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A baseball player named Aroldis Chapman, who plays for the Boston Red Sox, has changed his mind. He no longer wants the New York Yankees to say "sorry" to him.
Important: Chapman is a "closer" — that’s a special pitcher who tries to finish the game and protect a lead so his team can win.
Chapman told The Post:
“I turned the page a long time ago. They asked me a question and I answered.”
This means he has moved on from the past and was just answering a question before, not holding a grudge.
Chapman felt the Yankees made him look like the "bad guy" because of two things:
He thought they treated him unfairly, which is why he originally wanted an apology.
Important: Even though he felt wronged earlier, he now says he has "turned the page" and doesn’t need that apology anymore.
Aroldis Chapman, a Red Sox pitcher (closer), first said the Yankees should apologize before any trade back to them. But at the All-Star Game, he told The Post he already moved on and just answered a question earlier. He no longer wants an apology, closing the book on that chapter.
A closer is a pitcher who usually plays at the very end of the game to help his team keep the lead and win.
It’s a fun mid-season game where the best players from different teams join together to play an exhibition match.
The original story doesn’t say exactly why he missed it, but it was a practice session that the Yankees expected him to attend.
It means taking back something you said earlier, like saying "Never mind, I didn’t mean it."
Not necessarily! They are still rival teams, but Chapman personally isn’t asking for an apology from his old team anymore.