It didn’t take long for the Yankees to shrug off Friday’s humiliating loss to the historically awful Rockies. They corrected those wrongs by resembling the far superior team less than 24 hours later.

Those who visited Coors Field with hopes of witnessing a two-game winning streak from one of the worst clubs ever assembled in MLB’s modern era were disappointed. Reality set back in on Saturday, as the Yankees produced a mammoth 10-run inning en route to a 13-1 drubbing of the lowly Rockies.

With the score knotted at 1-1 entering the fifth, New York proceeded to send 14 batters to the plate, and the offensive eruption featured seven hits, three walks, and one error. Ironically, the monstrous rally ended with a strikeout of Aaron Judge, who drew first blood just 10 pitches into the game with his 18th home run of the season.

Each player in the Yankees’ lineup registered a hit, and the trio of Paul Goldschmidt, Cody Bellinger, and DJ LeMahieu logged three knocks apiece. New York totalled a season-high 21 hits, and the fifth-inning barrage also marked the Yankees’ first season with multiple 10-run frames since 2009.

“It just started to snowball. We had a few games here where the offense had been held down,” Yankees manager Aaron Boonetold reporters after the win. “To have a breakout inning like that was really good to see. Just a lot of really outstanding at-bats that inning. Today was just a really good example of a snowball inning… Coming off four or five days where we hadn’t scored a bunch, to break out like that, was nice.”

Pitching to the Max

While only one-third of the season is in the books, Max Fried has been earning every penny of the record-breaking contract he signed in free agency this past offseason. The veteran lefty once again resembled an ace, completing 7.1 innings of one-run ball with seven strikeouts and two pickoffs. He also lowered his season ERA to a league-best 1.29 and threw an economical 83 pitches.

Fried also made some history of his own. According to MLB.com’s Sarah Langs, the southpaw’s laudable ERA is the lowest by a Yankee in his first 11 starts of a season since earned runs became an official stat, back in 1913. The immense pressure to lead New York’s rotation with Gerrit Cole sidelined for all of 2025 hasn’t fazed Fried. The pinstripes clearly aren’t too heavy for him.

“The elements are different [at Coors Field]. It’s more about making pitches and making sure you’re executing those pitches,” Fried explained. “Because the ones that hang and are left over the plate really can beat you. It’s really about making sure you’re staying on top of it… We’re in a good position to win games, that’s all I can really control. Everything else is nice, but for me, when I take the ball, I really just want us to win. That’s been my main goal.”

Langs also noted that Fried — who now owns an AL-best seven wins — has the fourth-lowest ERA for a pitcher through their first 11 starts with a new franchise over the last 30 seasons. His next challenge will come against the reigning champion Dodgers at Chavez Ravine next weekend.

Striking Gold against lefties

Goldschmidt’s placement atop the Yankees’ lineup on Saturday was calculated and predictable. Entering the game, the veteran first baseman had a stellar .538 average with nine extra-base hits against left-handers this season (48 plate appearances), and the Rockies’ starter was — surprise! — southpaw Kyle Freeland.

In the leadoff spot, Goldschmidt went 3-for-4 with an RBI single, two runs scored, and a walk. His season average now sits at .344 — third-best in the majors — and a change of scenery has undoubtedly rejuvenated the 37-year-old slugger.

“I know the last couple games we hadn’t scored that much. I feel like yesterday we had a lot of chances,” Goldschmidt said. “Same thing today, those first few innings, we had a bunch of people on base and then some double plays. So I think the mindset is, just continue to have good at-bats and know there could be a big inning or a lot of small innings. Fortunate to get all of those runs there.”

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