The Morning Call

Hoskins out 4-6 months following elbow surgery

- By Scott Lauber

When Rhys Ho skin store ali gamen tin his left elbow last month, the Phillies’ doctors warned that he might need surgery even though the injury occurred in his non-throwing arm.

But the first baseman hoped it wouldn’t be necessary.

Ultimately, Hoskins went through with it, undergoing a repair of the ulnar collateral ligament last Friday. The projected recovery time is four to six months, the team announced, with the longer timetable taking Hoskins to Opening Day on April 1 at Citizens Bank Park.

“Any time you can avoid going under the knife, you want to,” Hoskins said a few weeks ago. “But we’ll have to decide, with the help of the medical team, whether or not the elbow is strong enough where I’m not compensati­ng other places within the swing. If it’s not, then I believe surgery is still on the table.”

Hoskins was injured when he tried to tag the Marlins’ Corey Dickerson in a Sept. 12 game in Miami. He sustained what he described as a small “gap” in the ligament and spent the last two weeks of the season on the injured list. The procedure was not a full reconstruc

tion, so Hoskins’ recovery time is expected to be shorter than it would be for Tommy John surgery.

Phillies shortstop Didi Gregorius had Tommy John surgery on his throwing elbow after the 2018 season with the New York Yankees and made it back in seven months.

During the final series at Tampa Bay, Hoskins took light swings in the batting cage to determine the strength of his grip. The decision to have surgery, performed by Phillies head team physician Steven Cohen, was an indication that Hoskins’ strength didn’t adequately return.

Hoskins’ injury came at the worst possible time. Not only were the Phillies in a playoff race, but Hoskins was their hottest hitter, slugging .622 with 10 homers in his final 25 games.

Hoskins said last month that doctors initially suggested he could return within four months.

“I was told that, because it’s non-throwing, it’s not as long as a normal elbow-surgery recovery time,” Hoskins said. “I was told about three to four months is the usual time, so I believe that puts me right at spring training, maybe a little bit before. So I don’t think anything in terms of next year would be affected.”

 ?? WILFREDO LEE/AP ?? Phillies Rhys Hoskins puts out Marlins’ Corey Dickerson at first after Starling Marte lined out into a double play.
WILFREDO LEE/AP Phillies Rhys Hoskins puts out Marlins’ Corey Dickerson at first after Starling Marte lined out into a double play.

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