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Yankees Star hopes to skip the rehab task

Jazz Chisholm Jr. believes that he will be back in about two weeks and hopes that a detour into the little leagues will not be needed.

The Yankees-Infield, who speaks on Tuesday, while working with the police and children at an event in the Macombs Dam Park in the Bronx, said that he had imagined a beat in the cage and believed that he would meet a high-speed machine either on Tuesday or on Wednesday.

“We are pretty close,” said Chisholm, who has been weird since April 29 with a high level of strain on his right.

The Yankees said about two and a half weeks on the 2nd May about two and a half weeks, he would be about 4-6 weeks. The infielder no longer shoots for a three -week absence, as he suggested last week, but would achieve the original goal in two weeks.

The Yankees player Jazz Chisholm Jr. With some participants in the first annual baseball camp of the SBH Health System for Bronx school children in the Macombs Dam Park in the Bronx on May 20, 2025. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post
The Yankees player Jazz Chisholm Jr. With some participants in the first annual baseball camp of the SBH Health System for Bronx school children in the Macombs Dam Park in the Bronx on May 20, 2025. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

Chisholm hopes that the swings he can get against machines can be enough to be sufficient to convince the Yankees that he is ready to need a trip to a Double-A Somerset or Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Bar.

“I don't like to do rehab tasks. I've never been really a fan of it,” said Chisholm, who had taken rehab tasks with the Marlins.

On Tuesday, manager Aaron Boone said Chisholm would “probably” need a trip to a partner, but he was not yet sure.

“I would think if it is a game, whether it is one or two games, we'll probably do something,” said Boone before the Yankees defeated the Rangers in the Bronx in series. “But it's not really what we really talked about.”

Jazz Chisholm Jason scenes for the New York Post

Chisholm, who is asymptomatic, spent part of his downtimes with the NYPD Sports Unit for the first baseball camp for children SBH Health System for children.

“For me, it's all about giving the children,” said Chisholm, who gave tickets for children from Cardinal Hayes's baseball team on Tuesday. “For me, the importance is that I am here today, children from the Bronx that I want to be part of their community.”

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