Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Yankees’ Paxton has back surgery, out 3-4 months

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All during the offseason, New York Yankees general manager Brian Cashman worried about James Paxton’s back pain and kept suggesting: “Let’s just get the surgery out of the way. We’re losing time.”

Paxton was examined by three doctors, who said the issue could resolve itself.

“They all came to the same conclusion: No, no, no,” Cashman recalled.

But Paxton did not get better and finally had the operation Wednesday. He is expected to be sidelined until May or June.

New York said Dr. Andrew Dossett in Dallas performed a microscopi­c lumbar discectomy, in which a herniated disk is repaired, and removed a peridiscal cyst. The Yankees estimated Paxton will be able to start throwing in about six weeks and could pitch in a major league game in three-to-four months.

Paxton left his final regular-season start, at Texas on Sept. 27, after one inning with what the Yankees said was a tight left glute muscle. That ended Paxton’s career-best streak of victories in 10 consecutiv­e starts.

Paxton was examined then by Yankees head team physician Dr. Christophe­r Ahmad and Rangers physician Dr. Keith Meister, and the pitcher received an injection of painkiller. Paxton went 1-0 with a 3.46 ERA in three postseason starts, allowing five runs in 13 innings.

“It did resolve. He pitched extremely well, especially in Houston,” Cashman said. “But when he started ramping up his winter program about four weeks or so ago, he started feeling symptoms again.”

Paxton’s injury weakens a Yankees rotation already missing righthande­r Domingo Germán, who must serve the final 63 games of an 81game suspension for violating Major League Baseball’s domestic violence policy. He is eligible to return June 5, barring any postponeme­nts.

After agreeing to a $324 million, nine-year contract, right-hander Gerrit Cole heads a rotation that includes righties Luis Severino and Masahiro Tanaka and lefty J.A. Happ.

Lefty Jordan Montgomery, who returned in September from Tommy John surgery, is a candidate to replace Paxton in the rotation at the start of the season along with right-handers Luis Cessa,and Jonathan Loaisiga and rookies Devi Garcia and Michael King.

Steinbrenn­er: ‘What if?’

ORLANDO, FLA. >> New York Yankees owner Hal Steinbrenn­er understand­s why his players feel cheated by the Houston Astros.

If Houston had not been using a video camera to steal opposing catcher’s signs in 2017, maybe the Yankees would have won the AL

Championsh­ip Series instead of losing to the Astros in seven games.

“When the report came out, I was as upset as anyone,” Steinbrenn­er said Wednesday at the baseball owners meeting. “Clearly, there were direct implicatio­ns to my organizati­on, our team, our 2017 team. But at some point I think we all for the sake of the game and the good of the game, need to move on.”

Steinbrenn­er is among the Yankees who wondered: what if?

“I think enough people have brought that to my attention and I’m a reasonably smart guy. I’ve certainly thought that,” Steinbrenn­er said.

 ?? MATT SLOCUM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Yankees pitcher James Paxton reacts after walking Houston’s Michael Brantley during Game 5of last year’s ALCS in New York.
MATT SLOCUM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Yankees pitcher James Paxton reacts after walking Houston’s Michael Brantley during Game 5of last year’s ALCS in New York.

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