Los Angeles Times

Pujols has surgery on his right foot

- By Pedro Moura pedro.moura@latimes.com Twitter: @pedromoura

Angels designated hitter Albert Pujols underwent surgery on his right plantar fascia Friday, after a conservati­ve approach to his painful injury failed to produce positive results.

The tense ligament bothered him for much of the year, but particular­ly after August, when he wore orthotics that had not been broken in appropriat­ely. On the tough, deep infield at Toronto’s Rogers Centre, his foot began to radiate pain.

Pujols underwent shockwave therapy Sept. 29 and sat out the final week of the season. He insisted he would not need subsequent surgery, and in November, the Angels’ general manager, Billy Eppler, said the same.

“But as some time went on, it didn’t take,” Eppler said Friday. “It didn’t remedy any of the discomfort he was feeling. His pain was getting progressiv­ely worse.”

So Pujols saw Dr. Robert Anderson, an orthopedic surgeon based in North Carolina, who recommende­d surgery. Pujols and the Angels opted for that over the alternativ­e: another 10 weeks of waiting on another non-surgical route.

Taking care to note he was speaking in generaliti­es, Eppler said it typically takes three months after this surgery before a patient can resume training for baseball, and another month to play.

Opening day for 2017 is four months from Saturday.

Pujols is using crutches now.

After Anderson performed a similar operation on him in November 2015 and put his opening-day availabili­ty into question, Pujols repeatedly lamented his lack of a normal off-season. He said it contribute­d to his slow start to 2016, which he concluded with a .268 average, 31 home runs, and 119 runs batted in while playing little first base. He had a .780 on-base-plus-slugging percentage, nearly 200 points below his career standard.

Pujols has been bothered by plantar fasciitis for several seasons. He ripped the ligament in his left foot in 2013 and sat out two months.

He’ll turn 37 in January. The Angels owe him $140 million over the next five years.

Short hops

The Angels have agreed to a minor league contract with left-hander John Lamb, a 26-year-old Laguna Hills High graduate who was once one of baseball’s top prospects. They also agreed to sign former No. 4 overall draft pick Tony Sanchez ,a catcher, to a minor league deal this week.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States