The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Gregorius has torn cartilage in his right wrist

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NEW YORK — The playoff-bound Yankees blew a three-run lead against the worst team in the majors Sunday — and then came the really bad news.

New York shortstop Didi Gregorius has torn cartilage in his right wrist and is unsure whether he will be able to play in the AL wildcard game on Oct. 3. Gregorius, who has 27 homers and 86 RBIs, got injured Saturday when he slid headfirst into home on Aaron Hicks’ 11th-inning double to score the run that clinched a postseason berth for the Yankees.

“It feels a little bit better now,” Gregorius said after missing a 6-3 loss to the Orioles in New York’s final home game of the regular season. “I slid into home plate, my right hand got stuck. We were celebratin­g, everything was fine. I went home, fine. I woke up this morning, it wasn’t feeling good.”

Gregorius had an MRI that revealed a small tear, he said. He received a cortisone shot and will be reevaluate­d soon.

“We’ll know a lot more in a few days,” manager Aaron Boone said .

Gregorius said the injury is “really frustratin­g” but he has some mobility in his wrist and is very optimistic he’ll play in the postseason. New York has seven regular-season games remaining and is trying to secure home-field advantage in the wild-card game.

“They say things like this happen to other players but some of them play through it,” Gregorius said, explaining he feels soreness but not sharp pain.

If Gregorius is unavailabl­e, the Yankees have a couple of options at shortstop. They could turn to Adeiny Hechavarri­a, especially if they’re concerned about defense. Or they could slide Gleyber Torres over from second base and put Neil Walker’s bat at second.

“Didi’s a great player and obviously I think everyone in this room understand­s how important he is to our team,” Boone said. “Kind of an anchor for us defensivel­y in the infield, and obviously what he brings from the left side of the plate. So, we’ll cross that bridge when we get there, but hopefully we get some good news here in a few days.”

New York remained 11⁄2 games ahead of Oakland for the top AL wild card when the Athletics lost 5-1 to Minnesota.

Boone said it’s important to the Yankees to get the wild-card game in the Bronx — where they finished 53-28 this season. They sure didn’t play that way, though.

Tim Beckham homered twice for the lowly Orioles, who trailed 3-0 early.

J.A. Happ needed 107 pitches to get through five innings in a possible tuneup for the wild-card game. Happ allowed only one run, but A.J. Cole (3-1) quickly coughed up a 3-1 lead in the sixth as the Yankees rested their best relievers.

Baltimore (45-110) remained one loss shy of matching the franchise record for defeats set by the 1939 St. Louis Browns, who went 43-111.

Orioles second baseman Breyvic Valera broke his left index finger on a headfirst slide into home plate, the team said. Valera was in a cast and a sling after the game.

Alex Cobb lasted only four pitches in an abbreviate­d start, leaving with another blister problem. The right-hander exited his previous outing Sept. 11 after two innings because of a blister on his middle finger.

METS 8, NATIONALS 6

Michael Conforto hit a go-ahead, bases-loaded triple, rookie Jeff McNeil matched a career high with four hits and New York beat host Washington.

The first pitch was delayed 25 minutes, and rain continued during the game, which lasted 4 hours, 14 minutes. Washington's grounds crew tended to the infield between innings throughout the day.

The Mets finished their road slate at 40-41, better than their 33-42 mark at home, where they have six games left.

The Nationals, who fell to .500 (78-78), led 3-1 before New York rallied in the fourth. Wander Suero (3-1) entered with one out and two on and issued a walk before McNeil singled in a run.

Conforto then poked a shot to left-center past a diving Michael A. Taylor to clear the bases and make it 5-3. Suero surrendere­d two more runs in the fifth when Kevin Plawecki delivered an RBI double and scored on Amed Rosario's infield single.

Drew Gagnon (2-1) pitched two scoreless innings for the Mets, who took three of four from the Nationals in the teams' final series of the season. Anthony Swarzak recorded the final five outs for his fourth save in five tries.

New York starter Steven Matz allowed three runs in three innings. Washington's Erick Fedde surrendere­d three runs in 3 1/3 innings.

McNeil improved his batting average to .328 in 195 at-bats since his big league debut on July 24.

Rookie Victor Robles homered, tripled and drove in three for Washington.

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 ?? Seth Wenig / Associated Press ?? Joey Rickard of the Orioles, right, slides safely into second base on Sunday.
Seth Wenig / Associated Press Joey Rickard of the Orioles, right, slides safely into second base on Sunday.

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