Now Available for 2012


THT Essentials:

Now Available



The Hardball Times Baseball Annual 2012, an annual "must buy" for all baseball fans, is now shipping. Read this article to learn more about it.

  • Finished in the semifinals (40 tms) at the Tulane baseball arbitration competition. Congrats to the winners (Feb 10)

  • Off to Tulane for moot MLB arbitration competition. Wish me luck! (Feb 07)

  • @StevesMcKee the founders beer that gets released next week (Feb 07)

Follow our quick-hitting updates each day on Twitter.

And here's the full roster.


Most Recent Comments


Dish TV Packages options for all televised baseball games.

Monthly Archives


Sports Tickets

Gear up for baseball season with Chicago White Sox tickets and New York Yankees tickets. LA Angels tickets, Houston Astros tickets, and Atlanta Braves tickets are hot sellers! You can get Boston Red Sox tickets, San Diego Padres tickets or Chicago Cubs tickets for your favorite baseball fan. Coast to Coast Tickets has the best MLB tickets like Minnesota Twins tickets, LA Dodgers tickets, Milwaukee Brewers tickets, New York Met tickets and St. Louis Cardinals tickets.
Championship Tickets






Creative Commons License
All content on this site (including text, graphs, and any other original works), unless otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons License.

Part of the USA Today Sports Media Group

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Big-name closers dealing with injuries

Posted by Chris Neault at 12:42am

Carlos Marmol suffered a mild left knee sprain last Friday night after delivering a pitch to Albert Pujols. He then felt more pronounced pain on a 1-1 offering to Ryan Ludwick, coming up limping after apparently twisting awkwardly on his follow-through on the planting leg. The Cubs training staff did a great job here by not allowing Marmol to continue, as this is the type of injury that could easily go from a mild, grade I strain to a more serious injury in no time.

The MRI came back showing only a grade I sprain, and nothing more. More importantly, Marmol is feeling fine now, and he was able to throw a pain-free bullpen session today. He is going to be available to pitch on Tuesday. This is nothing for fantasy owners to worry about going forward. With Kevin Gregg currently in the doghouse, Marmol seems to be entrenched as the closer for the Cubs. It was ridiculous for Lou Piniella to tab Gregg as the closer at the beginning of the season, when Marmol was clearly the better pitcher. Place Marmol back in your lineup with confidence.

Trevor Hoffman was activated on Sunday, after spending time on the DL since March 30 with an oblique strain. When I think of Hoffman, I can't help but think of Troy Percival. Other than their proximity in age, these are two guys who are going to be injury prone for the rest of their careers. With Hoffman back in the closer's seat, Carlos Villanueva shifts back to a setup role, and makes for a fine addition in leagues that count holds. In Yahoo leagues, Villanueva has dual eligibility (SP/RP). Hoffman owners may want to keep him on speed dial, if not on their roster.

Jose Valverde's strained right calf is going to keep him out at least through mid-week, as he aggravated the injury on Sunday after pushing off to run towards first base on a grounder. He had already been out of action from last Wednesday through Friday. The fact that his injury was aggravated without much activity, and that he has what is called "pitting edema" in his lower leg (i.e. moderate swelling that leaves an indentation in the skin when pressed) indicates that it was probably a grade 2 strain. He is still limping quite noticeably, so the prospects of having him ready by Friday are poor. The Astros are trying to avoid placing him on the DL, but I wouldn't bet on a return this week, so I would say he is probably 70 percent likely to hit the DL. Latroy Hakwins is the de facto closer in his absence. You've got to be pretty desperate for saves if you want to add Hawkins.

Joakim Soria is going to be treated with kid gloves, so if there is any hint that he isn't right by the end of the week, he probably will be sent to the DL. He is clearly the most valuable pitcher in their bullpen, if not their entire staff, so don't be surprised if he doesn't return this week. He has been dealing with a sore, stiff right shoulder. As we have learned, this type of nomenclature can be misleading. This phrase has been used in situations where the injury ended up being a rotator cuff tear, labrum tear, tendonitis, and more, so you never know.

An encouraging sign was that Soria threw 30-35 easy throws yesterday in a bullpen session on flat ground, without pain, but it was well under maximal effort. If the Royals were overly concerned, or if there was something more serious going on, he would not have been allowed to even pick up a ball. This tells me that there is probably no rotator cuff or labral tear to worry about here. This could be a situation similar to what Matt Lindstrom dealt with earlier this spring. With Soria likely to be out until the weekend at the earliest, Juan Cruz and Kyle Farnsworth are the options to close out games. Cruz is the one I would target, and the better pitcher overall for the job.

Send all injury-related questions or comments to .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)



Comments

Mark said...

This may have broken just after you finished this article, but it’s worth mentioning that Brad Lidge was unavailable last night due to a problem with his knee (yes, the same one that he’s had surgery on), and Ryan Madson finished the game for the save.

I drafted Heath Bell and Brandon Lyon, and currently I’ve got Bell, Corpas, Juan Cruz, and Ryan Madson. I got a save out of Villaneuva before Hoffman came back. I’m mid-pack in saves so far…..it bears repeating, you don’t have to overpay for saves.

Posted 04/28  at  09:37 AM
Chris said...

Yes, it broke after I wrote this up, but I did put a brief post up over at my DL Informer site early this morning. It was predictable that Lidge would have some form of knee irritation at some point. Actually, I’m surprised it didn’t happen sooner! Hopefully, this isn’t a chondral defect causing the inflammation…

Posted 04/28  at  09:41 AM
cpass said...

The Royals already said that Soria’s MRI was clean, no structural damage, no tear to the labrum or rotator cuff.  Considering that at first they said he wouldn’t pick up a ball for three days, then let him throw (at his own suggestion) on Sunday after all, I think they’re just being extra cautious.  Hillman’s not known for his forthcomingness (is that a word?) and is likely to keep his mouth shut so that other teams can sit and stew about whether they might see him from one night to the next.

Posted 04/28  at  10:14 AM
Page 1 of 1

Leave a comment:

Name (required):

Email (required):

URL:

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?



     Next Post:  When the wisdom of crowds is wrong>> <<Previous Post:  Roster Doctor: 4/27/09