Re: Articles
Posted: Sun Aug 25, 2019 12:37 pm
Jose Ramirez set for surgery Monday on fractured right hamate bone
Updated 12:05 PM; Today 12:04 PM
By Joe Noga, cleveland.com
CLEVELAND, Ohio — Jose Ramirez will fly to New York and have surgery Monday to remove a fractured hamate bone in his right hand, Cleveland Indians manager Terry Francona announced.
Ramirez suffered the injury during his at bat in the first inning of Saturday’s 4-2 win against Kansas City when he fouled off a 93 mph fastball from Royals starter Glenn Sparkman. Ramirez doubled over in pain after the swing and left the game after talking to Francona and head athletic trainer James Quinlan.
The hamate is a triangular-shaped bone near the wrist which is prone to injury by hitters because the knob of a bat can grind against it. Michael Brantley missed the final month of the season in 2011 with a similar injury. Other notable Tribe sluggers who missed time due to hamate injuries include Jim Thome, Travis Hafner and Carlos Santana.
Francona would not speculate as to whether or not the injury spells the end of Ramirez’s season, but said the club will have a better idea about a timetable for the two-time All-Star’s recovery following the surgery.
“I’m not sure anybody’s ever going to be able to nail it exactly,” Francona said. “But we will have a much better idea after he does the procedure.”
Francona said after Saturday’s game that Ramirez had been dealing with right wrist soreness for a while, but the team was concerned because this injury appeared to be in a different area. He was assured that the previous issue did not lead to the hamate bone fracture.
“Baseball players do this,” Francona said. “The trainers and the doctor, nobody thought it was related.”
Ramirez was batting .254 with 65 runs, 33 doubles, 20 home runs and 75 RBI in 126 games. Following a slow start, Ramirez hit .325 with 21 doubles, two triples, 15 home runs and 47 RBI with a 1.045 OPS in 52 games after June 21. His resurgence at the plate coincided with Cleveland erasing a deficit of 11.5 games in the American League Central, setting up a race for the division against Minnesota down the stretch.
Cleveland recalled 24-year-old infielder Yu Chang from Triple-A Columbus to take Ramirez’s spot on the 25-man roster. Chang has spent most of the season on the Clippers’ roster, batting .253 with 15 doubles, a triple, nine home runs and 39 RBI in 68 games. The native of Taiwan made his major league debut on June 28 in Baltimore when Ramίrez was on the Paternity List.
Francona said Chang and utility infielder Mike Freeman will share time at third, but added that playing time would probably be determined by production rather than a straight platoon.
“We’ll let them know the night before and we’ll try to put two guys out there to try to take Josey’s place,” Francona said. “Freeman’s done everything and more that we could have asked.”
Chang was limited earlier in the season by a finger injury in Columbus, but has shown flashes of power.
“He hit a couple home runs three nights ago," Francona said. “He’d been real streaky. When he gets in a good streak, it’s been really good, and then it’s been the other way, too."
In a season that’s already seen injuries and illness devastate the Indians’ starting pitching rotation, Francona said this latest blow is particularly painful. He said the team can choose to feel sorry for itself or rally back and use the injury as a time to shine
“I would choose No. 2,” Francona said. “I’m aware that it got more difficult. We lost a great player. That doesn’t mean you can’t win, it just makes it a little harder.”
Updated 12:05 PM; Today 12:04 PM
By Joe Noga, cleveland.com
CLEVELAND, Ohio — Jose Ramirez will fly to New York and have surgery Monday to remove a fractured hamate bone in his right hand, Cleveland Indians manager Terry Francona announced.
Ramirez suffered the injury during his at bat in the first inning of Saturday’s 4-2 win against Kansas City when he fouled off a 93 mph fastball from Royals starter Glenn Sparkman. Ramirez doubled over in pain after the swing and left the game after talking to Francona and head athletic trainer James Quinlan.
The hamate is a triangular-shaped bone near the wrist which is prone to injury by hitters because the knob of a bat can grind against it. Michael Brantley missed the final month of the season in 2011 with a similar injury. Other notable Tribe sluggers who missed time due to hamate injuries include Jim Thome, Travis Hafner and Carlos Santana.
Francona would not speculate as to whether or not the injury spells the end of Ramirez’s season, but said the club will have a better idea about a timetable for the two-time All-Star’s recovery following the surgery.
“I’m not sure anybody’s ever going to be able to nail it exactly,” Francona said. “But we will have a much better idea after he does the procedure.”
Francona said after Saturday’s game that Ramirez had been dealing with right wrist soreness for a while, but the team was concerned because this injury appeared to be in a different area. He was assured that the previous issue did not lead to the hamate bone fracture.
“Baseball players do this,” Francona said. “The trainers and the doctor, nobody thought it was related.”
Ramirez was batting .254 with 65 runs, 33 doubles, 20 home runs and 75 RBI in 126 games. Following a slow start, Ramirez hit .325 with 21 doubles, two triples, 15 home runs and 47 RBI with a 1.045 OPS in 52 games after June 21. His resurgence at the plate coincided with Cleveland erasing a deficit of 11.5 games in the American League Central, setting up a race for the division against Minnesota down the stretch.
Cleveland recalled 24-year-old infielder Yu Chang from Triple-A Columbus to take Ramirez’s spot on the 25-man roster. Chang has spent most of the season on the Clippers’ roster, batting .253 with 15 doubles, a triple, nine home runs and 39 RBI in 68 games. The native of Taiwan made his major league debut on June 28 in Baltimore when Ramίrez was on the Paternity List.
Francona said Chang and utility infielder Mike Freeman will share time at third, but added that playing time would probably be determined by production rather than a straight platoon.
“We’ll let them know the night before and we’ll try to put two guys out there to try to take Josey’s place,” Francona said. “Freeman’s done everything and more that we could have asked.”
Chang was limited earlier in the season by a finger injury in Columbus, but has shown flashes of power.
“He hit a couple home runs three nights ago," Francona said. “He’d been real streaky. When he gets in a good streak, it’s been really good, and then it’s been the other way, too."
In a season that’s already seen injuries and illness devastate the Indians’ starting pitching rotation, Francona said this latest blow is particularly painful. He said the team can choose to feel sorry for itself or rally back and use the injury as a time to shine
“I would choose No. 2,” Francona said. “I’m aware that it got more difficult. We lost a great player. That doesn’t mean you can’t win, it just makes it a little harder.”