Soto’s epic pennant-clinching at-bat, pitch by pitch

There have been many momentous home runs in the long and rich history of the Yankees. On Saturday night in Cleveland, Juan Soto etched his name alongside those of Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Joe DiMaggio, Mickey Mantle, Roger Maris, Reggie Jackson, Aaron Judge and Soto’s own manager, Aaron Boone, among others with iconic homers in franchise lore.

Soto sent the Yankees to their first World Series in 15 years when he belted a go-ahead three-run homer in the 10th inning of Game 5 of the American League Championship Series against the Guardians. The two-out battle between Soto and reliever Hunter Gaddis, with the AL pennant at stake, lasted seven pitches.

Here’s a pitch-by-pitch breakdown of one of the most memorable at-bats in recent postseason history:

Pitch 1: 89.1 mph slider, inside
Result: Ball (1-0)
The pitch that Soto has had the most trouble with is the slider — he hit just .169 with a .338 slugging percentage against it during the regular season. Gaddis, whose slider had a run value in the 98th percentile during the regular season, opened the matchup with three of them. Soto laid off the first one, which dipped low and inside.

Pitch 2: 89.8 mph slider, lower-outside corner
Result: Called strike (1-1)
Gaddis’ second slider was over the plate and caught the very bottom of the strike zone, according to home plate umpire Alan Porter. Soto took it and the count was even at 1-1. Soto immediately crouched down in displeasure after the borderline pitch was called a strike, apparently feeling the pitch was low.

Pitch 3: 89.2 mph slider, upper-middle of the zone
Result: Foul (1-2)
With Soto taking each of the first two sliders, Gaddis went back to the pitch a third time to jump ahead in the count. Though this slider was left over the middle of the plate in the upper half of the zone, Soto swung over the top of it, getting just enough of it to chop a foul ball back to the wall behind home plate.

Pitch 4: 82 mph changeup, lower-middle of the zone
Result: Foul (1-2)
After three straight sliders to start the at-bat, Gaddis attempted to not only change speeds on Soto by throwing him a changeup, but he also changed the eye level. After getting Soto to foul off the previous pitch at the top of the zone, Gaddis stayed over the middle of the plate but pumped the 82 mph offering in just above the knees. Soto stayed back just long enough to fight it off to the third-base side.

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