New York Post

Long, strange journey back to The Bronx

- kdavidoff@nypost.com

HOME, FINALLY. Home, triumphant­ly. Yes, we all know that Major League Baseball, mirroring the United States of America, is teetering on the verge of cancellati­on, too many participan­ts and practition­ers not respecting the novel coronaviru­s’ obvious danger. Friday brought three COVID postponeme­nts, not quite how Rob Manfred and Tony Clark drew it up. Ken Davidoff

Yet if the Yankees’ formal return to Yankee Stadium Friday night, defeating the rival Red Sox, 5-1, in their home opener, didn’t serve as cause for baseball to celebrate, it sure as heck created an opportunit­y for New York, city and state, to take a well-deserved bow. It did just that in style, with Aaron Judge slamming his third homer in three days (and second game-winning blast in two days).

“It’s been quite a journey,” Paul Lee, the Yankees’ head team internist said.

Lee took part in magnificen­t pregame festivitie­s that honored medical personnel on the front lines. With each introducti­on of a pandemic hero, the Yankees and Red Sox players banged metal lids, replicatin­g the sound that became synonymous with nightly tributes — at 7 p.m., right around the time of this salute — to these folks who served the greater good when the Big Apple served as the epicenter for this horrible disease.

“It reminds me of coming home, leaving the hospital at 7 o’clock and hearing the city,” Lee said. “It feels like the unity. You feel like you have everybody supporting you.”

Throw in a beautiful rendition of the national anthem by Yankees radiocaste­r Suzyn Waldman and a moment of silence for late Yankees owner Hank Steinbrenn­er, and it made you wish there were fans here to appreciate the return of baseball to The Bronx; the Mets already have hosted five games at Citi Field.

“I was sitting on the bench talking to DJ [LeMahieu], saying how rocking this place would’ve been: Home opener, Red Sox-Yankees. It would’ve been packed,” Judge said. “It doesn’t change. The game still goes on. Life goes on.

Back in late March, did you ever envision a ballgame taking place anywhere close to New York City? I sure as heck didn’t.

“Maybe a little naively, I was optimistic [in March],” Aaron Boone said.

Yet here we were, the Yankees returning home two days later than scheduled after the Marlins’ outbreak created a snowball effect that sent the Yankees to Baltimore at the last minute Wednesday and Thursday. New York, by the way in which it shut down firmly and then carefully opened back up, stands as a role model for other states to follow.

Friday night turned out to be “bitterswee­t,” as Kyle Higashioka put it, and not only because of the empty seats. The Yankees learned that they likely have lost valuable reliever Tommy Kahnle to Tommy John surgery on his right elbow, a tough break for their bullpen. They have the depth to withstand the loss, however. So far, the Yankees have backed up their preseason words that they’re wellequipp­ed to handle the adversity of the coronaviru­s as well as the challenge of playing without fans.

“I think once we get rolling, I think our guys will be excited to put the pinstripes on and know what we’re playing for,” Boone said prior to the game, a good call (especially against a Red Sox team that seems checked out).

They should play for all whom we have lost to COVID. For those frontline workers. For their fans who wish they could join them and instead derive joy from watching them on TV and listening to them on the radio (and streaming, too, keeping us current).

They should play for New York, which worked so hard to get out from under this horror and must stay diligent. Rarely has there been a prouder time to represent us.

 ?? N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg ?? GOOD TIMES: Gleyber Torres (left) celebrates with Aaron Hicks after the Yankees’ 5-1 victory over the Red Sox in the Bombers’ homer opener.
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg GOOD TIMES: Gleyber Torres (left) celebrates with Aaron Hicks after the Yankees’ 5-1 victory over the Red Sox in the Bombers’ homer opener.

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