HOUSTON — Juan Soto's Yankees debut, which will live for years in replays and memories and what Aaron Judge referred to as "Yankee Classic" rebroadcasts, had its roots in a subtle moment the day before.
While the team worked out at Minute Maid Park on Wednesday afternoon, it noticed that the infield was playing more quickly than usual. Ground balls were scooting through the turf and into the outfield. They filed away the mental note, believing that it might help throw a runner out on a bang-bang play.
Almost exactly 24 hours later, with Opening Day against the dreaded Houston Astros on the line, the Yanks and closer Clay Holmes clung to a 5-4 lead in the ninth. They had earned it with a day of long, grinding, '90s dynasty-type of at-bats, crawling back from an early 4-0 deficit.
When Jose Altuve came up with no outs and Mauricio Dubon on first, a big hit seemed like a fait accompli. That's just what happens to the Yankees against this team, and especially in this park.
But in 2024, for one day at least, Altuve was not the hero. He lined out to second base. Yordan Alvarez followed with a single, pushing Dubon to second.
Kyle Tucker followed with a single to right field. It seemed that the speedy Dubon was about to tie the game, and put the Yankees back in their place.
From his perch in the dugout, manager Aaron Boone saw what he had noticed the day before: the ball whizzed through the infield and arrived at Soto in five fast hops. He also noted that Soto got a good read on the ball and moved efficiently toward it.
That tracked with what caught the attention of Boone and outfield coach Luis Rojas during spring training: Soto was working toward becoming a better outfielder than he was long reputed to be.
Unlike the defensively elite Judge, Soto grades out, in scouting lingo, as an average or solid average outfielder at best. His range and routes have always been so-so, and his arm is generally seen as a 55 on a 20-80 scouting scale (Judge, by comparison, grades as a 60-70 arm, depending on who is writing the report).