Juan Soto is right. Soto’s estimate is that he will not hit in front of Judge Aaron in front of “the best batter in baseball.” And he will no longer be “get more attacks and get more pitches in the strike zone.”
The feelings Soto shared in an exclusive interview with colleague Mike Puma are correct. Soto hasn’t seen a lot of hits, especially for bass men. However, the timing is awful – at the beginning of a long marriage, and despite Soto’s Meh’s performance, the Mets won.
Soto is sharp. He had to realize that by accepting Steve Cohen’s $765 million offer, there would be no judges and a higher level of scrutiny existed. And remember that he made the appearance of 3,375 regular season plates in his career before teaming up with the judges, and assembled a portfolio that made him one of the best batsmen until the age of 24 in MLB history. Plus, the pressure didn’t seem to have made him step by step to such a degree that it would increase him (see his playoff performance).
Soto is a proven batsman in his prime great game, which has only played 19 games as Met over the weekend. In his first 19 games last season, the judge hit .193 with .710 OPS, even though Soto was permanently present at his previous base. The judge continued to win his second AL MVP. August 17th to September last year. 7, the Yankees dueled Oriol for Al East Reed, and the judge thrived behind him, and Soto produced .222, .778 OPS and two home runs in 19 games. In contrast to the beginning of the schedule, it blended into a long season and didn’t notice.

