Hartford Courant (Sunday)

$20M for 7 at-bats: Lowrie’s mysterious tenure reaches an end

- By Deesha Thosar

NEW YORK — Jed Lowrie’s tenure with the Mets ended not with a bang or whimper, but with a disappeari­ng act.

The Mets infielder, who will go down in history as one of Brodie Van Wagenen’s nausea-inducing signings, has not been around the Mets or participat­ed in any baseball activities since July’s training camp. When manager Luis Rojas was asked about Lowrie’s whereabout­s, the skipper consistent­ly said, “I don’t know what he’s doing.”

To Rojas’ understand­ing, Lowrie was scheduled to receive a series of injections for the PCL laxity he was diagnosed with back in July. (Though, he’s formally listed with “left knee discomfort” in the Mets’ records.) The PCL laxity was the first official diagnosis the public received on Lowrie’s knee issues dating to February 2019.

“I hope he can get back to being the best player he’s been,” Van Wagenen said on Friday. “I was disappoint­ed we weren’t able to do that together.”

Lowrie, 36, signed a two-year, $20 million contract with the Mets before the 2019 season. He went hitless in seven at-bats over nine games last year.

The Mets were a week into their 60-game season when they received the diagnosis on Lowrie — who has not played in a game this year — and Van Wagenen, at that point, still anticipate­d the veteran infielder would help the team.

“We expect him to contribute,” Van Wagenen said in July. Three days later, he was transferre­d to the 45-day injured list to make room on the Mets roster.

“I know Jed is a very hard worker; he’s obviously talented,” Van Wagenen said before the Mets’ 15-2 blowout loss to the Braves. “We’ve seen that throughout the course of his career and we even saw that in summer camp when he had the bat in his hand.

“It’s frustratin­g he wasn’t able to perform for his own goals, it’s frustratin­g he wasn’t able to perform for us and our investment in him. I know that he could have helped us as a player.”

The team’s comments on Lowrie routinely contrasted the infielder’s own actions –— which included terse nonanswers to the public on his knee injury and lengthy absences from the team.

Lowrie first griped about his knee discomfort, which the Mets originally referred to as a “left knee capsule sprain,” in his first spring training with the Mets in 2019. He rehabbed through the 2019 season and appeared ready to join the club in May, after playing six games for Triple-A Syracuse, but suffered another setback due to a left hamstring strain and was forced to start from scratch. He again rehabbed in the minors in August before joining the big-league roster for the first time in early September. He hasn’t appeared in a majorleagu­e game since.

He participat­ed in both training camps this year with a moderate improvemen­t in terms of baseball activity (running, fielding, hitting) this past summer. Lowrie couldn’t work out without donning a bulky black brace that stretched from his left ankle to thigh. It seemed like the infielder was set to play in the shortened season, but for the

second straight year, he was not able to go by Opening Day due to injury.

 ?? KATHY WILLENS/AP ?? Wearing a brace on his left leg, Mets infielder Jed Lowrie, left, reacts after an at-bat during a summer training camp simulated game July 7 in New York.
KATHY WILLENS/AP Wearing a brace on his left leg, Mets infielder Jed Lowrie, left, reacts after an at-bat during a summer training camp simulated game July 7 in New York.

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