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Yankees right fielder Aaron Judge, photographed in July 2018. The president of an auction house in California has offered $2 million for the baseball that represents Judge’s historic 62nd home run of the season. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons, photo credit Keith Allison. Shared under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license.

Fan who caught Aaron Judge’s 62nd HR ball offered $2M by auction house

Yankees right fielder Aaron Judge, photographed in July 2018. The president of an auction house in California has offered $2 million for the baseball that represents Judge’s historic 62nd home run of the season. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons, photo credit Keith Allison. Shared under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license.
Yankees right fielder Aaron Judge, photographed in July 2018. The president of an auction house in California has offered $2 million for the baseball that represents Judge’s historic 62nd home run of the season. Photo credit Keith Allison. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. Shared under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license.

TUSTIN, Calif. – The owner of a sports memorabilia auction house said he has offered $2 million to the fan who caught Aaron Judge’s American League-record 62nd home run.

JP Cohen, president of Memory Lane Inc. in Tustin, California, told the Associated Press on October 5 that he has texted and emailed Cory Youmans, the man who caught Judge’s milestone shot on the night of October 4 at Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas. Cohen said Youmans has not yet replied.

“I feel the offer is way above fair, if he is inclined to sell it,” Cohen said in a telephone interview with the AP.

Youmans grabbed the historic souvenir on the fly as it sailed into the front row of section 31 in left field. The homer pushed Judge past Roger Maris for the AL season record – a mark many consider baseball’s “clean” standard because the only National League players who hit more have been tarnished by ties to steroids.

Youmans, who is from Dallas, works in the financial world. He was asked October 4 what he planned to do with the prize while security personnel whisked him away to have it authenticated.

“Good question. I haven’t thought about it,” he said.

The record price for a home run ball is $3 million, paid for Mark McGwire’s record 70th from the 1998 season.

Cohen had previously pledged to offer $2 million for Judge’s 62nd homer. He said his company has a good relationship with the Yankees and it would be willing to loan the ball to the team for an exhibit. He added the team has frequently exhibited items owned by Memory Lane at Yankee Stadium.

“We did make an offer of $2 million, and that offer is still valid,” Cohen said.

After the Yankees lost 3-2, Judge said he didn’t have possession of the home run ball.

“I don’t know where it’s at,” he said. “We’ll see what happens with that. It would be great to get it back, but that’s a souvenir for a fan. He made a great catch out there, and they’ve got every right to it.”

Youmans was among the crowd of 38,832, the largest to watch a baseball game at the three-year-old ballpark.

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