Yankees pitcher Jimmy Cordero suspended for the rest of the season under MLB's domestic violence policy

Yankees' Jimmy Cordero suspended over domestic violence allegations

NEW YORK -- Yankees pitcher Jimmy Cordero was suspended for the rest of the season by baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred on Wednesday for violating the sport's domestic violence policy.

MLB said the 31-year-old right-hander accepted the suspension and will miss the season's final 76 games and the postseason. He loses $309,677 in pay.

"I found out about the suspension last night. He came to me a couple days ago and gave me a heads-up as to an investigation going on. That's kind of the extent of it," New York manager Aaron Boone said before Wednesday night's game against Baltimore.

"You get that news or you hear about that and it's sad. Your heart goes out to everyone involved. Again, I don't have any details, I don't know what went down, which is part of the idea of the investigation and the policy in place is, it's meant to work that way."

Cordero was 3-2 with a 3.86 ERA in one start and 30 relief appearances and has a $720,000 salary, the major league minimum. He missed the 2021 season after having Tommy John surgery while with the Chicago White Sox organization and spent 2022 with the Yankees' Triple-A team at Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.

 
The Yankees said in a statement they supported MLB's discipline and "there is no justification for domestic violence."

New York pitcher Domingo Germán was given an 81-game suspension under the domestic violence policy that he served in 2019 and 2020. Germán last week pitched the 24th perfect game in major league history.

Boone said the Yankees got wind of a possible MLB investigation underway involving Cordero within the past week or so.

"When things like this that are about as serious as it gets come up, there's a heavy price to be paid," Boone said. "And certainly I support that, I know the organization supports that. And hopefully now it turns to hopefully genuine healing."

Boone said he thinks Cordero began speaking to teammates about the situation after Tuesday's game. The manager said a large group of Yankees got together Wednesday to talk about it.

"My biggest thing right now is just feeling for the situation and hoping and praying that something good comes out of this, that there's maturity, that there's growth, that there's healing in whatever is going on," Boone said. "As far as (the) bullpen, I mean that's -- I wouldn't even say secondary. That's baseball, we'll deal with that. This is real life and a much more serious situation."

The 6-foot-4, 245-pound Cordero is 6-7 with a 4.36 ERA in 114 major league games, including one start, over four seasons with the Nationals, Blue Jays, White Sox and Yankees. His most recent outing was Sunday in St. Louis, where he allowed three runs and five hits in two innings against the Cardinals.

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