Aaron Judge hit a historic home run on Sunday, tying Harold Baines for 69th on the all-time list with 384 career home runs. He achieved this feat in the first inning of the Yankees' game against the Brewers.
What happened?
The Yankees superstar hit his 16th home run of the season, a first-pitch homer off Logan Henderson, to take an early lead.
Why it matters for Aaron Judge
This home run moved Judge up on the all-time home runs list, passing Hall of Famer Larry Walker.
What comes next?
The Yankees will head to Baltimore for a series with the Orioles on Monday night at Camden Yards.
On Sunday, Judge was batting third as the DH. He came into the day batting .266 with 38 hits, 15 home runs, 29 RBI's, 34 runs, and five stolen bases in 40 games.
The Yankees lost Sunday's game 4-3.
Judge's home run was his seventh in his last 14 games.
The Brewers had held Judge 1-for-6 with a single, three walks, and four strikeouts before his first-pitch homer.
Judge is in the 11th season of what will be a Hall of Fame career.
The Yankees are the second-place team in the American League East with a 26-14 record in 40 games.
And Judge's performance has been impressive, with a 104.4 mph exit velocity on his home run.
But the Yankees couldn't hold the lead, and the Brewers won the game.
So the Yankees will look to bounce back in their next series.
Judge's home run was 373 feet to the opposite field.
The Yankees will face the Orioles on Monday, and Judge will look to continue his strong performance.