MINNEAPOLIS – This wasn’t just another September ballgame. This was chaos, drama, and Yankee baseball at its loudest. In a heart-pounding slugfest at Target Field, the New York Yankees clawed their way past the Minnesota Twins, escaping with a 10-9 victory that left fans gasping until the very last out.
It was a night where pitching vanished and power took over. Aaron Judge, wearing his trademark No. 99, ignited the Bronx Bombers with a towering blast in the third inning, his 45th of the season, reminding everyone why he remains the face of New York. But it wasn’t just Judge—every bat in the lineup seemed to have its moment. Gleyber Torres ripped a clutch RBI double, Anthony Volpe added a key single, and Giancarlo Stanton delivered one of those signature line-drive rockets that nearly tore through the outfield wall.
Yet for every Yankee punch, the Twins punched right back. Carlos Correa and Royce Lewis powered Minnesota’s counterattack, driving the scoreboard into overdrive. By the seventh inning, the game had already featured five lead changes, the tension in the stadium climbing higher with every pitch.
The defining moment came in the top of the eighth. With the Yankees trailing 8-7 and the bases loaded, DJ LeMahieu stepped to the plate. Calm, collected, and ice-cold in the clutch, LeMahieu ripped a two-run single into right field, silencing the Minnesota crowd and flipping the game on its head. New York would tack on another insurance run, barely enough to survive what came next.
The Twins refused to go quietly. Down 10-8 in the bottom of the ninth, Minnesota loaded the bases against Yankees closer Clay Holmes. The crowd roared, the pressure mounted, and the ghosts of blown saves loomed large. Holmes managed to induce a ground ball, but a defensive miscue allowed one run to score, cutting the lead to one. With the winning run on second, Holmes finally slammed the door with a wicked sinker that froze the batter—strike three, game over.
The dugout erupted, Judge leaped into the air for a celebratory chest bump, and the Yankees walked off the field not just with a win, but with a statement: this team refuses to fold, no matter how chaotic the battle.
“This is what it’s about in September,” Judge said after the game, sweat still dripping as he addressed reporters. “It’s not always pretty, but it’s about finding ways to win. Tonight, we showed our fight.”
With the victory, the Yankees tightened their grip in the AL playoff race, proving that even on nights when pitching falters, the heart of New York can still outslug anyone.
It wasn’t just a win. It was survival. It was drama. It was Yankees baseball at its purest.
Final Score: Yankees 10, Twins 9.
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