Yankees learn the hard way that stuff happens
Briefly

Yankees learn the hard way that stuff happens
"It's not great. And it's all over the place,"
"Hopefully they get it cleaned up here overnight and [we're] back in business [Sunday]."
"It was everywhere. Bathroom. Food room. Hallway. It wasn't out in the dugout, which was nice. But you smelled it in the dugout. Batting cages were good, and then it was in the lounge. All underwater with sewage water, seeping from the drains. They did a great job cleaning everything up."
"I saw it, but I didn't smell it. I don't know if that's a problem for myself that I didn't smell it. But I did not smell it. I saw it, though. It was [expletive]. It was in the kitchen, the hallway, all the drains."
A major sewage issue outside Steinbrenner Field caused foul-smelling water to seep into the Yankees' clubhouse bathroom and surrounding areas, including the hallway and food room. Manager Aaron Boone met the media outside the clubhouse because of standing water and odor. Players reported pervasive sewage water in multiple spaces, with some areas underwater and drains seeping. Cleanup crews worked overnight to sanitize and remove the smell, significantly improving conditions by Sunday. The clubhouse and corridor no longer reeked as before, though the team faced the next-day game amid the aftermath of the incident.
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