Posted on June 10, 2008 at 8:06 AM
Filed Under:
Baseball
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Cincinnati Reds
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St. Louis Cardinals
I was off the Net, as it were, yesterday, so I had to do a double take when I saw the
thread title at CCH last night.
Wainwright to the DL? Say it ain't so!
"Surgery is not looking like something that is going to be needed,"
Wainwright said. He added that the finger felt Monday as it did
Saturday: "I can't bend it like I should be able to. It's like a bad
jammed finger. The weird thing is there's no swelling. It needs time."
This does not inspire Cardinal fans with confidence. How many times have we been told that a pitcher or player just "needs rest" and then, three months later, goes under season-ending surgery? With the Cardinals recent track record with injuries, is there anyone that thinks this is just going to be a 15-day thing?
I recently jammed my finger playing softball, so I get some idea what he's talking about. Not having swelling to go with it, though, seems concerning. There's some
talk about it being a ruptured tendon, which would mean the season would be over for the Wagonmaker.
So what does this mean for the Cardinal season? Pitchers are dropping like flies, though it looks like Todd Wellemeyer isn't as bad off as we thought (again, if you believe what you read) and Joel Pineiro could be coming back soon. Matt Clement's second minor league start wasn't as dazzling as the first, but he's still making progress and will pitch in Springfield again Friday.
Short-term, the Cardinals have to fill holes. Mitchell Boggs will make his first major league start tonight and there is talk of moving Kyle McClellan into the starter role. VEB
lays out the problems with that and the only real solution out there. Since Anthony Reyes is sporting a 3.14 ERA in Memphis, skewed by a bad outing two times ago (without that, it's a 2.38 mark) and is striking out a batter an inning, if he doesn't come up during this troubling time, I hope he's traded soon to an organization that will actually use him.
Long-term, catching up with the Cubs without Wainwright might be a tough task, especially if the little bears improve their pitching at the deadline. I like what Bernie is saying about
having the numbers to fill in for injured pitchers, but losing the one guy you could pretty much count on to give you a win is a chore to overcome. The Cards have to do it, though. They sit 2.5 back and right now may be the only serious challenger to the Cubs for the NL Central title. For the good of mankind, they must keep Chicago out of the playoffs!
Cards and Reds square off today with a couple of young pitchers and fresh slates. Obviously, Boggs hasn't faced the Reds before. Homer Bailey, just recalled from AAA (the Reds' version of Anthony Reyes, basically) hasn't seen the Redbirds this year, but had a disastrous outing last year against St. Louis,
allowing 7 runs in just 3.2 innings last July. Ryan Ludwick hit two home runs off of him, so he'll be ready to go for this evening.
Congrats to Ken Griffey Jr. on hitting #600. I didn't realize that the Reds played last night until right before ESPN cut in to his AB. I thought the Cards were going to get a chance to be on the end of both #500 and #600, which would have been neat. The last game I saw in person was Griffey's #500th in Busch and it couldn't happen to a better player.
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