Yankee 又有3个队员 感染covid了

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Qiguoji
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The New York Yankees were scheduled to kick off the second half of Major
League Baseball's regular season on Thursday night by hosting the Boston Red Sox. Instead, MLB has postponed the game because of the Yankees' latest
round of COVID-19 issues. Here's the league's official statement:

Following positive COVID-19 tests within the New York Yankees
organization, tonight's game between the Yankees and the Boston Red Sox at
Yankee Stadium has been postponed to allow for continued testing and contact tracing. Major League Baseball will continue to provide scheduling updates as available.

MLB has not yet deemed it necessary to postpone Friday's game, though that
could change as more information becomes available.

General manager Brian Cashman told reporters on Thursday afternoon that the Yankees have three positive cases and three that are pending. All the
individuals involved are players. Cashman's figure for positives includes
relieve Jonathan Loaisiga who was placed on the COVID-19 list before the
break, as well as fellow pitchers Nestor Cortes Jr. and Wandy Peralta, each placed on the COVID-19 list ahead of Thursday's contest. Cashman told
reporters all three were vaccinated. (The Yankees also reinstated reliever
Zack Britton from the 10-day injured list. Britton had been out since late
June after suffering a strained hamstring.)

Cashman told reporters "most" of the six players were previously vaccinated. The Yankees were reportedly one of the first teams to clear the vaccine
threshold (85 percent of tier-1 individuals) that allows for looser
adherence to MLB's protocols. This is their second instance of positive
tests since, with several coaches having to miss time in May following so-
called "breakthrough infections." As experts have since explained, the
purpose of a vaccination is to reduce the severity of the infection rather
than eliminate the possibility altogether; from that perspective, the COVID-19 vaccines worked as intended, with nearly all of those cases being
asymptomatic in nature.

ESPN's Marly Rivera reports Red Sox player Rafael Devers was asked not to
conduct interviews because one of the Yankees who tested positive was at the All-Star Game. Aroldis Chapman, Gerrit Cole, and Aaron Judge represented
the Yankees at the All-Star Game earlier this week. The three known
positives are relievers, so reading between the lines, Chapman could be one of the pending positive tests.

The Yankees had initially been forced to scrap batting practice as they
adhered to the league's COVID-19 health and safety protocol following a pair of positive tests.

Thursday was supposed to mark the beginning of a pivotal stretch for the
Yankees, who entered the second half stationed in fourth place in the
American League East, some eight games behind the Red Sox. The Yankees are
slated to play the Red Sox and the second-place Tampa Bay Rays a combined 11 times ahead of MLB's July 30 trade deadline. The results of those contests -- and keep in mind, the Yankees are 5-14 against those teams so far this
season -- will likely dictate whether New York is aggressive at the deadline.