The Yankees led after three pitches, but on the final pitch of the night, surrendered a walk-off three-run home run to fall 8-5 to the Texas Rangers in extra innings Monday in Arlington.
In the home half of the 10th frame, Jake Bird, the fifth Yankee out of the bullpen, made Marcus Semien look foolish going down swinging on the sweeper before getting Adolis GarcΓa to tap out to third. Manager Aaron Boone came out of the dugout to call for Wyatt Langford to be intentionally walked, and Josh Jung made that move look foolish: taking a sinker off the inside corner and driving a three-run homer 401 feet to left center to walk-off the Yanks.
The fourth straight loss doomed the struggling New York club to a 60-53 on the season (26-31 on the road) and lifted Texas to 59-55 (35-20 at home). The Yankees are now 5.5 games out of first place in the AL East and tied with the Seattle Mariners for the second Wild Card spot, with just a 1.5 game cushion ahead of the Rangers.
Here are the key takeaways…
– After Max Fried gutted through five innings, the bullpen trio of Luke Weaver, Camilo Doval, and David Bednar combined to retire the next nine batters with a strikeout each on 34 total pitches to preserve a one-run lead.
Devin Williams got the first batter of the ninth, but his 2-1 offering to pinch-hitter Joc Pederson was demolished 408 feet to right. The changeup hung right over the middle of the plate, and Pederson β 18-for-143 (.126) with a .473 OPS on the year β smoked it 101.6 mph off the bat to tie the game.
Williams got the game to extra innings, with a strikeout in the process, but it was his third blown save of the season as his ERA hit 5.10.
– In the top half of the tenth, Jasson Dominguez moved to third on a groundout and Anthony Volpe walked to put runners on the corners, but Austin Wells tapped into the 1-6-3 double play.
New York was 2-for-7 with runners in scoring position with six left on base through two frames while scoring three runs. They finished the night 3-for-15 with 10 left on base.
– The Yankees wasted no time jumping on left-hander Patrick Corbin as Paul Goldschmidt cranked a 92 mph sinker 419 feet to left field on the third pitch of the game. The homer, off the facing of the second deck, was his ninth of the season and first since June 19.
Amed Rosario followed by smacking a 92 mph sinker the other way into the right center gap for a double. Corbin got a pair of loud outs in between a pair of walks, which meantVolpe had a bases-loaded chance with two outs, but the shortstop went down swinging on a slider just off the outside corner.
The Yanks jumped on Corbin again in the second:Wells singled, Goldschmidt roped a double to the gap in left, Rosario singled up the middle to score one, and Cody Bellinger singled to left to plate another run. A wild pitch put the runners in scoring position and Giancarlo Stanton was walked intentionally, but again, the Yanks left the bases loaded asDominguez went down swinging and Jazz Chisholm Jr. flied out to left.
– After Goldschmidt singled to start the fourth, leaving him a triple shy of the cycle, against Rangers reliever Jon Gray, Stanton hit his classic line-drive homer, annihilating a ball 427 feet to center (115 mph off the bat) to put New York back ahead, 5-4.
In what could be his final start of the series, as Aaron Judge is expected to come off the IL on Tuesday and take the DH role, Stanton slugged his 10th homer in his 36th game of the season and sixth in his last 12 games
– Fried retired the first four batters he faced with two strikeouts before he allowed the next six batters to reach: Langford roped a double to the corner in left field, Jung worked a walk, Josh Smith went right back up the middle to plate the Rangers' first run, JonahHeimβs infield hit loaded the bases, Ezequiel Duran's single to left tied the game by driving in two, and Sam Haggerty singled to center to load them again.
Fried was responsible for the fourth run of the inning when he made a wild throw to second on a pickoff attempt. The lefty finally got out of the 35-pitch frame by retiring the next two.
After allowing a walk and a single in a scoreless third, the left-hander opened the fourth with a four-pitch walk and a Duran single to left. After a swinging bunt put two in scoring position, Fried froze Corey Seager with a sweeper and Volpe made a good stop on a smashed grounder, and his throw bounced the perfect height for Goldschmidt to field and end the inning.
Fried allowed a hit to start the fifth, but struck out the side to give him seven on the night. The lefty allowed eight hits and three walks (both matching his season high marks) but just four runs in five innings of work on 105 pitches (64 strikes).
– After Stanton's homer with two outs in the fourth, the Yanks managed just two hits β a Chisholm double and Bellinger single β as Gray kept it a one-run game to the middle of the eighth.
– The Yanksβ infield defense lacked a bit of crispness in the second inning. On the base hit up the middle that scored the first run, Chisholm and Volpe appeared to exchange glances as the ball went up the middle without either making much of an attempt at it. Later, Chisholm should have started an inning-ending double play, but his throw to second forced the shortstop to stretch and meant he couldnβt even attempt a throw to first.
– Dominguez entered the game in the top of the first inning after Austin Slater, making just his second start after coming over at the trade deadline, exited the game with left hamstring tightness. Slater sustained the injury running to first after grounding into a fielderβs choice to short.
Game MVP
The Rangers' bullpen got the job done with Gray starting things off with 5.0 innings of two-run ball before Luis Curvelo and Danny Coulombe pitched scoreless frames.
Highlights
GOODBYE!
Paul Goldschmidt with a leadoff home run! pic.twitter.com/wiHydA6U3I
β Yankees Videos (@snyyankees) August 5, 2025
Amed Rosario brings home Austin Wells! pic.twitter.com/vBOtQEj9Tb
β Yankees Videos (@snyyankees) August 5, 2025
Giancarlo Stanton hits a ROCKET for a home run! π pic.twitter.com/haOU8qxacT
β Yankees Videos (@snyyankees) August 5, 2025
Upcoming schedule
These two sides face off on Wednesday with an 8:05 p.m. first pitch.
Right-hander Will Warren (4.64 ERA and 1.428 WHIP in 110.2 innings over 23 starts) gets the ball for the visitors and will have to be on his game as the hosts are going with Nathan Eovaldi (1.49 ERA and 0.893 WHIP in 103.0 innings over 18 starts).