Jazz Chisholm Jr. was forced out of the Yankees’ 5-1 loss to the White Sox on Thursday night at the Stadium in one of the most painful ways imaginable.
During an at-bat in the bottom of the fourth, Chisholm fouled a ball straight off the ground near the plate, and the ball took an unfortunate bounce and hit Chisholm near the groin area.
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Try it freeThe second baseman crumbled to the ground and remained there for several moments before Aaron Boone and the training staff came out to check on Chisholm, who eventually got to his feet but was clearly still in discomfort.
Unable to continue, Chisholm was removed from the game, and Anthony Volpe entered to finish the at-bat.
Volpe ended up drawing a walk against Chicago right-hander Sean Burke but was thrown out trying to steal second to end the inning.
Volpe remained in the game at shortstop, while José Caballero, who started the game at short, moved to second.
Boone said after the game the Yankees were still waiting to find out the severity of the injury, but the manager was “hoping” Chisholm was OK.
Austin Wells’ comeback from the cervical headaches that landed him on the IL on June 6 took a step forward Thursday, as the catcher hit a pair of homers during a minor league rehab game with Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.
Prior to the Yankees closing out their series against the White Sox in The Bronx, Boone said the organization hadn’t made a decision as to whether Wells would come back for Friday’s game against the Reds, but they were “leaning” towards keeping him with SWB, especially since they were rained out Wednesday, robbing Wells of a day on the field, and they have a doubleheader Friday.
Boone said Wells, now over the headaches that sent him to the IL and kept J.C. Escarra in The Bronx, has worked with Jarret DeHart, the organization’s director of hitting, while with SWB.
“He’s had some good days of work,’’ Boone said of Wells, who went hitless in his first rehab game on Tuesday. “He’s getting some results. We want to keep building on that.”
Whether that translates to the majors is a different story, and as The Post’s Joel Sherman has reported, they could be in the market for a right-handed-hitting backstop to go along with Wells, with Minnesota’s Ryan Jeffers a potential target.
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Also at SWB, top prospect George Lombard Jr. was placed on the seven-day IL with what the Yankees termed “sprained fingers” in his left hand after he was slid into while covering second base on a stolen-base attempt Tuesday.
Despite the IL stint, Boone said there were “good initial signs on testing” and nothing else showed up, so the Yankees hope it’s a short absence for the shortstop.
The 21-year-old has played almost exclusively at short since Anthony Volpe has been back in the majors and is considered major league ready at the position.
José Caballero got the start at short Thursday.
On the bullpen front, Carlos Lagrange made his fourth relief appearance with SWB, and while he nearly touched 100 mph, the right-hander had mixed results over his 1 ²/₃-inning outing.
He allowed four runs — none earned — but gave up two hits and walked a pair without recording a strikeout.
The Yankees are in the process of transitioning him from the rotation, so the 23-year-old is pitching more frequently, including on three days’ rest Thursday. He is expected to join the Yankees bullpen at some point next month.