Hartford Courant

Scherzer still only halfway to returning to mound

- By Stefan Bondy

NEW YORK — Max Scherzer’s oblique strain is 90% recovered, but only halfway there.

The expensive ace revealed he received a P4P injection not long after suffering his injury, and the treatment went well enough to begin his tedious climb to the finish line quickly.

“The way to describe this injury and the rehab of this, half of the battle is getting back to 90% and then the second half of this battle is 90% to 100%,” Scherzer said. “With the trainers here we’ve done a good job of getting back to 90% but I’m still fighting the fight here to get back to 100%.”

Confusing math notwithsta­nding, Tuesday’s update was encouragin­g. Scherzer threw in the outfield before the Mets’ game against the Brewers, having returned to the club after rehabbing at home during its 10-game road trip. He’s scheduled to pitch a live batting practice session this week and the ideal scenario, as Scherzer explained, is one rehab start before an MLB return.

But Scherzer was also careful not to put timelines or expectatio­ns on his recovery.

“You just have to keep increasing your workload. You have to be cognizant and very aware of your body from how you stress it and how does it respond. You have to know what’s going on and what is normal and what’s not,” Scherzer said. “The other way I kind of describe it right now is breaking in a new shoe. It doesn’t feel good when you break in a new shoe, but you got to do it. That’s how I kind of feel now. I’m breaking through the scar tissue here of getting back to throwing and bullpens and everything. As you stress it, you’re going to feel different things. But you don’t want it to spiral out of control and have a setback.”

The original recovery timeline of 6-to-8 weeks would have Scherzer back by mid-july. He’s not paying attention to that estimate.

“It means nothing to me. I’m just doing what I can do every single day,” Scherzer said. “Come out here and work, put my work in, whatever I can handle. If I can do it quickly, great. If I do it slower, great. I can only do what I can do.”

Scherzer noted that former Nationals teammate Yan Gomes returned just 19 days after treating the same injury with a PRP injection.

“Actually in a big-league ballgame in 19 days. That’s crazy,” Scherzer said. “I can also see how he did it. If it works for you, it can really work. And I feel like it worked for me and got me back to 90%, the first half of this, pretty fast. I was back out there at 90% really quick. It’s the last 10% here that’s the danger.”

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