Stamford Advocate

Mets ace deGrom gets shut down for two more weeks

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NEW YORK — Jacob deGrom’s path to pitching again this season just added another roadblock.

DeGrom completed his two-week shutdown from throwing and underwent his scheduled follow-up MRI on his elbow inflammati­on. Then he flew crosscount­ry to see surgeon Neal ElAttrache, one of the nation’s top orthopedis­ts and the head team doctor for the Dodgers, to receive a second opinion.

On Thursday, ElAttrache told deGrom he should not pick up a ball for another two weeks, making the possibilit­y of him pitching again for the Mets this season more unlikely.

“He is frustrated,” said Mets manager Luis Rojas. “He wants to get back in there, he wants to pitch. But he wants to get all these things out of the way. He trusts our doctors’ opinions.”

The Mets ace will undergo another MRI at the end of the month — following 14 more days of being shut down from any baseball activity — and continue to be reassessed to determine whether he can begin ramping up again.

The silver lining for the two-time Cy Young award winner is that there is no ligament damage in his elbow. Mets manager Luis Rojas said: “It’s strictly

inflammati­on. That’s what the MRI showed the first time. It’s less of that now. That’s what I’ve been told.”

DeGrom last started for the Mets on July 7 against the Brewers. Though he stayed active over the AllStar break, played catch, and intended to make his next start later that month in Pittsburgh, the inflammati­on in his elbow abruptly stopped his throwing and workload. Now, the Mets are not sure how much time deGrom will need to ramp back up — he already hasn’t competed in five weeks — and depending on where the team is positioned in the

NL East standings in two weeks, it may make more sense to let deGrom rest up for the 2022 season.

The Mets on Friday entered a tough break in their schedule — opening 13 straight games against NL West titans in the Dodgers and Giants — which will paint a better picture of where they stand come September. The Mets’ biggest ally in their postseason push continues to be the mediocre NL East. Their best chance to qualify for October baseball is to win the division and of course, a lot can change in the remaining seven weeks on the 2021 schedule. The Mets entered Friday in second place, a half-game behind the Phillies.

The best-case scenario for the Mets is now likely a healthy deGrom in the playoffs. The team is expected to be cautious with his ramp up - if he is cleared to throw again around the end of the month. Since the Mets maintain they do not know what caused the elbow inflammati­on, it’s possible, if not likely, that throwing again will reaggravat­e it.

DeGrom went on the injured list with the best ERA (1.08) in MLB across 15 starts and 92 innings. He was on his way to his third Cy Young award in four years — striking out 146 batters, posting an otherworld­ly 0.554 WHIP — and this year, even racking up seven wins.

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