Fresh off snapping their six-game losing streak, the New York Yankees host the Baltimore Orioles on Friday, June 21 (6/21/2025) at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, New York.
Yankees vs. Orioles will air in market on YES Network and MASN Baltimore, and can be streamed live on fuboTV (free trial). Fans out of market can stream the game by adding MLB.TV to their fuboTV subscription.
Here’s what you need to know:
What: MLB regular season
Who: Baltimore Orioles at New York Yankees
When: Friday, June 20, 2025
Where: Yankee Stadium, Bronx, New York
Time: 7:05 p.m. ET
TV: YES, MASN Baltimore
Live stream: fuboTV (free trial), DirecTV (free trial), out of market on Sling

Fubo
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Fans can also stream on DirecTV (free trial) and out of market with MLB.TV on Sling.
Orioles at Yankees schedule
Friday, June 20: BAL @ NYY, 7:05 p.m. on YES, MASN (STREAM)
Saturday, June 21: BAL @ NYY, 7:05 p.m. on YES, MASN (STREAM)
Sunday, June 22: BAL @ NYY, 11:35 a.m. on Roku
Yankees gear, including new hats for the 2025 MLB season, can be found on Fanatics.com. Get cheap Yankees tickets from SeatGeek.
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Here’s a recent story about the Yankees from Randy Miller of nj.com:
NEW YORK — There was some curiosity in the Yankees clubhouse, their dugout and in back rooms while they were losing games and not scoring runs in the past week.
The new guys on the team were watching their captain.
They marveled seeing Aaron Judge graciously handle making an early run at hitting .400, winning a Triple Crown and having another 60-homer season.
They watched him lead in the clubhouse on his many great days and few bad ones, listened to his interviews when he played down all of his achievements and talked up everyone of his teammates as immensely talented, incredibly valuable and greatly appreciated.
This past week Cody Bellinger and Paul Goldschmidt, National League MVPs before they were Yankees, watched Judge, a two-time AL MVP, go through some prolonged struggles for the first time.
Neither could see any difference in the way Judge worked, acted or led. They noticed no frustration, just similar focus and determination that he’d had all season every day.
“Same guy,” Goldschmidt said after the Yankees beat the Angels 7-3 on Thursday to end a six-game losing streak. “That’s been one of the more impressive things (I’ve noticed).
“He’s obviously physically very gifted, but mentally he’s just as good to deal with ups and downs. Every time he steps in the box, especially on the road, everyone’s watching and yelling at him. To have that kind of spotlight on you, the way that he handles it is truly impressive.”
That’s what one of the Yankees rookies is seeing, too.
“Same guy,” catcher J.C. Escarra said. “Yeah, and that’s what I love most about Aaron Judge. He’s the same guy regardless if he’s doing well or doing bad. Same guy. He’s the captain.”
Judge’s struggles were pretty ugly the past week by anyone’s standards.
Like all great players, he showed he can go a few days without getting many hits while striking out a lot, too. His 0-for-4 collar with two Ks in Wednesday night’s Yankees loss left him 2-for-24 with one solo homer, 15 whiffs and three walks in his last seven games.
“He’s human,” Bellinger said. “For sure, he’s human. Sometimes they pitch you good or sometimes you miss the pitches to hit, but I just think Judge is so good and so consistent that at any moment he’s going to hit one out and get hot.”
Thursday was a breakout day for the Yankees offense, whose seven runs matched their combined total for the previous seven games, and Judge had a good day, too. His 1-for-3 with a walk included a leadoff double to left center in the eighth that led to two insurance runs.
The entire at-bat was Judge back to hitting like a hungry lion methodically hunting for a meal.
Facing Angels righty reliever Hector Neris, Judge swung and missed at a low first-pitch splitter, then fouled off three pitches in a row, a splitter and two four-seamers that were all strikes.
Judge then showed a good eye laying off three splitters that missed the zone, the first inside and the others low.
Neris’ 3-2 offering was a sinker that was left over the plate above the knees.
Bad spot.
Judge hit a laser to left center that was 109.9 mph off the bat for a standup double.
“I thought he did a really good job,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. “(Neris) was feeding a lot of splits there. I thought he had a patient at-bat where Neris was trying to get him to chase.
“I thought he did a good job of not expanding, getting deeper (in the count) and then getting a pitch he could really handle.”
Watching from the Yankees dugout, Bellinger was amazed.
“He’s just soooo good,” Bellinger said. “It must be like what watching (Barry) Bonds and (Mark) McGwire looked like.”
Except that Judge is doing it with no help that someday would cost him Hall of Fame votes.
“True,” Bellinger said with a nod and a smile. “That’s what makes it even more impressive.”
Judge just went through a really bad week that dropped his average 30 points, but he’s still leading the majors hitting .366 after 72 games, his 26 homers are one off the lead and his 60 RBI are tied for the most in the American League.
Goldschmidt knew Judge was a great player before they were teammates, but now that they’ve been on the same team for almost a half season he’s changed his opinion.
“He’s the best I’ve ever seen,” Goldschmidt said. “Regardless if he’s had a bad game or two in a row, he’s going to be the same guy.
“He’s going to go out there and compete and he’s always got a chance to leave the yard. Then when he gets hot, watch out!”
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