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In another injury blow for the Nationals, manager Manny Acta revealed after Tuesday's game that left-handed starter Odalis Perez left the Nationals' 6-1 loss to St. Louis after only three innings because of tendinitis in his left shoulder. Acta said Perez will miss his next start because of the injury, and Acta didn't name a possible replacement starter."It's like something burning," Perez said, describing the pain that he said has been bothering him for three to four starts.Perez said Tuesday that he simply couldn't go on after the third inning, and he told Acta he needed to come out of the game. Jesus Colome came on in relief just before the first of two lengthy rain delays."I've been battling, but today, I couldn't hold it," Perez said. The southpaw added that a team doctor confirmed that it was only tendinitis, saying that he felt no discomfort while the doctor was running other tests on the arm and shoulder.Acta first revealed the injury, saying it had not bothered Perez to the point where he couldn't pitch until tonight."Maybe three starts ago or something [it bothered him] ... but it wasn't anything serious that night," Acta said.Perez has been one of the veteran anchors of the Nationals' pitching staff this year, though his numbers haven't been as impressive as some of his younger counterparts in the rotation. The Opening Night starter is 2-5 with a 4.09 ERA.Perez and Acta both originally said the lefty would miss his next start. However, Perez backed off that comment later, saying he would see how his shoulder responds to treatment."I don't know," Perez said. "We'll see how it reacts on Thursday or Friday."
This is what happens when your hurt and you continue to tell yourself your not or your thrown out there: crappy play and losses. Jesus, I wish this team would stop doing that.
Often, a good player playing through pain (Pujols, for example, who needs Tommy John surgery) is better than a healthy backup. Even at well less than 100%, he's better than anything else they've got.
I'm pretty out of the loop - where'd you hear that?
I agree, but that's the major league baseball culture, nothing unique to Washington. Every player is playing with aches and pains, strains or other minor injuries pretty much all the time. It's hard to know exactly when that injury is really degrading performance enough to be hurting the team.Often, a good player playing through pain (Pujols, for example, who needs Tommy John surgery) is better than a healthy backup. Even at well less than 100%, he's better than anything else they've got.
Looks like Tyler Clippard will be the pitcher in Perez's place Sunday. He only pitched two quick innings tonight in anticipation of him being called up for a Sunday start.
If maybe these guys approached a trainer or conditioner (like we have those right?) when that pain FIRST hits rather than waiting three to four weeks (or years in the case of Hill) to see if it gets better, then maybe that pain wouldn't develop into a DL stint. I mean, who are these players? Do they all have the knowledge and experience to diagnosis themselves?