New York Yankees outfielder Aaron Judge began the weekend hitting .390 with 26 home runs and 60 runs batted in in 68 games this season. In 10 seasons with the Yankees, Judge has hit 341 homers. Tim McIntosh, the former Hopkins and Gophers star catcher, played for the Yankees, then scouted for the Yankees for three years (2001-03). He scouted Judge multiple times in high school and college. “I hadn’t seen this kid play, so I go out and look at him. He’s a senior in (Linden, Calif.) high school, and he’s big (6-foot-7), but not that strong,” McIntosh told the Pioneer Press last week. “They didn’t even have a street light in his town. I tricked my west coast cross-checker (scout) to come in and look at him, because he wasn’t on my list of top guys. He even said that’s not great. “So I put him in the system (report) that he’s big and you never know what’s going to happen. He’s got some ability, but he’s not ready, and he should go to college. Three years later (2017), when Judge was en route to becoming American League Rookie of the Year, McIntosh spotted the Red Sox scout at a minor league ballpark and jokingly asked how they had done on their reports on Judge. “He said, ‘I’m lucky to have a job,’ ” McIntosh said. The only team to draft Judge out of high school in 2010 was the Oakland Athletics in the 31st round. “His mom said he wants something like $500,000 to sign,” McIntosh said. Oakland wasn’t going to pay that, so Judge opted for Fresno State. “We all (scouts) thought he can’t hit a slider, he’s not going (to make it),” McIntosh said. “I did some homework, and I found out through the family that his dad was a football player at Michigan State and played in the NFL. His mom was a softball player, they gave him up for adoption, so I knew there was some athleticism. “But are you going to take that big of a flyer on a big guy who couldn’t hit the ball out of the high school field? He didn’t hit one ball out of the park for me (when scouted). So it’s tricky at that age.” Two years later, McIntosh scouted Judge at Fresno State. “Judge hit a ball so hard then that I thought if it hit (the pitcher) in the head, his head would have blown up,” he said. Scouting remains an inexact science. The Yankees, who had three first-round picks in the 2013 draft, chose Judge No. 32 overall. He received a $1.8 million signing bonus. In 2024, he signed a $360 million, nine-year contract with the Yankees. The Twins play the Yankees Aug. 11-14 in New York. By then, Judge, 33, could have 40 home runs. — These days, McIntosh, 60, resides in Golden Valley and is a successful realtor for the Fazendin company. — Hoping the best for San Diego Padres scout Mark Merila, 53, the three-time Gophers All-America infielder who was diagnosed with brain cancer 31 years ago and is back undergoing experimental chemotherapy. — The “AE1” endorsement shoe of the Timberwolves’ Anthony Edwards is the No. 1 seller of all Adidas models. — Edina senior outfielder Ben Molitor, son of hall of famer Paul Molitor, is headed to Winona State. — Bob Paradise, the Cretin grad who played eight seasons (1971-79) in the NHL, is watching the Stanley Cup playoffs. Today’s NHL players compared to his era? “Night and day,” said Paradise, 81. “These guys are so damn good. The guys now, when they shoot the puck, they knock the glass out of the building. They can all shoot like crazy. Their passes are like slap shots. Bigger, faster, stronger, all of that applies to these guys now. “And they train 11 months — they take a month off after this, and they’re back at it. After a game, we used to drink 10 beers. Now, they’re drinking lemonade and orange juice. They’re eating pasta before a game. We were eating steak, which they say is the worst thing you can eat, then play a game. That’s like dropping a bowling ball in your stomach. And they’re watching film for a couple hours a day. They‘re intense. “They got it all figured out now.” — During his era, Paradise was among the toughest fighters in the NHL. Somebody once said he was 25-0 in NHL fights. I asked Paradise if that were true.
