC
CLE25-21
DET32-17
MLBN @10:40 PM UTC
MIL24-25
PIT16-33
SNPT @10:40 PM UTC
ATL24-24
WAS22-27
MAS2 @10:45 PM UTC
BAL15-32
BOS25-25
MLBN @10:45 PM UTC

May 23

SF29-20
WAS22-27
NBCSBAY @10:45 PM UTC
SEA27-20
HOU25-23
SCHN @12:10 AM UTC
CHC29-20
CIN25-25
FDOH @10:40 PM UTC
MIL24-25
PIT16-33
SNPT @10:40 PM UTC
TOR23-24
TB22-26
FSUN @11:05 PM UTC
CLE25-21
DET32-17
GDTV @11:10 PM UTC
LAD30-19
NYM29-20
ATV @11:10 PM UTC
BAL15-32
BOS25-25
MLBN @11:10 PM UTC
SD27-19
ATL24-24
MLBN @11:15 PM UTC
TEX25-24
CWS15-34
KDAF @11:40 PM UTC

Aaron Judge contract prediction puts him ahead of Mike Trout

Aaron Judge is having a historic season. 

From being a clear AL MVP frontrunner to chasing a Triple Crown, the New York Yankees star outfielder is showing up and out this year. Just a few days ago, Judge hit his 60th blast as he inches even closer to Roger Maris' American League single-season home run record (61). 

As he puts the finishing touches on a record-setting season, the 30-year-old slugger is gearing up to a massive payday 

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“Very few people get this opportunity to talk extension. Me getting this opportunity is something special and I appreciate the Yankees wanting to do that,” Judge said after rejecting a seven-year, $213.5 million extension in spring training. 

“But I don't mind going into free agency ... At the end of this year, I'll talk to 30 teams. The Yankees will be one of those teams.” 

The seven-year offer the Yankees made would have made Judge the highest paid position player in team history on an annual basis, but yesterday’s price is not today’s price.

In March 2019, Los Angeles Angels outfielder Mike Trout signed the largest contract in professional sports history, that was worth $426.5 million. The 12-year contract with the Angels is now the third-largest deal in sports history. Behind soccer star Lionel Messi, who signed a 4-year $674,000,000 deal with the Barcelona football club and NFL quarterback Patrick Mahomes,  who inked a 10-year $503,000,000 million dollar deal with the Kansas City Chiefs. 

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However, Judge has a big chance at not only being the highest-paid MLB player in 2023 but landing ahead of Trout's mega deal.

This year, Judge was looking for a $21 million salary for the 2022 season but the Yankees were offering $17 million and even offered to meet midway at $19 million. Judge ultimately agreed to the $19 million midpoint, with incentives of $250,000 for being named MVP and $250,000 for World Series MVP. But now he looks to up the conversation.

Yankees broadcaster Michael Kay believes that the Yankees need to go at least $100 million over their last offer, bringing the offer to $313.5 million, but even that seems low. So let’s dig a little deeper. Here’s a look at a projected future AAV based on a $313.5 million dollar offer:

But after this 2022 season tear, it's more than reasonable that he could land a massive 10-year contract. A 10-year $400 million deal would give Judge an AAV of $40 million, which would put him in the No. 2 spot behind New York Mets pitcher Max Scherzer (AAV $43 million) but above Trout's AAV of $35.6 million per year. 

Numbers like these are historic in the league. And even though the Yankees rank as the third priciest roster in baseball with a $253-million dollar payroll this season, keeping Judge will be the first thing on their to-do-list.

By turning down the Yankees’ initial offer, it’s clear that Judge knows his worth and may even test the waters a bit. Time will tell.

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