Juan Soto predicted that it would be 50,000 against a Friday evening at the Yankee Stadium.
It was only slightly absent – perhaps 42,700 to 5,000 – but in a battle of first -place clubs, the only ratio which was finally important was 6-2.
As in the Yankees 6, put 2.
Soto returned to deafening hoots in the Bronx and responded by walking three times, but the bats that the Yankees made it possible to replace him in the programming contributed to a victory on the dishes during the first installation of the Subway series in front of a closed window crowds of 47,700.
“I was ready for that,” said Soto. “These are really passionate fans and they are injured. They will do their best for their team, and they feel that.”
Cody Bellinger and Paul Goldschmidt, were part of the Yankees pivot once Soto chose the $ 765 million in food on their $ 760 million, combined for five strokes, three points and two points produced to carry out a patient offensive attack.
And of course, Aaron Judge was Aaron Judge, going 2 for 4 with a walk and two points to pass his average to 0.414.
“It was really fun to be part,” said Bellinger, who went 3 for 5 and came a few meters from the addition of a circuit. “It was noisy, the stadium was full. Really Friday evening at the Yankee Stadium so far was really fun to be part of, but it was just full of energy.”
Soto saw 29 throws through his five plaques appearances and has reached three times, but only came the margin once.
He came on the plate at the top of the ninth with two runners, but the Yankees led Luke Weaver, who led him to fly to end it.
While he was heading for the plate for his first at-bat at the top of the first round, Soto met an avalanche of huae who rivaled with Jose Altuve around these parts.
After Soto and Receiver Austin Wells exchanged jokes, the knock raised his helmet with a heavy choir of anger, with a smile on his face.
When Soto ran to the right field for the bottom of the first, most of the stands of the stands turned to him.
And although he finally praised the crowd there too, he again met huae and songs of “F – K Juan Soto”.
“It was a very good environment,” said manager Aaron Boone. “It was certainly one of those nights when you could really feel energy in the building.”
There were later songs of “We Want Grisham” – the opposite of what was heard here last June when Trent Grisham was marble and Soto on the bench – “surface”, and of course more hoots.
But it only served in the seventh victory of the Yankees in their last nine games and their first victory on the Mets (28-17) since 2023, after being swept in four games last year.
“We want to win as many games as possible against each opponent,” said Goldschmidt, who also made a great shoulder to support the first base line in fifth round. “Good victory, and it’s a very good team. They have played very much. It will also be a good challenge on the next few days.”
The Yankees (26-18) took an advance of 4-0 on Tylor Megill at the end of the third with only two bullets leaving the inner field.
The only blow that left the inner field came from Jorbit Vivas, who led with a simple right.
One later, the judge walked before Bellinger touched a benchmark on the third base and jostled on the line for a simple field.
Goldschmidt came then and hit a single -stroke single in the middle. Francisco Lindor arrived at the ball and made a late throw in the first, but the attempted scoop of Pete Alonso turned the ball into the country of No-Man, allowing a second round to score.
After Jasson Domínguez walked to load the bases, Anthony Volpe struck a sacrifice fly towards a relatively shallow right field, the Yankees testing the arm of Soto and Bellinger beating his three -hop launch with marble.
Megill had to launch 39 seats in the round, confront nine strikers and have yet obtained only two withdrawals.
As the right-hander traveled Oswald Peraza to force a race with the base loaded to do so 4-0, Carlos Mendoza finally pulled the cap and relieved Megill with Max Kranick.
The dishes obtained one of these races at the top of the fourth by Carlos Rodón in a rally launched by Soto, who came to mark on the Brandon Nimmo lining on the left field line.
But that was all they obtained against Rodón – which was solid, if not his clearest, on five rounds of ball at a race.
“I was trying to get (SOTO) to swing and miss each time,” said Rodón, who walked Soto three times. “I wanted to get it. But he had me. “