Cape Breton Post

A-rod needs hip surgery, will miss opening day

- BY RONALD BLUM

NASHVILLE — Alex Rodriguez will start the season in what’s become a familiar place: the disabled list.

The New York Yankees said Monday the third baseman will have surgery on his left hip, an injury that could sideline him until the All-Star break and may explain his spectacula­rly poor performanc­e during the playoffs.

“It’s a significan­t blow,” Yankees general manager Brian Cashman said. “But we’ve dealt with significan­t blows and, hopefully, we’ll be able to deal with this one, as well.”

A 14-time All-Star and baseball’s priciest player at $275 million, Rodriguez has a torn labrum, bone impingemen­t and a cyst. He will need four to six weeks of physical therapy to strengthen the hip before surgery, and the team anticipate­s he will be sidelined four to six months after the operation.

This will be Rodriguez’s sixth trip to the disabled list in six seasons. A-Rod had right hip surgery on March 9, 2009, and returned that May 8.

“It is a more complicate­d surgery with a longer recovery time because there is a little bit more that needs to be done,” Cashman said, citing the bone impingemen­t. “I don’t think it’s age related. Butt at the same time, the older you are, the slower you’re going to recover regardless. But the bottom line and the message I’ve been receiving is that this is a solvable issue.”

Rodriguez, who turns 38 in July, complained to manager Joe Girardi of a problem with his right hip the night Raul Ibanez pinch hit for him — and hit a tying ninth-inning home run — against Baltimore during Game 3 of the AL division series in October.

He went to New York-Presbyteri­an Hospital’s emergency room and was checked out then.

“Up to this point, there was no complaints of any nature at all from his hip, or anything really,” Cashman said. “At that point Joe went to Alex in the dugout and said, ‘I’m going to pinch hit for you and we’re going to pinch hit Ibanez,’ and Alex said to Joe at that moment, ‘OK,’ he said, ‘I’ve got to talk to you about something. I think my right hip needs to be looked at. I just don’t feel like I’m firing on all cylinders.”’

Cashman said the test on the right hip “was clean” and the left hip was not examined.

“I can tell you if a patient shows up in the emergency room with a complaint, they’re going to focus on where the complaint is, not something else,” he said.

Rodriguez, owed $114 million by New York over the next five years, remained a shell of his former self on the field. He was benched in three of nine postseason games and pinch hit for in three others. He batted .120 (3 for 25) with no RBIs in the playoffs, including 0 for 18 with 12 strikeouts against right-handed pitchers.

A-Rod broke his left hand when he was hit by a pitch from Seattle’s Felix Hernandez on July 24. He returned Sept. 3 and hit .195 with two homers and six RBIs over the final month of the regular season.

Cashman said Rodriguez’s left hip injury was detected last month when he had an annual physical in Colorado with Dr. Marc Philippon, who operated on the right hip 3 1/2 years ago. Rodriguez got a second opinion from Dr. Bryan Kelly of New York’s Hospital for Special Surgery, who will operate on A-Rod next month, and the injury was made public Monday by the New York Post.

Cashman said “they’re not your typical injuries” but wouldn’t speculate whether they are related to steroids use. Rodriguez admitted in 2009 that he used steroids while with the Texas Rangers from 2001-03.

“It doesn’t matter what I wonder,” Cashman said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada