New York Post

Jake gets cleared to throw again

- By GREG JOYCE

Jacob deGrom has taken the first small step toward potentiall­y pitching again this season.

For the first time in nearly a month, deGrom played catch on Wednesday afternoon at Citi Field, after the MRI exam he underwent earlier in the day showed enough improvemen­t in his elbow to resume throwing.

Manager Luis Rojas said he did not know the details of the MRI — whether deGrom’s elbow inflammati­on had completely cleared or just subsided enough to get the green light — but called it “great news.”

“We’ll see where we go from here,”

Rojas said before the Mets hosted the Giants. “There’s not a progressio­n mapped out yet for how things are going to keep going. But at least getting to play catch today, that’s great news for us.”

The Mets ace had been shut down for four weeks after previous MRIs showed inflammati­on in his elbow. He last pitched on July 7, and still faces a sizable progressio­n to build back up. He cannot come off the 60-day injured list until Sept. 13, and almost certainly won’t be back right away once he’s eligible.

But Wednesday’s events offered the first glimmer of hope that deGrom could still make it back before the regular season ends on Oct. 3.

Even if he is able to return, it remains to be seen whether deGrom will be pitching in meaningful games. The Mets are seven games back of the Braves for first place in the NL East.

“It’ll be huge to have him at the end,” Rojas said. “We gotta start playing better baseball, especially if our offense starts clicking. To see Jake late in the season, probably at a perfect point of the season where we’re closing the gap or facing our division rivals, it would be ideal.”

DeGrom’s last MRI exam before Wednesday, two weeks ago, showed the inflammati­on had subsided some, but not enough to give him the green light to begin a throwing program. Acting general manager Zack Scott said Tuesday the Mets needed to see “continued improvemen­t” in Wednesday’s MRI exam in order for deGrom to be cleared.

There are still plenty of hurdles for deGrom to clear as he embarks on a progressio­n that includes extending the distance from which he throws on flat ground to throwing off a mound to facing live hitters to getting into potential rehab games.

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JACOB DEGROM

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