ARLINGTON, Texas — With Matt Holliday and Greg Bird back from the DL, Joe Girardi essentially has four bodies for three spots on a daily basis.

When Bird returned Chase Headley was entrenched as the first baseman. Now he gets at-bats as the DH and is available to play third base where Todd Frazier is the regular. Holliday is strictly a DH.

So, it’s the manager’s job to fit four names into three spots and so far Girardi said it hasn’t been that difficult.

“It has worked pretty well so far. I have been able to keep guys fresh,’’ Girardi said before Saturday’s 3-1 winat Globe Life Park where the right-handed hitting Holliday wasn’t in the lineup against right-hander Andrew Cashner, but had a big pinch-hit single off Alex Claudio in the eighth.

Bird was at first and went 1-for2. Headley was the DH and drove in two runs.

“I will continue to manage it the same way,’’ Girardi said. “Part of it is you look at Bird, Headley and Holliday and they are all important to us. You want to keep everyone going and it’s hard to say this guy should sit every day or this guy should sit every day.’’

Aaron Judge’s walk in the second inning was his 106th of the season and tied a MLB record for rookies.

Didi Gregorius was in Girardi’s lineup Saturday hitting fourth less than 24 hours after leaving Friday night’s game after fouling a ball off his right calf that caused swelling and had the shortstop limping in the clubhouse after the 11-5 loss. He went 0-for-4.

“If I have to change it I will change it,’’ Girardi said about putting Gregorius’ name in the lineup prior to talking to the shortstop. “He was fine to go back in (Friday night). I figured I would get ice on it as soon as possible.’’

Gregorius’ solo homer Friday night gave him a career-high 21 after hitting 20 last season. Prior to that the most homers by Gregorius was nine in 2015.

Facing left-handed pitching has helped Gregorius become a complete player according to Girardi.

“You look at his numbers early in his career against righties and they were good, against lefties he struggled but we ran him out there every day because we felt he was an every-day shortstop,’’ Girardi said.

The numbers paint a picture of what Girardi was talking about. In 2013 Gregorius hit .200 (22-for-110) without a homer or an RBI against lefties. In 2014 he batted .137 (7-for-51) without a homer and three RBIs.

Improvement started in 2015, his first with the Yankees, when Gregorius hit .247 (36-for-146) with a homer and 24 RBIs. That was followed by a .320 (47-for-147) average and four homers and 23 RBIs last year. Entering Saturday, Gregorius was batting .260 (34-for-131) with three homers and 14 RBIs against lefties.

According to Baseball America, the Yankees have signed Ronny Rojas, a 16-year-old shortstop from the Dominican Republic for a $1 million bonus. That reduces the amount of international pool money the Yankees will have this offseason to chase Shohei Otani if the Hokkaido Nippon Ham Fighters post the two-way star.

Rojas, a 6-foot-1, 170-pound switch-hitter, was rated as the 11th best international prospect by MLB and Baseball America. He wasn’t eligible to sign until turning 16 on Aug. 23.

Clint Frazier went 1-for-4 Friday night for Double-A Trenton against Binghamton in the Eastern League playoffs in which Justus Sheffield and Taylor Widener didn’t allow a hit. Frazier, who is on the big league DL with an oblique injury, entered Saturday night’s action batting .167 (2-for-12) on a minor league rehab assignment.