logo
Yankees' injured ace provides encouraging update on his recovery

Yankees' injured ace provides encouraging update on his recovery

Yahoo06-05-2025

For the second spring in a row, Gerrit Cole's elbow whispered trouble. This time, though, the murmur turned into a full-throated shout: Tommy John surgery. It's the pitcher's equivalent of a full engine rebuild. Now, the New York Yankees ace won't be toeing the rubber again until the summer of 2026—at best.
That kind of news hits hard, like a fastball to the ribs. Cole isn't just any arm in the rotation. He's the arm. The kind of pitcher who doesn't just set the tone—he is the tone. And when he's out, the silence is deafening.
Still in the Game, Just Not on the Field
Though Cole's season has been erased, he hasn't vanished. On Monday, he popped into the Yankees' clubhouse, offering a familiar face and a dose of grounded optimism. Speaking to reporters, Cole peeled back the curtain on his recovery process. He's tracking well and aiming to resume playing catch in August—a small step in physical terms, but a giant leap after elbow surgery.
Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images
In the meantime, Cole hasn't stopped pitching—at least not in his mind. 'I still pitch mentally every night before bed,' he shared. 'I haven't given up any hits.' It was part-joke, part-truth, and fully Gerrit Cole: ever the perfectionist, still competing even when confined to the sidelines. It's the kind of line that makes you smile—and also one that underscores just how hard it is for someone wired like Cole to sit out.
The Weight of Expectations
The Yankees are tracking his rehab closely, and for good reason. They have a lot riding on Cole—both emotionally and financially. He's not just a big name on the roster. He's the 2023 AL Cy Young winner, a pitcher who makes a difference every fifth day. His career ERA sits at 3.18, and it dips even lower—to 3.12—with the Yankee pinstripes.
Advertisement
With the Yankees' rotation currently resembling a game of musical chairs—one with more wrong notes than harmony—Cole's absence is more than just noticeable. It's gaping.
Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images
From the Couch to the Comeback
Tommy John surgery isn't just a medical procedure—it's a marathon. And right now, Cole is still in mile one. But come August, he'll start the gentle climb back with a game of catch. It's not glamorous, but it's crucial. From there, it'll be a careful dance of strengthening, rebuilding, and ultimately re-entering the kind of competitive fire that only the Bronx can bring.
For now, he pitches in his mind, late at night, no hits, no runs. And somewhere in those imagined innings, a return begins.
Advertisement
Related Headlines

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

All that Jazz: 'Electric' Chisholm Jr. talks new approach for Yankees
All that Jazz: 'Electric' Chisholm Jr. talks new approach for Yankees

Yahoo

time9 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

All that Jazz: 'Electric' Chisholm Jr. talks new approach for Yankees

NEW YORK – Arriving at a less-is-more revelation, Jazz Chisholm Jr. believes he's found that next-level key to personal success. That means an easier swing, a steadier running gait, a calmer approach in the field. Advertisement 'If I stay fundamentally sound at 70%, I'm a pretty good baseball player,'' said Chisholm, whose second straight three-hit night boosted the Yankees to a 9-6 victory Friday night. Chisholm's three-run homer and RBI single contributed to an early seven-run lead against the rival Boston Red Sox and starter Walker Buehler, knocked out after two innings. Of course, the last time Buehler was on the Stadium mound, he closed out the World Series clincher in Game 5 for the Los Angeles Dodgers. This time, the Yanks jumped Buehler for five first-inning runs – including Chisholm's three-run homer on an 0-2 changeup to straightaway center field and a two-run shot by Anthony Volpe. Advertisement Volpe left the game shortly after being plunked on the left elbow, forcing home a second inning run; X-rays and a CT scan were negative, and Volpe feels he'll be available Saturday. Meanwhile, Chisholm is batting .500 (8-for-16) with two homers, six RBI and three stolen bases in four games since coming off the injured list due to a strained oblique. Yankees' Jazz Chisholm Jr. at '70%' 'Electric is the only way to describe Jazz,'' said Yankees rookie starter Will Warren, who rebounded from a rough start last Saturday at Dodger Stadium by being more aggressive in the strike zone. As Chisholm reasons, 'you can be electric while being in control at the same time,'' though 'it's super challenging for me. The only thing I knew was how to go fast. Advertisement 'Basically, I was Ricky Bobby. That's all I knew.'' Chisholm's new approach had its first light-bulb moment on April 29, the day he was injured at Baltimore – doubling to right despite three small tears to his oblique. Before his brief minor league rehab assignment began last week, Chisholm convened with the club's hitting coaches and reviewed video of his minor league days. 'The swing looked so effortless,'' and a plan was hatched to dial back in some respect – inspiring more contact, less swing and miss. '(At) 70%, you're one of the best out there,'' said Chisholm, quoting a conversation with assistant hitting coach Pat Roessler. 'At 100 percent, I might be dog crap. I was hitting .171 at 100 percent.'' Aaron Judge's take on Jazz Chisholm's approach 'It's really just about slowing everything down and taking a nice easy swing,'' said Judge. 'And that's what I felt like I saw tonight, even the homer to center field.'' Advertisement Chisholm drove an 0-2 Buehler curveball an estimated 417 feet over the center field wall, a ball that just kept carrying in the warm, humid air. 'I'm looking forward to seeing more of that,'' Judge said of the at-bat that produced Chisholm's ninth homer of the year, in his 34th game. In his third time up, Chisholm rifled a single to center off a 1-0 changeup. 'Earlier I the season, I was pulling off that and hitting it foul or rolling over because I was trying to hit a home run,'' said Chisholm. 'I feel like a baseball player again.'' Maybe the 70-percent stuff sends a mixed message, so Chisholm emphasized, 'you can't be lackadaisical," but 'if I stay fundamentally sound at 70%, I'm a pretty good baseball player. Advertisement "I really heard that all my life," Chisholm said. "I need to tone down the way I play." This article originally appeared on Yankees' Jazz Chisholm on new approach for New York

