The Palm Beach Post

Life after ‘3 1/2’ Tommy Johns

Former Braves pitcher Jonny Venters returns to majors after more than five seasons away.

- By David O’Brien Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on

He didn’t pitch in a major league game for more than 5 ½ years, during which former Braves reliever Jonny Venters endured three elbow surgeries and untold thousands of hours of grueling rehabilita­tion.

At times he wondered if he’d make it back, if he should keep trying or just get on with whatever he was going to do after pitching, along with being a husband to the woman who stood by him throughout his saga and a father to their three children, two of whom were born during his rehab years.

If any other athlete comes up to Venters and says they know what it was like, they are almost certainly exaggerati­ng. Because the number of pitchers who came back to pitch in the majors after three Tommy John surgeries can be counted on the fingers of one hand — with digits to spare.

But Venters, who many believe was the best lefthanded reliever in baseball for a couple of years at the beginning of this decade, didn’t come back from just three TJ ligament-replacemen­t surgeries, he came back from “3½.”

The “half-Tommy John” surgery, as it’s become known, was the last procedure he had Sept. 16, 2016, when Dr. Neal ElAttrache addressed another torn ulnar collateral ligament but did a procedure to … well, let’s let Venters explain.

“Dr. ElAttrache did not want to do another Tommy John, I guess because the bone had been drilled so many times previously that he felt doing another Tommy John would really compromise the bone and I guess be more susceptibl­e for a break or something like that,” said Venters, who had Tommy John procedures performed by Dr. James Andrews in 2005 (when he was a Braves minor leaguer) and 2013 and by ElAttrache in 2014.

“So he really was adamant that he did not want to do that (fourth TJ surgery). And he presented me with this other idea. At that point I wasn’t sure if I was going to do anything (have another surgery),” Venters said. “As long as I could play catch with my kids at that point. And then he said that this procedure was a little less invasive, a little shorter rehab. It piqued my interest, I took some time, spoke to my family and my agent, the Rays, and decided to do it.”

His wife, Viviana, was all for it if that’s what Venters wanted. His agent, B.B. Abbott (a lifelong friend of Chipper Jones and the Hall of Famer’s agent) talked it over with Venters.

Venters made the decision to have the procedure, and before much longer he decided he’d continue his epic journey

“I didn’t go at it full-bore at the beginning. I started playing catch at the house, I wanted to see how it felt before I made the decision,” Venters said. “The Rays were with me the whole time, we talked a whole lot and I decided to make another run at it.”

Venters, who turned 33 during spring training, had a good camp with the Rays and made five appearance­s at Triple-A Durham before getting the call he didn’t know if he’d ever get again. He was brought up by the Rays on April 25 at Baltimore and recorded an out that night in his first major league appearance in more than 2,000 days.

Entering last week’s series opener against the Braves — “It’s going to be emotional,” he said — Venters had three appearance­s with one hit and one walk (intentiona­l) in 2⅓ scoreless innings. His stuff isn’t quite what it once was, but it’s still good enough — low-90s sinkers now, topping out at 94 and not as dramatical­ly diving as the 97-mph “turbo sinkers” he threw back in his peak years with the Braves, which some hitters said was like trying to hit a bowling ball.

Venters pitched an efficient and perfect ninth inning with three groundouts in a 1-0 loss to the Braves.

Before being called up April 25, his last major league appearance was Oct. 12, 2012, when he pitched two-thirds of a scoreless inning in the Braves’ Wild Card game loss to the Cardinals.

His elbow had throbbed for much of that season, but Venters still managed to pitch effectivel­y, posting a 3.22 ERA in 66 appearance­s with 69 strikeouts in 58⅔ innings despite a stint on the disabled list.

That’d be a really good season for most relievers, but few have experience­d the dizzying heights that Venters reached in 2010 and 2011 when he was part of the “O’Ventbrel” relief trio — Venters and Eric O’Flaherty setting up Craig Kimbrel — that was as good as any the majors had seen in the past quarter-century.

In that two-year span Venters was astonishin­gly good, posting a 1.89 ERA in a whopping 164 appearance­s — including a league-leading 85 appearance­s in 2011 — while limiting batters to a .190 average and .530 OPS and recording 189 strikeouts in 171 innings.

After his ulnar collateral wore down in 2012 and popped the following spring, Venters had his second Tommy John surgery. He missed the entire 2013 season, signed with the Rays and missed the next two seasons after another TJ surgery in 2014. Three full seasons of no pitching whatsoever, not even in a minor league game.

“There was days where I wondered if I was wasting my time and if this was possible,” Venters said. “I tried to go in the training room and get my work done, try to put it out of my mind and just push through it every day, see what happens.

“I had an amazing support system. The Rays were always there with me, my family was always there, my agent. I had a wonderful support system that made those things easier on me. It was a crazy journey but so far, so good. It’s worked out.”

 ?? MITCHELL LAYTON / GETTY IMAGES ?? Jonny Venters was brought up by the Rays on April 25 at Baltimore and recorded an out in his first major league appearance in more than 2,000 days.
MITCHELL LAYTON / GETTY IMAGES Jonny Venters was brought up by the Rays on April 25 at Baltimore and recorded an out in his first major league appearance in more than 2,000 days.

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