Yankees
Photo by Claudette Alcober, ONNJ Sports
April 20, 2026

Bronx Power Surge: Yankees Sweep Royals Behind Home Run Barrage and Dominant Pitching

By Jonna Perlinger

The Yankees didn’t just sweep the Royals. They flexed a little while doing it, reminding everyone why they are called “The Bronx Bombers.”

Nine home runs, 24 runs, and three completely different styles of winning.

This felt like the kind of series that infused some much needed confidence in a few who needed it most, and it had everything—breakout moment for Ryan McMahon, a home run streak from Ben Rice, an absolute Saturday mauling by the entire offense, and elite pitching from young rotation pieces that are starting to find their groove.

Game 1: McMahon Delivers the Breakthrough in Late-Inning Battle

The opener wasn’t a blowout, it was a grind, and it flipped in one swing.

After being held scoreless through three innings, the Yankees broke through in the fourth when Ben Rice launched a two-run homer to right, scoring Cody Bellinger and giving New York a 2–0 lead.

On the mound, Cam Schlittler continued his strong start to the season, working into the sixth while allowing just one unearned run and keeping Kansas City off balance.

But the game tightened late.

In the sixth, the Royals scratched across a run after a defensive miscue, and in the eighth, Vinnie Pasquantino tied the game with a solo home run off Camilo Doval, suddenly shifting momentum.

Then came the moment.

With two outs in the bottom of the eighth, Ryan McMahon—who had been battling through an early-season slump—crushed a go-ahead two-run homer to left-center.

It was his first home run (and first extra-base hit) since Opening Day, and it instantly turned a tense game into a 4–2 Yankees lead. It felt like the exact kind of moment Ryan McMahon needed.

From there, David Bednar handled the ninth for the save, locking down a win that felt bigger than just one game.

Game 2: Three Homers, One Inning, Game Over

Saturday was the exact opposite. No drama, just domination.

After two quiet innings, the Yankees erupted in the third with a five-run inning fueled entirely by the long ball:

  • Amed Rosario opened the scoring with a two-run homer
  • Cody Bellinger followed with another two-run shot
  • Ben Rice capped it with a solo blast

Three home runs in one inning. And just like that, it was 5–0.

Bellinger wasn’t done. He added another two-run homer later in the game, finishing his explosive day with:

  • 3 hits
  • 2 home runs
  • 5 RBI

Rice stayed scorching as well, homering for the third straight game, continuing what was becoming the defining stretch of the series.

On the mound, Will Warren delivered a statement:

  • 7.0 innings
  • 11 strikeouts (career-high)
  • 0 walks

Kansas City never threatened, and the Yankees cruised to a 13–4 win to secure the series win.

Game 3: Judge & Rice Go Full Bash Bros to Seal the Sweep

By Sunday, the Yankees didn’t need chaos. They just needed control.

And they got it immediately.

Aaron Judge jumped on the first inning, launching a two-run homer to left-center to give the Yankees an early lead, and give the young righty Ryan Weathers a nice jumpstart.

Then, the hottest bat in the lineup struck again.

Ben Rice homered in the second inning, extending his streak to four consecutive games with a home run, becoming one of the biggest stories in baseball over the weekend.

Then the knockout came in the fifth.

With two on and no outs, Trent Grisham joined the party with a three-run homer, pushing the lead to 7–0 and eliminating any suspense.

From there, it became a pitching showcase.

Ryan Weathers dominated:

  • 7.1 innings
  • 0 runs
  • 8 strikeouts

The Yankees completed the 7–0 shutout, their fourth of the season, and sealed the sweep in emphatic fashion.

The Series Takeaway: This Version of the Yankees Is Dangerous

This wasn’t just three wins. It was three different ways to win:

  • Game 1: Late-inning clutch power
  • Game 2: Overwhelming offensive explosion
  • Game 3: Complete, top-to-bottom control

And the numbers back it up:

  • 9 home runs in the series
  • 18 home runs over their last 7 games
  • Rotation holding a 2.98 ERA through 22 starts
  • Yankees now 11–3 when scoring first

At the center of it all is Ben Rice:

  • 4 straight games with a homer
  • Slashing .338/.476/.800
  • Reaching base in 18 of 21 games

And that is how you take back over the division lead. The Yanks now sit a half game up on Tampa Bay with a record of 13-9.

Up Next: “I’m shipping up to Boston”

The Yankees head to Boston next, where things are never quiet and momentum always gets tested.

After that, yee haw, it’s a Texas two-step.

They’ll open with a weekend set in Houston before heading to Arlington to face the Rangers, closing out a road stretch that should say a lot about where this team really stands.

Momentum is one thing.

Now comes the test of sustaining it.

About the Author

Jonna Perlinger
Jonna Perlinger
Social Media Director, Baseball Content Lead, New York Yankees Lead Writer

Jonna Perlinger is a lifelong Yankees fan with pinstripes in her veins and a storyteller’s heart for the game of baseball. Her love for the sport began at birth, but truly ignited at age six when she was handed a broken bat by Buck Showalter – just before the Yankees’ 90s dynasty took off. Since then, she’s been captivated not only by the game on the field, but by the history, emotion, and stories that live within it.

Jonna brings that passion to her role with On New Jersey Sports, where she covers the Yankees and contributes baseball content with a voice rooted in nostalgia, storytelling, and deep appreciation for the sport’s legacy. After volunteering at MLB All-Star Week in 2021, she turned her lifelong love of baseball into a career in sports media and hasn’t looked back.

She is also the founder of Babe’s Babes Media, a platform dedicated to amplifying women’s voices in baseball, and she proudly carries her Omaha roots into her work, covering the College World Series – the “Greatest Show on Dirt.”

Most recently, Jonna was credentialed for the MLB Winter Meetings, and she continues to cover the sport at every level – including the reigning Big East Champion Creighton Bluejays in 2026.

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