Ex-Yankees star Alex Rodriguez says Aaron Judge 'needs' an October moment to be a true franchise legend
Ex-Yankees star Alex Rodriguez says Aaron Judge 'needs' an October moment to be a true franchise legend

Fox News

time4 hours ago

  • Fox News

Ex-Yankees star Alex Rodriguez says Aaron Judge 'needs' an October moment to be a true franchise legend

For the New York Yankees, it is always World Series or bust. Of course, the Bronx Bombers have 27 titles to their name, and that includes a record 18-year drought from 1978 to 1996. But, after a new dynasty won four titles in five years, expectations changed once again. The Yankees, still, are a perennial postseason team, not having finished under .500 since 1993. Former MLB star Alex Rodriguez knew all about the expectations when he went from the Texas Rangers to the Yankees in 2004. Rodriguez made the postseason in all but three of his seasons with the Yankees (not including when he missed the 2014 season due to suspension). But today, he is part owner of the Minnesota Timberwolves and Minnesota Lynx. And while on the diamond, anything short of a title was a failure, he admits that as an owner, "you have to adjust" your expectations. "At the end of the day, it's so hard to win, and there's so many different resources. The days of the Yankees winning four out of five years, those days are long gone, because the business models have changed, people are competing from a different point of view, the league structures are different, whether it's the luxury tax in baseball, there's different elements that are pushing and pulling," Rodriguez said in a recent interview with Fox News Digital. "But I think that winning is more being one of the most respected organizations sports to treating your fans an impeccable way, your players or organization, and then your partners, your sponsorships and stuff like that, and then having a consistent winner that has an opportunity to strike every year. So I think when you think about winning and bust-or-nothing, it's more about the behavior of an organization versus just black and white winning a championship." But the Yankees still have All-Star Aaron Judge, who, if it weren't for the Houston Astros' Jose Altuve in 2017, would be vying for his fourth MVP Award. His regular-season numbers are astonishing, but so are his postseason stats… in the opposite direction. Since the start of the 2022 season (entering Thursday), Judge has MLB highs in WAR (30.9), home runs (178) and OPS (1.124). But in October, he's hit just .205 with a .768 OPS. Rodriguez was polarizing in New York from day one — he was the superstar shortstop with the largest sports contract of all time who didn't exactly praise Yankees great Derek Jeter in a now-infamous quote — whereas Judge is much more universally loved, being a homegrown Yankee. However, that love is not unanimous because of Judge's postseason struggles. And if he wants to be forever in Yankees lore, Judge "needs" to find success in October, according to Rodriguez. "I mean, I'm probably the one guy that can answer this from a personal experience more than anybody," said Rodriguez, who notoriously struggled in autumn with the Bombers before carrying the Yankees to their 2009 World Series title. "I can tell you that for me, 2004 was just an absolute debacle, being up 3-0 against the [Boston] Red Sox and then losing four in a row. And for five years, I basically did not sleep comfortably, until five years later in '09, we brought it home and dropped the hammer. So I think he needs a moment like that. I think he will get one. I think being part of the Yankees and that lore is you're going to get cracks at it every single year. So that's on his side, the talent's on his side, and the more at-bats, the more reps he gets, the chances increase. And when he does, it's going to be such an enormous win for everybody, and it's going to be an elephant off his back." The Yankees, though, didn't exactly fare well in their World Series rematch last week against the Los Angeles Dodgers. They dropped two of the three games, including one contest where they were trounced 18-2 (both of the Yankees' runs came on solo Judge homers). Rodriguez is a partner with Lysol, which cleans up the stink — and the Yanks certainly could have used some in Los Angeles' Chavez Ravine. The ex-Yankees slugger recently surprised a local umpire in Miami Beach with some Lysol. "Umpires are unsung heroes of the game, and it was great to show my appreciation for the work they do on and off the field," he said. "Lysol is just an incredible company to partner with. We've had a tremendous partnership, and one of the things we want to do is make impact in the community and recognize people that often don't get recognized." One player's impact that the Yankees are certainly missing is that of right-handed pitcher Gerrit Cole. And while the rotation has been a pleasant surprise, even with Cole's Tommy John surgery and Rookie of the Year Luis Gil's lat injury, an incomplete Yankees team is no match for the reigning World Series champs, Rodriguez thinks. "I think if you zoom out, I think it's obvious to me with enough data points that the National League is far superior than the American League. So that's one macro thought. And then obviously, the Dodgers have the Yankees' number," Rodriguez said. "It was great that they were able to salvage the series by at least winning one game and not getting swept. But look, when you have someone like Gerrit Cole hurt, the Yankees can still get through some pedestrian teams in the American League, but it's obvious that when you play the Dodgers, you need your full team and then some, and even that may not be enough." Follow Fox News Digital's sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

