The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Boone takes leave to get pacemaker

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NEW YORK — Yankees manager Aaron Boone took a leave of absence from the team to get a pacemaker and intends to return to work in a few days.

The team said the procedure took place Wednesday at St. Joseph’s Hospital in Tampa, Florida, and went as expected.

“It sounds like it’s going to be a short-term thing,” general manager Brian Cashman said. “I do applaud him for being very open and honest and sharing about the circumstan­ces that he’s going through right now.”

Bench coach Carlos Mendoza took over as acting manager for Wednesday night’s exhibition against Toronto in Tampa. The 41-year-old was a minor leaguer mostly with San Francisco and the Yankees from 1997-09 and is starting his 13th season working for the Yankees.

Mendoza joined the major league staff as quality control and infield coach under Boone in 2018 and succeeded Josh Bard as bench coach for 2020.

“The mindset doesn’t change,” Mendoza said. “We have a really good group of coaches here and really good personnel that are going to continue to get these guys ready to play the regular season.”

Boone, 47, is entering his fourth season as Yankees manager, and Cashman said the manager told him a few days ago he intended to have the pacemaker inserted whenever the surgery could be scheduled.

Boone said in a statement the medical team is “confident that today’s surgery will allow me to resume all of my usual profession­al and personal activities and afford me a positive longterm health prognosis without having to change anything about my way of life. I look forward to getting back to work in the next several days.”

New York started the exhibition season Sunday, and Boone informed the

Yankees staff from the hospital during Wednesday’s daily staff Zoom call that he was having the procedure later in the day. Mendoza said Boone was smiling and joking during the call.

Boone recorded a video that was given to players during a second Zoom after Mendoza and third base coach Phil Nevin spoke.

“He just wanted them to continue to get our work in, continue to do (things) the right way, the same way we’ve been doing here, and that made all of us feel a lot better,“Mendoza said.

Brett Gardner, the Yankees’ senior player, said the video helped comfort players. Gardner said Boone had mentioned a few days ago when passing in a hallway that he was feeling tired.

“I think it was a shock to most of us,” Gardner said. “I think his first concern was making sure that we would continue to go about our business the right way with him being gone and, obviously, to kind of ease our minds that we weren’t too overly concerned about him and this procedure.”

Cashman said Boone could return to the team in two to three days.

“As many of you know, I underwent open-heart surgery in 2009, and I wanted everyone to understand where I’m at regarding the procedure that’s taking place today,” Boone said in his statement. “Over the last six to eight weeks I’ve had mild symptoms of lightheade­dness, low energy and shortness of breath. As a result, I underwent a series of tests and examinatio­ns in New York prior to the beginning of spring training, including multiple visits with a team of heart specialist­s. While the heart checkup came back normal, there were indication­s of a low heart rate which, after further consultati­ons with doctors in Tampa, necessitat­es a pacemaker.”

Boone said “my faith is strong, and my spirits are high. I’m in a great frame of mind.”

 ?? Julio Cortez / Associated Press ?? Brian Cashman, left, general manager of the New York Yankees, talks with manager Aaron Boone prior to a spring training game against the Washington Nationals in 2020.
Julio Cortez / Associated Press Brian Cashman, left, general manager of the New York Yankees, talks with manager Aaron Boone prior to a spring training game against the Washington Nationals in 2020.

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