Most recent on Dodgers' Shohei Ohtani injury; Yankees response

 LOS ANGELES —
Yankees second baseman Gleyber Torres saw nothing strange in the Dodgers' seventh inning Saturday night when 50/50 sanction part Shohei Ohtani pursued for a first Worldwide championship taken base.


The Dodgers previously were up three runs and searching for more protection that would assist them with getting to the end goal for a 2-games-to-none lead in this best of seven.


"I just attempted to make the out and I didn't actually see what occurred," Torres said after the Yankees lost 4-2.


"I saw him slide and stay down," Yankees first baseman Anthony Rizzo added.


The inning was finished, yet Ohtani was down-level on his back.


Ohtani was still dealing with some challenges. He left Los Angeles late for New York with the Dodgers and received imaging on Monday in New York.


"We will get a few tests sooner or later and afterward we'll know more in the two or three days," Roberts added. "I can't guess since we don't get the sweeps yet. When we get the sweeps, we'll know more. Once more, with the strength, the scope of movement great, that is unquestionably a positive."


Roberts' initial expectation is Ohtani will be all set Monday night when the Yankees and Dodgers play Game 3 at Yankee Arena.


This injury alarm happened on Ohtani's slide.


"He slides to his left side knee, right foot forward," Roberts said. "That is my presumption Then as he put his give over, it most likely subluxed out. That is presumably the thing it was."


"The entire arena went quiet," Dodgers left defender Teoscar Hernandez said. "You know how large Shohei is for this group."


Before sufficiently long, the Dodgers got an exceptionally uplifting update.


Primer imaging showed Ohtani has a shoulder subluxation, which is a fractional disengagement that can be delicately popped once again into the right spot.


That definitely beats a messed up collar bone or isolated shoulder that would prepare end.


"He had a little left shoulder subluxation, yet the strength was perfect," Dodgers supervisor Dave Roberts said. "The scope of movement is great. So we're empowered."

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