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Try it freeFrom an on-field performance standpoint, the Yankees designating DJ LeMahieu for assignment Wednesday had become inevitable.
But for the captain who knew LeMahieu better than anyone else in the clubhouse, and was around for his best moments in pinstripes, the transaction carried some more weight than just the $22 million the Yankees decided to eat to let the veteran infielder go.
“It wasn’t great, especially what DJ’s meant to this team and what he’s meant to me, also, as a player,” Aaron Judge said before Thursday’s game at Yankee Stadium, where he delivered the walk-off sacrifice fly in a 6-5 win over the Mariners in 10 innings. “I’ve hit behind him for so many years. A lot of those playoff runs we went on from ’19 on, we’re not getting there without DJ. Kind of seeing how this played out, it’s tough. But I’m wishing him the best. He’s meant a lot to this team, a lot to us in this clubhouse, the fan base.”
LeMahieu’s past few years were derailed by a series of injuries, sapping the former two-time batting champion of his production and robbing him of the opportunity to take the field on a daily basis like he had for most of his career. It ultimately led to his departure, too, as moving back to third base became too much of a physical challenge and tied the Yankees’ hands from a roster perspective.
Through it all, the soon-to-be 37-year-old was soft-spoken, but he made it known this spring just how much it was killing him to not be able to be out there with his teammates as his body betrayed him.