“I don’t know about the 25,” he said, “but I do know about the 0.” Today, Paradise resides in St. Paul, retired from a successful real estate career. — That was Utah Mammoth scout Mike Guentzel, in a foursome with son Jake of the Tampa Bay Lightning, acing the 197-yard No. 16 hole with a 7-wood at Stone Ridge Golf Club the other day, his second career ace. — Condolences to the family of St. Paul sportsman Tim Giuliani, 77, who died last week after a recent heart attack. — Rocco Baldelli said rookie pitcher Travis Adams took his demotion from the Twins to St. Paul well last week when the Minnesota manager informed him. Not everybody takes demotions well. “You see all kinds of stuff — every conversation’s very different,” Baldelli said. “You’ve got to be as honest as you can. Most of the guys are in the range of emotional and understanding. No one wants to be told they’re going down to Triple-A or potentially even worse. I try to take time with guys, especially when I have guys I know will take it to heart. I want them to leave in a good headspace, one way or another.” — Two of baseball’s best storytellers — Tim Tschida and Jim Kaat — will chat next week on the upstart “Tim Tschida, The Show” podcast on the OIC Network. Tschida, the former major league umpire crew chief from St. Paul, had former pitcher Curt Schilling as an entertaining first guest. — Former Twins pitcher Tom Johnson, who is Mission Director of the Church of the Open Door in Maple Grove, in two weeks leaves for Slovakia, where he conducts popular youth baseball programs. — That’s highly accomplished Mark Boyle, St. Louis Park High grad and son of former WTCN-TV sports anchor Joe, broadcasting the NBA Finals for the Indiana Pacers, for whom he has magnificently called games the past 37 seasons. — For a fifth time, former St. Paul Central and Southwest State quarterback Jeff Loots is on the 2026 College Football Hall of Fame ballot. — Croke Park in Dublin, where the Vikings on Sept. 28 will play the Pittsburgh Steelers in the first regular season NFL game in Ireland, has a natural grass playing surface. Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, where the Vikings will play the Cleveland Browns on Oct. 5, has a combined natural-synthetic grass surface. — Ethan Stade, a 6-4 junior left-hander at Minnesota State Mankato, struck out 26 of 27 outs — including three on nine pitches one inning and three on 10 pitches another inning — for the New Ulm Brewers in a recent 5-0 town ball victory over Bird Island, which perennially is a state tournament contender. “At any level it’s amazing for an individual to strike out that many,” Minnesota State coach Matt Majers said in an understatement. “Really remarkable.” Stade, 21, a New Ulm High grad, will pitch for the Northwoods League Willmar Stingers the second half of this summer. He features a fastball in the upper-80s with a slider. Also the other day, sophomore right-hander Landon Sanderson of Lake Crystal-Wellcome Memorial High struck out 21 of 21 outs in a 7-0 victory over St. Clair. — The NFL’s Horrigan writers award, representing cooperation with media and won by Vikings coach Kevin O’Connell in 2025, was won in 1998 by another classy coach, Tampa Bay’s Tony Dungy. — Among speakers at the Professional Football Researchers Association national convention July 10-13 in St. Paul will be former Viking Leo Lewis and former Gopher-Packer Darrell Thompson. — After a 17-hour bus trip to Auburn, N.Y., for the Junior College World Series, the Century College (White Bear Lake) Wood Ducks, for which ex-Boston Red Sox pitcher Dana Kiecker from Fairfax is a volunteer bench coach, knocked off No. 1-ranked SUNY Niagara, which was 49-0, in the Division III JC nationals. Century was 44-9. — That was Waseca baseball legend Tink Larson, 83, catching an inning for the town team Waseca Braves against the Austin Blue Jays the other day.
“No big deal — it doesn’t bother me to go back there,’’ said Larson, who is assistant coach for five area teams this season. “If the ball’s in the strike zone, I can catch it.” — Presumed Timberwolves co-owner Alex Rodriguez headlines the Morrie Miller Athletic Foundation banquet in Winona on Sept. 13.
