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Now in his 10th year with the Yankees, CC Sabathia has seen plenty of pitchers fail after coming to New York.

The lefty doesn’t think Sonny Gray will meet that fate, despite the results he’s had so far — but Sabathia did have some advice.

“He’s gonna be OK,” Sabathia said. “He wants it. He works hard. He cares.”

And that’s where Sabathia’s advice comes in.

“Sometimes I think he cares too much,” Sabathia said. “He just has to trust his stuff. It’s right there. It’s not like he’s off. He’s just a couple pitches away every outing. I think he can definitely turn it around. I don’t think he’s far away at all.”

Gray agreed and is doing his best to put his last outing — a 2 1/3-inning, six-run debacle against the Red Sox in The Bronx — behind him.

“It’s not hard to do,’’ Gray said. “I can move on fairly easily. I feel like things don’t get to me and have any carryover to my next start. With any situation, I can look at it, address it, learn from it and move on. That’s kind of the way I approach not just baseball, but life, as well.”

He’ll get his chance Friday in Toronto, where Gray has pitched well throughout his career. The right-hander also will make his following start away from Yankee Stadium, since the Yankees close out the first half of the season on an 11-game road trip.

And as bad as things have looked, Gray insists he saw signs of progress before he was booed off the mound at the Stadium.

In his previous five outings before the Boston fiasco, Gray was 3-2 with a 3.23 ERA. He walked just six and struck out 29 in 30 2/3 innings. It’s hardly the stuff of legend, but it was an improvement.

“Realistically, in the month of June, I was moving in the right direction,” Gray said. “And the very last day of the month, I had a start like that. But I don’t take it as that month being lost. I take it as progress in the right direction and then a big bump in the road. It was definitely a struggle, but I don’t let one start affect how I think of myself and the work I was doing.”

Gray pointed to several areas that he thought had been better.

“I felt I was throwing more strikes and getting deeper into games,” Gray said. “I was just trying to attack guys more, and I felt for the most part I was having, not as much success as I want, but pitching into the sixth and seventh inning more times than not.”

But Gray has strung together consecutive good starts just twice this season and has hardly provided the innings or quality the Yankees hoped they were getting when they acquired him from Oakland prior to last year’s trade deadline.

He’s aware of that, which is why he was so critical of himself following his last outing, when he said: “I feel like we are the best team in baseball four out of five days and then I do that. It sucks.”

“I don’t feel like I was being hard on myself,” Gray said of the comment. “Just being honest. But after that, I walked away and moved on. Now I have to go out and do my job.”

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