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You have to wonder if the Yankees will be fully healthy by the wild-card game.

Life got a lot tougher for the injury-plagued Yankees in their 10-2 wipeout of the terrible Blue Jays at Yankee Stadium on Sunday when shortstop Didi Gregorius had to leave the game after two innings because of a bruised left heel.

We are going to see what these Yankees are made of because there is a good chance Gregorius will land on the disabled list, joining Aaron Judge and Gary Sanchez.

Three of the most important Yankees are sidelined, and if Gregorius is out for any length of time, that figures to have huge repercussions because Judge said Sunday he is still waiting on the chip fracture in his wrist to completely heal — and that could take a full six weeks.

Then there is the rehab and re-grooving his dynamic swing, a swing that has accounted for 26 home runs and 61 RBIs this season. The Yankees were dreaming when they talked about a three-week timetable for Judge.

The Gregorius injury hurts the Yankees in many ways. He was injured when the Blue Jays hulking first baseman Kendrys Morales positioned himself behind the bag, leaning into foul territory, as he tried to catch a throw from deep second. Morales left no path for Gregorius and in the resulting collision, Gregorius went down in a heap.

The lefty-hitting shortstop, the man who replaced Derek Jeter, does so much on defense and offense.

Now Gregorius, Judge and Sanchez could all be out. Poof, just like that a combined 62 home runs and 177 RBIs have been stripped. The Yankees can be thankful that Giancarlo Stanton has played in 123-of-124 games, though he’s been limited to DH duties that last 12 games with his own hamstring issue.

A glum Aaron Boone offered this about Gregorius: “He’s got a pretty bad bruise on his heel. It’s something that we’ll monitor over the next 24 hours. It could potentially be a DL thing. So not great, we’ll just have to see where we are [Monday]. There’s nothing broken, but he has a pretty significant bruise on his heel and there is some swelling in there.”

If they are already mentioning it could be a DL situation for Gregorius, who was not available for comment, that shows you how serious this could be, even more so for a shortstop with all the footwork and starts and stops that have to be made at that essential position.

After Gregorius left, Gleyber Torres slid from second to short and Ronald Torreyes came in to play second — and went 3-for-4 with a double.

The Yankees traveled to Miami after the game where they begin a two-game series Tuesday.

The best thing about this team has been the resiliency it has shown. Judge made note of that.

“It shows the fact that we have a young team and we are having a little rough patch, but these guys know how to fight,” Judge said in a quiet clubhouse after the game. “We’re a really good team and we just have to keep fighting and grind through those tough times, and it is going to make us better in the long run.”

Aaron Judge and Giancarlo StantonCorey SipkinAaron Judge and Giancarlo StantonCorey Sipkin

All along, I’ve been saying Judge will take a while to get back because of the simple fact broken bones have to heal before you can go forward, and Judge pointed out there is still pain, saying: “Oh yeah, it’s still fractured, there is still a little bit of pain in there, but that’s what we are trying to get past right now. It takes about four to six weeks for stuff like that to heal so wait for that six weeks.”

Judge was injured on July 26, so this is still going to take time and then he has to get his swing in working order. That’s a tall task. No. 99 has played in 99 games. Judge is still not swinging the bat.

Sanchez (groin) is heading to Tampa and will begin rehab games later in the week.

The 78-46 Yankees are being tested.

“Injuries are injuries,” Boone said. “You hope to avoid them, especially to key guys. These are all things we will have to deal with and we will.’’

They have no other choice.

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