New York Post

Gonzalez fractures orbital on foul ball

- By GREG JOYCE

MEXICO CITY — A lively atmosphere at Estadio Alfredo Harp Helú went quiet in the second inning Monday night when Oscar Gonzalez fouled a pitch off his face and suffered what was eventually diagnosed as a right orbital fracture.

The Yankees outfielder immediatel­y fell to the ground in pain with Diablos Rojos catcher Jose Briceño waving to the visiting dugout. Boone and two trainers rushed out to tend to Gonzalez, who eventually sat up and later walked under his own power to a cart that took him off the field.

Gonzalez was taken to a local hospital for further evaluation, with preliminar­y tests showing the orbital fracture. The Yankees said he would stay in the hospital overnight for observatio­n and rest, with follow-up imaging planned for Tuesday. A Double-A trainer was set to stay with Gonzalez in Mexico City while the team flew to Houston.

“That’s scary,” Boone said. “Hope and pray for the best. I understand he’s getting outstandin­g care. One thing checking with [trainer Alfonso Malaguti] when he was giving me the report after the game, just asking about the care. He was confident that [Gonzalez] was getting excellent care. Trust in he’s in good hands here and hope for a speedy recovery. But obviously a tough way to end his spring.”

Boone said that Malaguti “seemed to rule out a concussion” before Gonzalez underwent X-rays and a CT-scan.

Gonzalez, who was reassigned to minor league camp earlier in the day, could head to Triple-A once he is healthy. In 16 games this spring, the former Guardian hit .333 with a .945 OPS.

“I told him before the game, [he’s] a guy that I feel like can absolutely help us,” Boone said. “I feel like he’s a better player and grown as a player even this spring since when I’ve seen him in the past.”

➤ The Yankees’ initial 26man roster is nearly complete, though the club is leaving the door open for external additions ahead of Thursday’s Opening Day.

As the team flew to Houston on Monday night — part of it from Tampa and part from Mexico City — it did so with right-handers Clayton Beeter and Nick Burdi having won the internal competitio­n for the final two bullpen spots. Second baseman/left fielder Jahmai Jones and third catcher Ben Rortvedt were tentativel­y filling the final two bench spots, though there is likely a move coming before Thursday to add a backup shortstop, perhaps using Rortvedt (who is out of minor league options) to do so.

For both the bullpen and bench, the Yankees are expected to explore outside options in the coming days as players get cut from rosters or opt out of deals elsewhere.

“We’re working through all that now,” general manager Brian Cashman said Monday afternoon regarding the final bench spots. “There’s always a potential trade or designatio­ns, opt-outs, that type of stuff.

“We’ll probably go into Houston, we’ll have conversati­ons with some guys saying, ‘You’ve beaten people out internally, you’ll be joining us in Houston, but no guarantee you’re officially on the team until we exhaust making sure there aren’t better options outside.’ ”

The Yankees made the roster decisions clearer by reassignin­g infielders Kevin Smith and Jose Rojas, infielder/ catcher Luis Torrens, outfielder­s Gonzalez and Greg Allen and relievers Dennis Santana and Yerry De Los Santos to minor league camp.

 ?? ?? THAT’S GOTTA HURT: Oscar Gonzalez is driven off the field in Mexico City after taking a foul ball off his face, fracturing his right orbital.
THAT’S GOTTA HURT: Oscar Gonzalez is driven off the field in Mexico City after taking a foul ball off his face, fracturing his right orbital.

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