Many people actually do follow it and have made similar assessments about Judge, Stanton, and other slugger types in the Yankee line up over recent years. But I watch baseball religiously, and I saw every Yankee game aside from those few that aired on Amazon. Judge's season was achieved b/c he had made adjustments where he spit on good breaking stuff and handled the high fastball better, even on the inside (but he was never that bad with the latter to begin with).
https://nypost.com/2022/09/16/inside-aaron-judges-transformation-to-set-up-special-season/
Judge played way too much at the end, and pressed trying to hit those last two homers. He had post seasonish pressure, with a ridiculous amount of attention on the road and at home, once he was at 59 HR. He came out of his game at the end, desperately trying to hit those last dingers, and limped into the post season. Without the HR chase, he would've been rested a lot during those last 2 weeks, since the Yankees weren't playing for any positioning any longer, and would've had a serious crack at the Triple Crown. Instead, he was batting lead off every day, trying to make it happen. He wasn't the same hitter heading into the playoffs.
And give a little credit to Astro pitching, as they dominated both "tough outs" and sluggers, undefeated, right to a World Series, which they also won. 11-2 for the entire postseaon, .172 batting ave against their pitching. As they say, "good pitching beats good hitting." And Kwan hit .429 against the Yankees in the Division Series, but he hit .000 against the Rays in the Wildcard Series. Such is the nature of the post season and small samples.
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