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Jazz Chisholm plays weird injuries, but Yankees worried

BALTIMORE -It was difficult to miss that something was bothered by the Jazz Chisholm when he fought on Tuesday evening in the first inning against four of the first five Yanke's solo homer over the 21-foot-high, right field with the right field of Oriole Park.

Chisholm felt some discomfort in his right, sloping area, which Kyle Gibson's first pitch. After taking the second for a ball, the second Baseman stepped out of the box and began to fluctuate his middle part.

Manager Aaron Boone and a team trainer came out to see Chisholm, who made a few exercises and then explained that it was good to continue.

Next, Chisholm laced a shot into the right blanket and started. He made his way to the second basis when the right field player Ramon Laaureano bobbed the ball, then held him to third place and slipped safely.

Since Chisholm looked as if he was injured after an additional goal that initially scored a triple and then switched to a double and a basic error, the third basic coach Luis Rojas said:

“Hey, I don't want you to continue.”

Chisholm said he had this request to leave the game and was also said: “That was my best swing that I have ever done!”

Chisholm agreed that the intelligent game should be left and checked out immediately, so Oswald Peraza was called by the bank to pinch and then play second place.

“It was just not time to risk it,” said Chisholm.

A little later the first diagnoses in the press field was announced:

Chisholm left the game with discomfort in his black.

Be what?

After the Yankees had completed a 15-3 romp on the Orioles, Boone called this a weird problem.

“This is really the same place,” said Chisholm, before he flashed his contagious big smile and added: “If you look at a cow, that's her sloping flows.”

Chisholm seemed to be in a great atmosphere in his short interview after the game and have fun. He was ready to leave the stadium while the Pitcher Carlos Rodon won the farm, but was waiting in his locker that the media set off.

Chisholm wanted to let everyone know that he was already “feeling pretty good” and “not concerned” this problem would become an injury list.

The Yankees are not so sure. Chisholm will not play in the series finale on Wednesday evening and will undergo an MRI and other tests on Thursday on Thursday.

“He seems to do it well,” said Boone, “but he definitely has something going on with the slope, so we will test in New York.

“He is in a pretty good atmosphere. He only told me:” I'm fine. “I don't know about it, but we'll see what we have.

According to Medicine.net, mild sloping tribes can take 2 to 4 weeks to heal. If Chisholm's test results show a slight load that seems very possible, he could be on the 10-day list of injury by Friday.

“I'm really not as worried as everyone else,” said Chisholm. “I have already torn my slopes, so I know that it is not torn or something. I know my body. I really suspect these things most of the time.

“I would know if I'm super painful or my things are so confused.”

It was Chisholm who told Yankees that this was a “flack” problem.

Chisholm laughed when he was asked if he knew what a flick was before his injury.

“I? I mean, yes and no,” he said slowly in a comedic tone. “I know that the flank was somewhere, but at first I didn't know what it was. I went and looked at it and said: 'Yes, I can use that.'”

Chisholm will find out on Thursday if his idea of ​​the severity of his flick muscle is correct or not.

The Yankees hope for good news. Although Chisholm only beats 0.181, he was very productive with seven Homern and 17 RBI. His second base game was usually very good … and much better than what you received from Gleyber Torres last season.

Chisholm is optimistic that he will be willing this weekend to play this weekend when the rays are in the Bronx for three games, maybe as soon as it is on Friday evening series of series series, but Boone is “a little” concerned that this is more serious.

“But he says he feels good,” added the manager. “We'll see.”

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Randy Miller can be reached rmiller@njadvancemedia.com.

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