The designated batter of parents, Luis Arraáz, was taken off the field after a terrifying collision with the second base of Houston Astros, Mauricio Dubon, in San Diego’s 3-2 victory on Sunday night. Arraáz returned to the stadium after the game after being hospital tasks.
San Diego’s manager, Mike Shildt, said after the game that the situation was the “best cases with Luis.”
“Obviously, very scary,” Shildt said. “We believe that it is mostly in the forest. More time will say it, but the initial tests are very favorable. There are no fractures of any kind. I mean, it put on a bit of laceration in its line of the jaw, so we are concerned about their jaw. We are worried about its cervical region. Everything was clear, stable in the initial tests.”
“We have been burned before in the tests, so we will be cautiously optimistic,” he said. “Hey, made a period where he was aware of where he was, so that is clearly a group. Everything is returning to him now, and his initial tests from a position of brain shock were favorable, we are not out of the forest.”
According to San Diego Union Tribune, Arraáz will remain in Houston during the night.
At the top of the first entrance, Arraáz left a touch of drag and tried to overcome the first base. Dubon came to cover the bag and was catching the launch of the first base man Christian Walker when Dubon crashed inadvertently in Arraáz, who seemed to hit his arm or Dubon’s elbow with his face.
Both players hit the floor, but Arraáz toke the worst of him, lying on the fault with the first base when the coaches and coaches of both teams went out to serve him.
“It was scary,” Dubon said. “I mean, just seeing him not to move. It was scary. Special people know the type of player I am. He is not a dirty player or anything. So he stinks. The sausage of that is that you get threats to death of things as a function.
Dubon and Walker, as well as Fernando Tatis Jr. and Manny Machado stood up and saw how Arraáz was placed on a board and left the stage. While they placed him in the car, Arraáz put his arm around Shildt.
“It was a sad moment, as special approaching him and seeing him on the floor like this, you definitely scare yourself,” said Tatis, who hit the home run of a noise in the game. “You almost cry but you get up. You feel right next to him and start praying for him immediately. Happy that he has already returned with us. Just happy, he stands. It is a sad part of the game, but things happen.”
Tatis, who ran second in the work, said he heard the collision.
“As soon as they called Timeout, I can see my son and see what was happening,” he said.
Dubon said he meets Incarés.
“That’s what I am saying,” Dubon said. “It stinks that game in him and everything. As I said before, there is nothing I could have done. I lean and I thought I was going to get the worst. I mean, I’m not a big guy.”
Arraáz gave the crowd a thumb up when Daikin Park left. There was a delay of 11 minutes before the game resumed.
Arraáz entered hitting .287 in the season with three homers and seven ranges.
Associated Press contributed to this report.
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