Orlando Sentinel

Strasburg blames ASG for DL stint

- By Chelsea Janes

WASHINGTON — Stephen Strasburg had floated the theory many times before. He always thought the nerve impingemen­t that sent him to the disabled list in late July resulted from a breach in his routine perpetrate­d by his trip to the All-Star Game in Miami.

“Might have to rethink about if I’m going to actually pitch or not pitch in an all-star game, whether I’ll actually go all together,” Strasburg said at the Nationals’ WinterFest Sunday. “That was the issue I felt like was the reason why I got hurt. I was on such a good program with the training staff and massage therapists — I was in this routine. Then all of a sudden you’re asked to throw, potentiall­y pitch — maybe not — but not have any access or ability to really stick to your routine.

“Once that’s over, it’s like right back into it. Bullpen, day off, game. I just know that little lapse, for whatever reason, it pushed me back a bit. It started making my arm hurt.”

Strasburg held opposing hitters to a .211 batting average in the first half of the season, earning an all-star nod for the second straight year. He was selected to the 2016 MLB All-Star Game in his hometown of San Diego, but chose not to pitch, though he made the trip. Last year, Strasburg made himself available for the game in Miami despite some reservatio­ns, and though surrenderi­ng a spot might have allowed Gio Gonzalez to take the trip to his hometown.

Strasburg did not pitch, in the end. He felt discomfort in his first start after the break, in which he allowed one run in seven innings to the Cincinnati Reds. He left his next start after two innings, and landed on the disabled list shortly thereafter for what the team insisted were precaution­ary reasons — and ultimately seemed to be so.

“My arm felt good before that, then it was like after (the all-star game), it just didn’t feel right. I’m glad at that point I kind of tried to put my pride aside and say, hey, I want to be there in the end,” Strasburg said. “So we just had to get it right. No point in pushing through it. I’m glad it worked out that way.”

Strasburg returned to throw 35 consecutiv­e scoreless innings and dominate in two playoff starts, most notably his seven scoreless innings in Game 4 of the National League Division Series. After spending the 2015 and 2016 seasons shuffling on and off the disabled list with a variety of injuries, Strasburg entered last offseason prioritizi­ng longevity — as well as October. He inserted more long distance running into his offseason program, working on stamina rather than just raw strength, and intends to keep running on the beaches of San Diego all winter, as he did last year.

Strasburg pitched from the stretch all season, something he says he intends to do again, in part because of its effects on his mechanics, in part because he believes hitters had a tougher time picking up pitches and timing when he did.

The strange all-star experience could become a prominent narrative next summer, when the MLB All-Star Game is at Nationals Park. Strasburg and Max Scherzer, two of the three Cy Young finalists, will be the sentimenta­l favorites to start the game.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States