Yankees play the Red Sox leading series 1-0
Yankees play the Red Sox leading series 1-0

Associated Press

time7 hours ago

  • Associated Press

Yankees play the Red Sox leading series 1-0

Boston Red Sox (30-35, fourth in the AL East) vs. New York Yankees (39-23, first in the AL East) New York; Saturday, 7:35 p.m. EDT PITCHING PROBABLES: Red Sox: Garrett Crochet (5-4, 1.98 ERA, 1.06 WHIP, 101 strikeouts); Yankees: Ryan Yarbrough (3-0, 2.83 ERA, 0.99 WHIP, 40 strikeouts) BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Yankees -112, Red Sox -107; over/under is 8 runs BOTTOM LINE: The New York Yankees face the Boston Red Sox with a 1-0 series lead. New York has a 39-23 record overall and a 21-10 record at home. The Yankees have hit 101 total home runs to lead the majors. Boston is 30-35 overall and 13-19 on the road. Red Sox hitters have a collective .325 on-base percentage, the second-ranked percentage in the AL. The matchup Saturday is the second time these teams square off this season. TOP PERFORMERS: Aaron Judge has 17 doubles, two triples and 21 home runs while hitting .397 for the Yankees. Paul Goldschmidt is 11 for 43 with two doubles and two home runs over the last 10 games. Jarren Duran has 17 doubles, seven triples, four home runs and 35 RBIs while hitting .274 for the Red Sox. Ceddanne Rafaela is 14 for 42 with two doubles and four home runs over the last 10 games. LAST 10 GAMES: Yankees: 7-3, .242 batting average, 4.50 ERA, outscored by five runs Red Sox: 3-7, .243 batting average, 4.29 ERA, outscored by eight runs INJURIES: Yankees: Anthony Volpe: day-to-day (elbow), Luke Weaver: 15-Day IL (hamstring), Oswaldo Cabrera: 10-Day IL (ankle), Giancarlo Stanton: 60-Day IL (elbow), Marcus Stroman: 15-Day IL (knee), JT Brubaker: 60-Day IL (ribs), Jake Cousins: 60-Day IL (elbow), Gerrit Cole: 60-Day IL (elbow), Luis Gil: 60-Day IL (back) Red Sox: Nick Burdi: 15-Day IL (knee), Justin Slaten: 15-Day IL (shoulder), Liam Hendriks: 15-Day IL (hip), Alex Bregman: 10-Day IL (quadricep), Triston Casas: 60-Day IL (knee), Masataka Yoshida: 60-Day IL (shoulder), Kutter Crawford: 60-Day IL (knee), Tanner Houck: 15-Day IL (flexor), Chris Murphy: 60-Day IL (elbow), Patrick Sandoval: 60-Day IL (elbow) ___ The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store