After a week-plus of Aaron Judge taking full batting practice and running the bases, the Yankees determined the outfielder was ready for his next significant step in his rehab from the sprained right big toe that has kept him out since June 4.
Judge played in a simulated game Tuesday in Tampa at the clubโs minor-league complex, a controlled environment with Yankeesโ minor leaguers in which he played roughly five innings.
โHit a long home run to right-center in one of his ABs and appeared to be moving around well,โ said one talent evaluator who was in attendance. โI did not see him favoring [the toe] . . . ย I would be encouraged.โ
Before Tuesday nightโs game against the Mets, Aaron Boone said Judge will play another sim game on Wednesday โ which will include, as it did Tuesday, the Yankeesโ captain playing in rightfield and running the bases. Everything thereafter will be โday-to-day.โ
Which pretty much summarized the managerโs answer when asked if he saw Judge returning in time for this weekendโs series in Baltimore.
โI wouldnโt rule anything out,โ Boone said. โWeโre day-to-day right now.โ
Judge has said from the time he was diagnosed with the injury that the biggest test for him would be running at full speed and being able to stop and start on the toe with a minimal amount of discomfort.
โWeโll try and set up situations to make sure thereโs action in play, or script some things a little bit more so that not only is he getting the volume of being out there for an hour or two hours, getting the live at-bats, but trying to replicate things that would come up in the game as much as we can,โ Boone said.
Judge, who faced Jonathan Loaisiga in a live batting practice session Sunday at the Stadium, said early last week that his return wonโt be predicated on him no longer feeling pain or discomfort in the toe because that simply isnโt realistic. At least, not for the rest of 2023.
โItโs not going to be…
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