Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Judge hits IL; Yanks down 13

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NEW YORK — Aaron Judge won’t be back with the New York Yankees anytime soon, a further blow to an injury-decimated team with a mediocre record 3½ weeks into the season.

New York’s biggest offensive threat and the heart of its clubhouse went on the injured list for the third time in four seasons Sunday, a day after straining the oblique muscle on the left side of his abdomen while hitting a Judge sixth-inning single against Kansas City.

“Pretty significan­t strain in there,” Manager Aaron Boone said. “These next couple of weeks will kind of be a lot of just the healing process, so I think once we get through these first couple of weeks then we’ll have a better timeline.”

Judge broke his right wrist when hit by a pitch by the Royals’ Jakob Junis on July 26 and did not return until Sept. 14. The Yankees were 65-36 when Judge went on the DL, went 25-20 while he was out, then won 10 of their final 16 games en route to a second-place finish in the AL East.

He became the Yankees’ major league-high 13th player on the injured list and the 14th overall this season, joining left fielder Giancarlo Stanton (strained left biceps), center fielder Aaron Hicks (strained left lower back), catcher Gary Sánchez (strained left calf), shortstop Didi Gregorius (Tommy John surgery), third baseman Miguel Andújar (torn labrum in right shoulder) and first baseman Greg Bird (torn plantar fascia in left foot).

Those six and Judge accounted for 175 of the team’s

record 267 home runs last year, 515 of 851 runs and 515 of the 821 RBI. In addition, new shortstop Troy Tulowitzki has a strained left calf.

New York’s starting lineup for the series finale Sunday against the Royals resembled a Broadway show stocked with understudi­es near the end of a lengthy run.

DJ LeMahieu was at second, followed by designated hitter Luke Voit, center fielder Brett Gardner, right fielder Clint Frazier, left fielder Mike Tauchman, third baseman Gio Urshela, first baseman Mike Ford, catcher Austin Romine and shortstop Tyler Wade. New York gave second baseman Gleyber Torres a day off.

“You feel like this a great opportunit­y for us,” Boone said. “I feel like it can make the end all that much more sweet.”

The Yankees won 7-6 in 10 innings to improve to 11-10.

“The guys that have been pressed into more regular roles than certainly any of us expected at this point have been productive and have been shown to be good players,” Boone said. “And some of our young players that have very bright futures have stepped up and performed at a really high level.”

Judge suffered a season-ending right oblique strain while fouling off a pitch against the Los Angeles Dodgers on Sept. 13, 2016.

The Yankees called that a grade 2 strain, but Boone said Sunday there was no grade on this injury: “With obliques, they don’t grade; it’s not like that.”

Infielder Thairo Estrada, the only remaining healthy position player on the 40-man roster, was recalled from ClassAAA Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. Estrada, recovered from an early 2018 gunshot wound suffered in Venezuela, has never played in the major leagues, though he was on the bench for an April 4 game at Baltimore.

Sánchez, out since April 10 with a strained left calf, is scheduled to play a rehabilita­tion game Monday with Class A Charleston and could be activated before Wednesday’s game at the Los Angeles Angels. Hicks, Andújar and Tulowitzki were headed to the team’s Tampa, Fla., complex on Sunday to continue their rehabs. Hicks felt pain while taking batting practice on March 1, Andújar got hurt March 31 and Tulowitzki on April 3.

Stanton, injured on March 31, will be evaluated in the next few days “and then it could potentiall­y move fast,” Boone said.

New York’s sidelined pitchers includes ace Luis Severino (strained latissimus dorsi muscle), reliever Dellin Betances (right shoulder impingemen­t), and Jordan Montgomery and Ben Heller (both recovering from Tommy John surgery).

Outfielder Jacoby Ellsbury has not played since 2017 because of a variety of ailments.

“I don’t view him as being close,” Boone said. “He’s had different things that have popped up that haven’t allowed him to kind of break through and really get to that point to where we start thinking about heavy baseball activities.”

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 ?? AP/JULIO CORTEZ ?? Aaron Judge (left) reacts while talking to a trainer and bench coach Josh Bard (center) after hitting a single to right field during the sixth inning of Saturday’s 9-2 victory over the Kansas City Royals. Judge was placed on the injured list after straining his oblique muscle on the play. New York Yankees outfielder
AP/JULIO CORTEZ Aaron Judge (left) reacts while talking to a trainer and bench coach Josh Bard (center) after hitting a single to right field during the sixth inning of Saturday’s 9-2 victory over the Kansas City Royals. Judge was placed on the injured list after straining his oblique muscle on the play. New York Yankees outfielder

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