“At the end of the year, I’m a free agent,” Judge said. “Talk to 30 teams, and the Yankees will be one of those 30 teams. It’s always nice to try to wrap something up, the sooner the better. But we weren’t able to get it done, and now it’s onto baseball.”
Judge, who turns 30 this month, is an extraordinary player: Across the last five seasons, only other hitter with at least 1,500 plate appearances, Mike Trout, can top Judge in both on-base percentage (.391) and higher slugging percentage (.563). But Judge has not been especially durable; he was healthy as a rookie and again last season, but missed 37 percent of the Yankees’ games in the three years in between.
By turning down the deal, Judge now assumes all the risk. Which is puzzling, because the offer seemed to match up with his wishes. Here is how Judge characterized his emotions on the collapse of contract talks:
“I’m just disappointed because I think I’ve been vocal about, ‘I want to be a Yankee for life,’ and I want to bring a championship back to New York. I want to do it for the fans here. They’re family. This is home for me. And not getting that done right now, it stinks, but I’ve got a job to do on the field and I’ve got to shift my focus to that now and go play some ball.”