Sylvester-Schur says: "if $n \ge 2k$, then there is a number in the list
$n − k + 1, n − k + 2,$ ... $, n$
divisible by a prime $p > k$."

Shouldn't it also be true that if $n \ge k$, then there is a number in the list $n + 1, n + 2, $ ... $, n+k$ divisible by a prime $p > k$.

Does anyone know of a theorem that comes close to establish this or why the stronger claim is not true?

Thanks very much,

-Larry