TAMPA — DJ LeMahieu isn’t ruling out Opening Day just yet.
It is an issue that the Yankees third baseman is still experiencing soreness doing “everything,” including just walking, after sustaining a significant bone bruise on his right foot from fouling a ball off it Saturday.
But LeMahieu doesn’t believe he will need much of a ramp-up once the swelling subsides, as he faces a race against the clock to be ready for next Thursday’s opener against the Astros.
Yankees infielder DJ LeMahieu is dealing with a foot injury after he fouled a ball off his right foot on Saturday. USA TODAY Sports via Reuters Con“I’m just taking it one day [at a time] and going,” LeMahieu said Wednesday at Steinbrenner Field. “Baseball-wise, I don’t think it’s going to take me much to be ready. [Aaron Boone] has told me about five times to be smart. So the last thing I want to do is something stupid and go backwards. That’s been made very clear by him to me.”
Boone said Monday that he had told LeMahieu he did not want him trying to play through anything, especially because it is the same right foot that caused the veteran issues over the last two seasons.
LeMahieu said he was hoping to try swinging “in the next day or two.” He has been getting daily treatment but has not done any baseball activities since smoking the foul ball off his foot.
“I at least gotta see where I’m at,” he said. “It’s not going to take me much to get going.”
LeMahieu indicated that he can already tell a difference in his foot and that this injury is not comparable to the one he sustained in 2022 from a broken bone in his big right toe and a torn ligament in his second toe.
But it is also more serious than the “hundreds” of foul balls off his feet that LeMahieu has experienced during his career.
“I don’t know if this one just caught me different or what, but it was definitely different when I woke up the next day,” he said.
DJ LeMahieu isn’t ruling out playing on Opening Day for the Yankees. Charles Wenzelberg/NY PostEarlier this spring, Boone had raved about LeMahieu’s “explosiveness” at the plate, thanks in part to his improved health. LeMahieu said he does not believe this bone bruise changes anything in that regard.
But whether LeMahieu will be ready to be the Yankees’ leadoff hitter next Thursday in Houston remains to be seen. He, for one, still believes it is a possibility.
“I’ve had a good spring training. I’ve had plenty of at-bats [27],” LeMahieu said. “It’s not going to take me much to — I mean, I pretty much am ready already. So, that’s definitely my goal.”
The Pirates rare taking a chance on Domingo German, but not before doing their due diligence on the former Yankees right-hander.
Pirates manager Derek Shelton said Wednesday the team went through a “very extensive process” prior to signing German to a minor league deal last week.
German’s Yankees tenure included serving an 81-game suspension for violating the league’s domestic violence policy and ending last season on the restricted list to seek treatment for alcohol abuse following a clubhouse incident at Yankee Stadium
“Not only [talking to] former teammates, former staff guys, people in different front offices [but] then obviously sitting down with Domingo and his family and walking through what we thought was appropriate,” Shelton said before the Yankees’ 12-0 exhibition win over the Pirates. “In those conversations, we thought this was a really good place that we could support him.”
Shelton said he spoke with Boone during the process but declined to get into details.
For now, the Pirates are focused on German building up his workload after signing late in camp. He is expected to start the year at Triple-A.
Oswald Peraza (shoulder strain) could start hitting “any day now,” Boone said. The infielder is two weeks into his throwing shutdown of three to four weeks.







