Yankees still waiting to reimage Aaron Judge's fractured rib
The Yankees’ Aaron Judge looks on from the dugout during an MLB game against the Boston Red Sox at Yankee Stadium on June 5. Credit: Kathleen Malone-Van Dyke
BOSTON — Getting an injury update on Aaron Judge from Aaron Boone can be like drawing blood from a stone.
Judge, who has not played since May 31, was put on the injured list June 5 with a right rib stress fracture. The Yankees announced at the time that he would be shut down from baseball activities for four to six weeks before the club would “reimage” the affected area.
Once imaging shows that the rib has healed, Judge will be cleared to resume baseball activities. That would mark the beginning of his being built back up to play in rehab games, followed by major-league games.
He would require a second spring training, which is why the organization considers a return by mid-August as a best-case scenario.
Monday marks the fourth week that Judge has been shut down. At the start of the weekend, Boone said he is not yet “ready” to be reimaged.
Is he still completely shut down?
“I know he’s doing some workout stuff in the weight room,” Boone said before Sunday night’s game against the Red Sox at Fenway Park. “I don’t know all that he’s doing specifically, but I think he’s doing some more things than he was initially.”
Is it exclusively lower-body work Judge is doing?
“I don’t know the level of things,” Boone said. “I see him working on different things sometimes in the training room.”
Is it upper body or lower body?
“When he’s in the training room, it’s upper-body stuff that he’s working on,” Boone said. “But I don’t know what he’s doing as far as exercise-wise right now.”
Boone did offer a bit more clarity on another of his injured outfielders.
Centerfielder Trent Grisham, sidelined since June 13 with a right hamstring strain, ran the bases before Sunday’s game. He could begin a minor-league rehab assignment as soon as Tuesday, though that isn’t guaranteed
Boone said the expectation is that Grisham will be activated sometime during the Yankees’ upcoming homestand, which begins Monday night against the Tigers. After that three-game set and a Thursday off-day — the club’s first in 16 days — the Twins will arrive at Yankee Stadium for a three-game series starting Friday.
“I do expect him back with us at some point on the homestand,” Boone said. “Whether that’s Detroit or Minnesota, I don’t know that yet, but I do expect him back.”
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