New York Post

Hicks: I would be ‘ready’ to play in July

- By GEORGE A. KING III george.king@nypost.com

The identity of the Yankees’ starting right fielder whenever the next game is played is unknown, but the man in the middle of the outfield says he will be ready to chase fly balls in the gaps and deny base runners from taking an extra base.

Aaron Hicks was asked Friday, if the season were to start late next month, whether his surgically repaired right elbow would allow him to participat­e.

“I would be ready to play,’’ Hicks told The Post by phone from Tampa, where he has been hitting and throwing at George M. Steinbrenn­er Field for the past few weeks. “The plan was July to see where I am at and ready to play games. For me, I want to be back to the arm strength I had before.’’

Hicks, who had Tommy John surgery after the Yankees were eliminated from the ALCS by the Astros last October, estimated his arm strength to be at 80 percent and improving.

“I am doing really well. I am up to 160 feet throwing, taking BP on the field and doing defensive work,’’ said Hicks, who was limited to 59 games a year ago due to a lower-back problem that surfaced in spring training and a strained right flexor injury in early August. “I get better and better [throwing] every day and every week. The throwing gets stronger. It is definitely coming. It comes in its own ways when it wants to. I am not too far off. I will throw to bases coming up here pretty soon, think next week. My arm feels great.’’

The switch-hitting Hicks has been taking batting practice for two months with no problems outside of “trying to figure out hitting again.’’

In addition to the quarantine forced by the coronaviru­s pandemic, the 30-year-old Hicks welcomed son Jaylen into the world on May 6 and has been in Tampa for two weeks.

With the emphasis on safety and health the small number of Yankees working out at Steinbrenn­er Field are divided into groups of four and staggered. And since Hicks isn’t in Aaron Judge’s group, Hicks didn’t have an update on what the right fielder is doing while coming back from a fractured top right rib that was discovered in spring training and believed to have happened diving for a ball last September.

As for a 60- or 70-game schedule, Hicks was asked about the challenge of a dash instead of the playing the normal 162-game grind.

“As a starter you have to know that you are going to have to play every single game because there is no time,’’ said Hicks, who Aaron Boone will likely be careful with since he also has Brett Gardner and Mike Tauchman to play center. “Anything can happen in a 60-game season.

“You have to come out fast and you have to come out strong. You have to create separation between you and the other teams.’’

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