Ben Rice Just Forced His Way Into Rare Yankees Territory

After overcoming a rocky start, Ben Rice's power surge not only propels him into the record books alongside a Yankees legend but also earns him a coveted All-Star Game starting position.

Ben Rice’s season has gone from buried to booming, and now it has pushed him into a piece of Yankees history that only Roger Maris can match.

Five weeks ago, the young first baseman looked stuck in neutral. Since the start of June, he was hitting .200 with a .391 slugging percentage and a 91 wRC+, numbers that sat below league average and reflected just how much he had stalled. That slump hit at the wrong time for the Yankees, who were already without Aaron Judge and searching for power in a lineup that had started to thin out.

Then Rice caught fire in a way that changed everything. He homered in five straight games.

He launched seven long balls over a 10-game stretch. He drove in nine runs in a four-game series in Tampa Bay and became the one bat the Yankees could count on when the rest of the offense went quiet.

That surge reached another level in Washington. Rice’s 29th home run came in the Yankees’ 5-3 win over the Nationals, and it put him on a list that has only one other name on it: Roger Maris. Rice is now the only other left-handed Yankees hitter to reach 29 or more home runs before the All-Star break, joining Maris, who had 33 before the 1961 break during the season he chased down Babe Ruth’s single-season record with 61.

The pace is eye-opening. Rice got to 29 homers in 93 Yankees games, which projects to about 50 over a full season.

He entered the Washington series hitting .275 with 90 hits, 28 homers, 65 RBIs and 63 runs, and his .969 OPS ranked third in the majors. He is tied with Houston’s Yordan Alvarez for second in home runs in baseball, one behind the leader.

Among qualified first basemen since the start of last season, his 145 wRC+ leads the group, and his .886 OPS ranks second at the position.

The turnaround has not gone unnoticed. Former Yankees manager Joe Girardi, who managed the club for 10 seasons, talked about Rice before Friday’s game and pointed to the way he carries himself through the ups and downs.

“He plays it with a lot of joy,” Girardi said, adding that Rice is happy all the time.

Girardi also connected that personality to the way Rice bounced back after June.

“He struggled in June. In July, he has been fantastic,” Girardi said.

And when it came to the recognition Rice is about to get, Girardi didn’t leave much room for debate.

“He deserves to be an All-Star,” Girardi said.

Rice has been more matter-of-fact about the whole thing. He brushed off the idea that one rough month should define a season, saying, “It’s such a long year,” according to SNY’s Robert Sanchez.

Now the reward appears to be bigger than a reserve spot. Rice is expected to start at first base for the American League in the All-Star Game.

That opening came after Athletics rookie Nick Kurtz won the player vote at first base, then was expected to go on the injured list with a right thumb capsule strain. With that spot suddenly available, Rice and Baltimore’s Pete Alonso emerged as the leading candidates.

For Rice, the moment would mark another step in a climb that never looked obvious from the start. He was a 12th-round pick out of Dartmouth in 2021, hit .171 as a Yankees rookie, then reshaped his body and his swing. He made his first All-Star team this year, and starting the game would be a different kind of milestone.

The Yankees have needed every bit of it. With Judge out and no certainty he’ll be at full strength when he returns, Rice has been asked to help carry an offense missing its biggest names. He and Giancarlo Stanton have both been leaned on to cover for those absences, and Rice has delivered.

His power binge has not lifted the Yankees in the standings, but it has kept them from falling farther behind. They remain four games back of Tampa Bay in the AL East, and Rice’s bat has been a major reason the gap did not widen during a three-week team slump.

He has also been doing damage in the biggest moments. Rice has 13 home runs this season that gave the Yankees a lead, the most in the majors. In a summer where the lineup has often been short on answers, he has kept supplying the one thing it desperately needed.

The Yankees finish their series in Washington before the break, then Rice heads to Philadelphia for All-Star festivities, including Monday’s Home Run Derby at Citizens Bank Park. He committed to the Derby earlier in the week, and since then he has kept right on homering.

A month that once looked like a dead end has turned into a run that rewrote his season. Rice now stands on a 50-homer pace, beside Maris on a list of two, with an All-Star starting job waiting for him on baseball’s biggest midsummer stage.

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