Shohei Ohtani will play for the Dodgers in Game 3 of the World Series at Yankee Stadium, manager Dave Roberts told ESPN.

Ohtani partially dislocated his left shoulder sliding into second base when he was caught stealing to end the seventh inning of Saturday night’s 4-2 victory in Los Angeles.

But the superstar slugger has been cleared to play Monday, Roberts told ESPN in a text message Sunday. Roberts was set to speak to media at Yankee Stadium later Sunday.

The Dodgers hold a 2-0 lead in the best-of-seven Series and are two wins shy of their second championship in five years.

Roberts said on Saturday night that Ohtani “had a little left shoulder subluxation” and would get image testing either Saturday night or Sunday.

Ohtani clutched his left forearm after being tagged by shortstop Anthony Volpe for the final out in the seventh on a feetfirst slide. He laid near the bag for a couple minutes before being tended to by trainers and leaving the field.

Roberts said after the game he was encouraged that Ohtani had good strength and range of motion in the shoulder, but the team needed to see the results of his scans before knowing his status.

The Japanese slugger — and presumptive NL MVP — was 0 for 3 with a walk in Game 2. He’s 1 for 8 in the first two games of the Fall Classic and is batting .260 with three home runs and 10 RBIs in his first postseason in the majors.

Ohtani had been one of the few players on the Dodgers roster who got through the season without a major injury. The pitching staff has been beset by injuries, with nearly every member of the starting rotation spending time on the injured list.

Ohani hasn’t pitched this year but became the first MLB player with at least 50 homers and 50 stolen bases in a season.

Boone on defense: Aaron Boone has one regret about his pitching decisions during Game 1 of the Series on Friday night.

It’s not the one Yankees fans would think.

With a night to ponder what went wrong in the 6-3 loss to the Dodgers in 10 innings, the Yankees manager said before a Game 2 loss Saturday that he still would have put Nestor Cortes into a high-leverage situation with one out in the 10th inning despite not pitching since Sept. 18. Cortes gave up a walk-off grand slam to Freddie Freeman in his first appearance in over a month.

What Boone would have done differently, though, is he would have had Luke Weaver go longer.

“I have no problem with Nestor. Even after the fact, I feel like that was the right move with one out,” Boone said. “The thing is, do I send (Weaver) back out there for the third up?’ ”

Weaver, the Yankees’ best reliever in the postseason, retired all five hitters he faced in 1 2/3 innings. The right-hander came in with one out in the eighth and Ohtani on third. A sac fly by Mookie Betts brought in Ohtani to tie it at 2.

Jake Cousins replaced Weaver in the 10th. Cousins got Will Smith to fly out but walked Gavin Lux and gave up an infield single to Tommy Edman. That’s when Boone went to Cortes.