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“I don’t know about the 25,” he said, “but I do know about the 0.” Today, Paradise resides in St. Paul, retired from a successful real estate career. — That was Utah Mammoth scout Mike Guentzel, in a foursome with son Jake of the Tampa Bay Lightning, acing the 197-yard No. 16 hole with a 7-wood at Stone Ridge Golf Club the other day, his second career ace. — Condolences to the family of St. Paul sportsman Tim Giuliani, 77, who died last week after a recent heart attack. — Rocco Baldelli said rookie pitcher Travis Adams took his demotion from the Twins to St. Paul well last week when the Minnesota manager informed him. Not everybody takes demotions well. “You see all kinds of stuff — every conversation’s very different,” Baldelli said. “You’ve got to be as honest as you can. Most of the guys are in the range of emotional and understanding. No one wants to be told they’re going down to Triple-A or potentially even worse. I try to take time with guys, especially when I have guys I know will take it to heart. I want them to leave in a good headspace, one way or another.” — Two of baseball’s best storytellers — Tim Tschida and Jim Kaat — will chat next week on the upstart “Tim Tschida, The Show” podcast on the OIC Network. Tschida, the former major league umpire crew chief from St. Paul, had former pitcher Curt Schilling as an entertaining first guest. — Former Twins pitcher Tom Johnson, who is Mission Director of the Church of the Open Door in Maple Grove, in two weeks leaves for Slovakia, where he conducts popular youth baseball programs. — That’s highly accomplished Mark Boyle, St. Louis Park High grad and son of former WTCN-TV sports anchor Joe, broadcasting the NBA Finals for the Indiana Pacers, for whom he has magnificently called games the past 37 seasons. — For a fifth time, former St. Paul Central and Southwest State quarterback Jeff Loots is on the 2026 College Football Hall of Fame ballot. — Croke Park in Dublin, where the Vikings on Sept. 28 will play the Pittsburgh Steelers in the first regular season NFL game in Ireland, has a natural grass playing surface. Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, where the Vikings will play the Cleveland Browns on Oct. 5, has a combined natural-synthetic grass surface. — Ethan Stade, a 6-4 junior left-hander at Minnesota State Mankato, struck out 26 of 27 outs — including three on nine pitches one inning and three on 10 pitches another inning — for the New Ulm Brewers in a recent 5-0 town ball victory over Bird Island, which perennially is a state tournament contender. “At any level it’s amazing for an individual to strike out that many,” Minnesota State coach Matt Majers said in an understatement. “Really remarkable.” Stade, 21, a New Ulm High grad, will pitch for the Northwoods League Willmar Stingers the second half of this summer. He features a fastball in the upper-80s with a slider. Also the other day, sophomore right-hander Landon Sanderson of Lake Crystal-Wellcome Memorial High struck out 21 of 21 outs in a 7-0 victory over St. Clair. — The NFL’s Horrigan writers award, representing cooperation with media and won by Vikings coach Kevin O’Connell in 2025, was won in 1998 by another classy coach, Tampa Bay’s Tony Dungy. — Among speakers at the Professional Football Researchers Association national convention July 10-13 in St. Paul will be former Viking Leo Lewis and former Gopher-Packer Darrell Thompson. — After a 17-hour bus trip to Auburn, N.Y., for the Junior College World Series, the Century College (White Bear Lake) Wood Ducks, for which ex-Boston Red Sox pitcher Dana Kiecker from Fairfax is a volunteer bench coach, knocked off No. 1-ranked SUNY Niagara, which was 49-0, in the Division III JC nationals. Century was 44-9. — That was Waseca baseball legend Tink Larson, 83, catching an inning for the town team Waseca Braves against the Austin Blue Jays the other day.
“No big deal — it doesn’t bother me to go back there,’’ said Larson, who is assistant coach for five area teams this season. “If the ball’s in the strike zone, I can catch it.” — Presumed Timberwolves co-owner Alex Rodriguez headlines the Morrie Miller Athletic Foundation banquet in Winona on Sept. 13.