Max Fried Injury Update: Yankees Ace Faces Multi-Week Return Timeline

Max Fried could miss multiple weeks after the Yankees ace exited Wednesday’s start with an elbow hyperextension injury. Early indications suggest the left-hander may have avoided structural damage that would threaten a significantly longer absence. Fried left his start against the Baltimore Orioles on Wednesday after just three innings, pulled with what the New York Yankees diagnosed as left elbow posterior soreness, and flew back to New York for an MRI and examination by team physician Dr. Christopher Ahmad, the New York Post reported.

But the Yankees worry is not only what happened Wednesday, but for what Fried admitted had been building for weeks across multiple starts before finally refusing to fade. According to a report from Pinstripes Nation, the best-case scenario would show only soft tissue inflammation with no damage to the olecranon, triceps tendon or posterior capsule — an outcome that could allow Fried to return within two to three weeks following rest and a gradual throwing progression.

Fried’s Elbow Problem: What the Yankees Saw

Fried described the sensation as a hyperextension at the back of the elbow, a “banging” feeling in the triceps area that had come and gone throughout the season. Wednesday he felt it again but thus time it wouldn’t go away.

“The first hitter of the inning would be like 88, 90, 91, and then by the fourth, fifth hitter, 20 pitches in and I’m able to get things loosened up,” Fried said, as quoted by the Post. “Just wasn’t sharp and it was just hard to keep bouncing back.”

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That pattern of early-inning velocity dips followed by gradual recovery is a recognized symptom of posterior elbow irritation in power pitchers. The structures at the back of the joint absorb braking force each time the arm decelerates after release, according to EmergeOrtho sports medicine specialists. Applied across a full season without adequate recovery, the cumulative load can tip from manageable to structural.

Following Wednesday’s game, a 7-0 Yankees loss to Baltimore in which Fried allowed three runs on five hits in three innings and 61 pitches, the 32-year-old southpaw confirmed the issue had surfaced in several starts before Wednesday.

“This one, it’s just probably one too many times and just a little irritated and a little pissed off,” Fried said, quoted by the New York Post.

Yankees Face Multi-Week Fried Return Timeline

Manager Aaron Boone noticed the problem immediately. Fried’s fastball, which typically sits around 95 mph, was registering 88 to 91 mph at the start of each inning.

“His stuff was down. It would take him two, three hitters in the inning to get to 95 when he needed it,” Boone said, according to Pinstripes Nation‘s Esteban Quiñones. After Baltimore scored twice in the third, Boone pulled the plug.

Fried’s Tommy John surgery in 2014 makes any elbow development significant. But the posterior location of Wednesday’s complaint is anatomically separate from the ulnar collateral ligament, the target of the Tommy John prodecure.

“I’m not too worried about a super long-term thing,” Fried told reporters Wednesday. “If I can, I’d love to be able to make my next start.”

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His hope appears unrealistic. Chronic posterior elbow irritation of this recurrent type typically demands a minimum two-to-three-week rest period before any throwing program can resume, and that assumes clean imaging. The Yankees will know more after Fried’s MRI on Thursday.

The rotation has reinforcements. Gerrit Cole is closing in on a return from Tommy John surgery after multiple minor league rehab starts, according to Pinstripes Nation‘s Sara Molnick. Cam Schlittler, Will Warren, Ryan Weathers and Carlos Rodon, who returned from the injured list Sunday,remain available.

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