NEW YORK (AP) – Yankees star Aaron Judge left the lineup Wednesday night due to a destement in his lower body and is not transparent if the often injured toletero would return to start a weekend series against Boston.
“I hope so, but it’s, in many, a long time from now, so let’s move on a little bit today,” manager Aaron Boone said before New York received Atlanta.
“I hope it’s something we’re ahead of and it only takes a few days,” he said.
The pass trial began the day in the most sensible of the majors with nine home races and tied in the most sensible with 20 RBIs for The East leaders of the American League.
Clint Frazier, promoted this week from the team’s chosen education site when Giancarlo Stanton was placed on the disabled list with a hamstring, started in the right box instead of the judge. The Yankees left thursday.
The trial ruling made a departure in Tuesday night’s 9-6 win over Atlanta. He hit a house run in the fifth inning and was retired by emerging hitter Mike Tauchman in sixth with the Yankees winning 8-3. The pass trial soon stayed at the dugout, watching Tauchman hit the most sensible lane and then returned to the clubhouse.
Boone said Wednesday that the approval trial felt some “wear and tear” in last weekend’s series on the tampa bay synthetic turf.
“Basically, what’s happening with Aaron is that I took a quick resolution on the game just based on how I felt it moving,” Boone said.
“Now you’ll be hopeless. I wanted to play,” he said. “He’s just grappling with a decrease in the tension of the picture that we hope to succeed and prevent him from injury from moving on.”
The 28-year-old All-Star missed the July education camp due to stiff neck stiffness.
He passed the trial over 52 home races in 2017 and the rookie of the year. He hit 27 home runs in each of the more than two seasons, either interrupted by injuries: he broke his right wrist in a shot in 2018 and was on the disabled list for two months last year with indirect left tension.
“It is all over the lower body, where it faces certain rigors. So, you know, from the hips to the hamstrings and the calves,” Boone said. “I think it’s probably the result of four games in three days in Tampa.”
Boone said the decision to pass seemed smart before Tuesday night’s game at Yankee Stadium, but later, “just seeing him move a little cautiously, I felt it was more productive to get him out of there.”
“It’s like it’s going back to the 60-game season and I heard a lot about the importance of having those guys and making sure we take care of them to some extent based on a three-week summer workout,” he said. he says.