New York Daily News

GALLO LEADS

- SNY’s Zeile breaks down Whistlegat­e BY KRISTIE ACKERT

Using video with enhanced audio of last Saturday night’s game, former Met and current SNY analyst Todd Zeille charged that the Yankees had pitcher Taijuan Walker’s tips or signs and were signaling their hitters in real-time with whistles.

Zeile indicated that the Yankees were using one long whistle for a changeup and a short whistle for a fastball. He showed a video that seemed to back that up on home runs by Kyle Higashioka and Brett Gardner.

Aaron Boone denied the allegation­s.

“It’s much ado about nothing,” the

Yankee manager said. “There’s nothing going on. I’m certain of that. So I don’t know what to say other than when I see Todd, I’ll tell him so and I think the people in the know know nothing was going on.”

The issue came to a head in the series finale when Francisco Lindor homered and made a whistling gesture as he rounded the bases. When Giancarlo Stanton homered, he stopped mid trot to tel Lindor he didn’t appreciate the implicatio­n. Lindor told ESPN that the Mets thought Walker was tipping his pitches or the Yankees had somehow stolen their signs.

The Yankees claimed it was reliever Wandy Peralta in the dugout trying to get the Bombers’ bats going.

Boone and the Yankees were furious when they believed the Astros were doing this to them in the 2019 American League Championsh­ip Series. MLB investigat­ed and while they later found the Astros had a sophistica­ted, electronic system for stealing signs and relaying them in real-time to their hitters, they found nothing to the whistling allegation at the time.

GUTSY GIL

Luis Gil has shown he has the stuff to contribute to this Yankees team. His last start, he showed he had the resiliency to grind out a start even when his stuff was not that sharp. Saturday, he has another chance to show he can help the Bombers in the postseason.

The 23-year-old will make his sixth career big league start with the Yankees’ playoff hopes on his shoulders. He earned that right not just with the impressive 18.2 scoreless innings he pitched to begin his big league career, but also the way he worked without his best command and after being hit hard early in his last start.

He put the Yankees in a 4-0 hole before they even came to bat last time out, but wound up sticking around to give them six innings and allowing just one more run. That gave the Yankees bats a chance to catch up and come back for a win over the Twins.

“He’s got something different about him, I don’t know. I can’t tell what it is,” Aaron Judge said of Gil after that performanc­e. “I know he’s got great stuff, but he’s just got this chip on his shoulder. He’s got a little bit of attitude. He knows he’s the man out there on the field.”

Gil, who goes into Saturday’s game with a 2.88 ERA, isn’t worrying about his role in the postseason.

“I’m just trying to do the best I can out there to take care of my job and my responsibi­lities,” Gil said through the Yankees interprete­r before Friday’s series opener against Cleveland. “I’m putting a lot of heart into this, and I’m just trying to win every single game I pitch and hopefully I make the playoff roster.”

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