New York Yankees’ new No. 22 is making Yankees fans forget all about Juan Soto

Colorado Rockies v New York Yankees

This past winter, New York Yankees’ fans were left stunned by the perceived betrayal of their prominent star right fielder and Aaron Judge setup man, Juan Soto, who took a record-breaking $765 million to make the move across town to the New York Mets. Soto had excelled in pinstripes, posting a slash line of .288/.419/.569/.988 with a career-high 41 home runs during his one year in the Bronx. With his departure, it seemed like the Yankees’ run production was doomed to plummet.

But any assumption like this proved premature.

The Yankees have begun the year with a bang, hitting an MLB-leading 22 home runs in six games entering Friday’s action against the Pittsburgh Pirates. On a historic pace for long balls, it seems the Yankee offense isn’t truly lacking Soto’s brilliant talent that combines both on-base percentage and slugging. And it’s in large part thanks to their new DH who now bears Soto’s old number that Yankee fans can forget their one-year wonder.

Ben Rice is picking up where Juan Soto left off

Ben Rice made his MLB debut last season replacing the injured Anthony Rizzo as the Yankees’ first baseman wearing Ni. 93. He quickly catapulted his way into the franchise history books with a three-homer game, the first ever for a Yankees rookie. His seven RBI that day also matched the team’s rookie record, set by none other than MLB legend Lou Gehrig. Unfortunately, after a torrid stretch, Rice finished the year with a lackluster .171 batting average with 7 home runs in his 152 at-bat stint, seemingly exposed at the highest level.

This year, after making plenty of hard contact in spring training, Rice was chosen to fill in for the ailing Giancarlo Stanton. However, not only did he inherit the DH slot, but jersey No. 22 as well, still warm after being vacated by Soto.

With his new (and possibly temporary) role and new number, Rice is vindicating the Yankees’ confidence in him. Sporting a powerful new swing, Rice is 7-for-19 (.368 average) with two home runs and two walks so far this year. Compare this to his predecessor, who is hitting .240 with one home run so far with the Mets. While this isn’t to say Rice will perform better in the long run, his recent success takes the sting out of losing the hitter that pushed the Yankees to the World Series last season.

Related Posts

Dodgers’ Roki Sasaki to Take Major Step in Pitching Progression, Late Season Return

Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Roki Sasaki reportedly is making major progress on a return to the team sooner than later.

Uрdate: Beyond the bullрen, how aggreѕѕіve wіll the Dodgerѕ be at the MLB trade deadlіne?

Four monthѕ ago, the Dodgerѕ were caѕt aѕ baѕeball’ѕ new evіl emріre, laрріng rіval contenderѕ wіth lavіѕh free-agent ѕрendіng durіng an offѕeaѕon that raіѕed alarmѕ about comрetіtіve balance wіthіn MLB. “Comіng іnto…

MLB News: Veteran Pitcher Announces Sudden Retirement After 18 Seasons

Veteran right-handed pitcher Jesse Chavez has announced his retirement from Major League Baseball after 18 seasons. He made the announcement Thursday on Foul Territory. “All honestly, I…

REPORT: Dodgers facing another brutal pitching loss just one day after Tanner Scott move

Nothing went right for the Dodgers on Tuesday night against the Twins. With Yoshinobu Yamamoto on the bump, an immediate error from Miguel Rojas allowed Minnesota’s first…

Colby Frieda Signs Free Agent Deal with New York Mets – Troy University Athletics

TROY, Ala. – Troy right-handed pitcher Colby Frieda signed an undrafted free agent contract with the New York Mets on Thursday.

Joe Torre’s David Wright Hall of Fame claim will excite Mets fans

Former New York Yankees manager Joe Torre recently said that Mets legend David Wright could make his way to Cooperstown down the road.