One in, one out.

In a corresponding transaction fitting for the 2019 Yankees, Luke Voit’s return from the injured list Friday came on the same day Gio Urshela went on it with a groin strain. There remain 16 Yankees on the injured list, but the club has now broken the MLB record for players to go on the IL in a single season with 29.

“We are probably a little too used to it, but something that everyone doesn’t flinch at,” manager Aaron Boone said before the Yankees’ 8-2 loss to the Athletics on Friday in The Bronx.

The good news for the Yankees and Urshela is they don’t believe he will be out long, perhaps as short as the minimum 10 days. The third baseman, who has been a revelation as an everyday player this season, experienced tightness in his groin during Wednesday’s win over the Mariners, but an MRI exam on Thursday revealed only a strain and inflammation, he said.

“It’s getting better,” said Urshela, who was hitting .331 with 18 home runs and a 142 OPS+ while replacing the injured Miguel Andujar at the hot corner. “I don’t want to force anything. I don’t want it to get worse.”

DJ LeMahieu will get the “majority” of starts at third base in Urshela’s absence, Boone said. Urshela is eligible to come off the IL on Sept. 8 against the Red Sox and “that’s a real possibility,” according to the manager.

The injured list stint also means Urshela is unlikely to have enough plate appearances to qualify for the batting title. He entered Friday in third place in the AL race — his .331 average trailing LeMahieu (.335) and the Astros’ Michael Brantley (.332) — but he needed 88 plate appearances across the final 27 games to qualify. He said that didn’t bother him.

“It’s more [important to] win games,” Urshela said with a smile.

Voit, meanwhile, was back in the lineup Friday — playing first base and going 2-for-4 while batting sixth — for the first time since July 30, when he left the game and was later diagnosed with a sports hernia. He opted for a cortisone shot and rehab rather than undergoing surgery, which could have knocked him out for the year.

Offseason surgery will be discussed once the Yankees are done playing, Voit said, but for now he was feeling “ready to go.” He went 8-for-17 with two home runs in four rehab games with Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.

LeMahieu and Mike Ford split time at first base in Voit’s absence. Ford has caught fire of late, hitting .417 (10-for-24) with five home runs on the Yankees’ West Coast road trip. He was on the bench Friday, but could still get starts at DH when he’s not giving Voit a breather.

Voit admitted he was not sure the injury wouldn’t flare up again the rest of the season — he originally missed eight games in July with an abdominal strain before missing 28 more in his most recent IL stint — but said rest would be important in maintaining his health.

“Obviously just going to have to see how it goes,” he said. “But the good thing is it’ll be September [with expanded rosters], too, so we’ll have extra guys here if I need an extra off day or something like that. Like I said, it’s going to be a total feel thing. Sometimes I’ll maybe need an extra off day or something like that, but as of right now, I feel good.”

Boone said he will keep in daily communication with Voit and the Yankees’ strength and training staff to make sure the first baseman is bouncing back well and getting days off when he needs them. For now, he was excited to have Voit’s big bat back in the line.

“I’m excited to get him back,” Boone said, “and know he’s in a good place.”