Baseball News

Yankees activate DJ Lemahieu on Tuesday

Yankee Program Activation DJ Lemahieu Manager Aaron Boone told reporters from the injury list before tomorrow’s game against the Mariners (including athletic Brendan Kuty). Lemahieu is already on his way to Seattle, but will not be active for tonight's series opener. They will put him back as he will leave the bench on Tuesday and enter the starting lineup on Wednesday.

Lemahieu will debut after a six-week stay. The veteran infielder was quite nervous early in the spring training. The Yankees announced it was announced from the critical range of Level 1 or Level 2. A match and two batsmen ended his camp. Yanks sent him on April 22 to a minor league rehabilitation mission. Position players can spend up to 20 days on rehabilitation work, and then the team needs to activate them, or at least another five days. The rehabilitation window is closed today.

While there is nothing to collect from the player statistics during the recovery period, the lemahieu form presumably encouraged the Yankees. He hit .444 on home runs, and in nine games, strikeouts (four) almost walks (three). He separated the time between Somerset and the triple-scratch scranton/wilkes-barre.

Lemahieu projected the Yankees' third baseman who began entering camp. New York rarely seems to have tried to upgrade on Hot Corner, even if he stands out in his 35-year-old season. He also missed the time for his feet and hip injuries. Boone suggested last week that Lemahieu could see more time in second base Jazz Chisholm Jr. Located on a shelf (transmitted by Chris Kirschner of athleticism).

Yanke has been relying on Oswaldo Cabrera and Jorbit Vivas in the third and second respectively. The Cabrera of the switch has a .243/.319/.311 diagonal line, and 117 disks appear on the banner. Vivas reached .158 in his first nine MLB games. Their other second/third base candidates are selected substitutes Oswald Peraza and Pablo Reyes. Lemahieu will compete regularly.

Boone also provides updates Louis Gill (via Greg Joyce of The New York Post). Last year's AL rookie of the year is still two to three weeks away from working on the hills. Gil started a throwing program in late April, but worked only on flat ground. During spring training, GIL lasted for several weeks of advanced LAT work. He was unable to participate in the exhibition competition. He will need multiple bullpen meetings and extended rehabilitation tasks. It seems like Jill may not enter the mound until the end of May, which makes it difficult to return to Yankee Stadium before the calendar turns to July.

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button