Aug 19, 2025, 12:39 PM ET
New York Yankees manager Aaron Boone reversed course on the status of star Aaron Judge on Tuesday, saying he should be able to return to the field this season after earlier casting doubt on whether that would happen.
Judge has been limited to being a designated hitter since being activated from the injured list on Aug. 5, after a stint there due to a flexor strain in his right elbow.
Boone told radio station WFAN on Tuesday that there is no timetable on a fielding return for Judge.
“I don’t think we’re going to see him throwing like he normally does at any point this year, but that’s OK,” Boone told WFAN. “We’ve got to feel like he can go out there and protect himself.”
Judge said those comments took him surprise, leading him to push back on the Yankees manager.
The star slugger said he feels “way better” than earlier this month, when he couldn’t make a 60-foot toss. He added that he’s thrown out to 250 feet and sounded optimistic about getting back to full strength.
“I don’t know why he said that,” Judge said. “He hasn’t seen me throw for the past two weeks, so I’m pretty confident I’ll get back to (100%).”
Boone then acknowledged he may have overstated the situation with his initial comment to WFAN.
“Is he going to come back and be a 70-80 arm?” Boone told media before the Yankees played the Rays in Tampa, Florida, on Tuesday night. “I don’t know that I’m expecting that necessarily. But when we get him back out there, I would expect him to be able to handle it.”
The Yankees are coming off a three-game sweep of the St. Louis Cardinals and hold a three-game lead for the final American League wild-card spot. Offensively, they will be satisfied if Judge can simply remain productive at the plate. He entered the week batting .333 with 39 home runs, 91 RBI and a 1.134 OPS, all among the league leaders. His home run Sunday was his first extra-base hit since returning.
Judge’s inability to play the field has reduced the team’s flexibility.
Giancarlo Stanton returned to the Yankees’ lineup Tuesday night after missing three games with what the team described as general soreness. Stanton is batting .299 with 12 home runs, 34 RBI and a .953 OPS this season, but his long injury history makes any outfield assignment a risk. He did not debut until mid-June because of tendinitis in both elbows. After playing three straight games in the outfield last week, he then missed three with the soreness. He has declined to specify where the discomfort occurred.
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.