USA TODAY US Edition

MLB’s injury epidemic cause elusive

- Gabe Lacques

Jack Flaherty and Fernando Tatis Jr. very well could have won – maybe still will win – the National League Cy Young and MVP awards, respective­ly.

Yet in a span of less than 24 hours, the Cardinals ace and Padres shortstop suffered oblique injuries, the latest stars succumbing to what can only be described as an unstoppabl­e epidemic in MLB.

Flaherty tore his oblique muscle during a Monday start at Dodger Stadium; his absence will be measured in months, not weeks.

Tatis, 23, was removed with oblique tightness one night later and the cautious maneuver left San Diego manager Jayce Tingler “optimistic we caught it before things got bad.”

Tatis has already made two trips to the injured list, due to a shoulder injury, but looks to have dodged a bullet in joining dozens of others to suffer a soft tissue injury – pulls, strains or tears of the hamstring, oblique quadriceps or groin – ravaging MLB one year after a pandemic-shortened season.

Through May, there were 104 soft tissue injuries that resulted in stints on the IL, a 160% increase over the 48 after two months in 2019, according to Stan Conte, the former trainer for the Dodgers and Giants who now operates Conte Sport Performanc­e Therapy in Arizona and consults for multiple MLB franchises and the league office.

Hamstrings are going haywire: Already the most common injury in baseball, they are up 193% since 2019, with 47 IL stints compared to 16 through May 2021.

Adductors are in disarray – there have been 16 groin-related IL trips, compared to two in 2019’s first two months.

And oblique strains and tears are up 83%, from 12 after two months of 2019 to 22 in 2021.

Tatis, who may avoid the IL, and Flaherty are the stars of a group waylaid by the set of core muscles that are so pivotal to a ballplayer’s rotation, be it a batter’s swing or a pitcher’s delivery. Key pieces of other clubs – including Cleveland’s Franmil Reyes, the Yankees’ Luke Voit, Arizona’s Christian Walker and Kansas City shortstop Adalberto Mondesi – have or will be sidelined longer than a month with oblique injuries.

With four-time American League MVP Mike Trout (calf) out until August and two-time NL Cy Young winner Jacob deGrom having served an injured list stint due to side and back discomfort, it feels like a star a day is succumbing to injury.

Conte assures you your feelings are valid.

“What you’re feeling is what we’re seeing,” he says. “The increase is real. Whether it will smooth out after these two months? We’ve never seen an increase like we’ve seen these past two months. The why is a little bit tougher.”

Why the flood of injuries?

There’s an obvious culprit: A 2020 season that saw players ramp up during spring training in February or March, then return home for four months as the COVID-19 pandemic interceded, followed by an abbreviate­d “summer camp” in July and then a 60-game regular season.

The winter months, presumably, should have provided “some sort of reset” for ballplayer­s, says Conte, though the 12-month rhythms many have lived for more than a decade – physically, mentally, emotionall­y – were undeniably disrupted.

“Clearly, elite athletes know how to condition themselves, but this was unpreceden­ted,” says James Gladstone, head of sports medicine at New York’s Mount Sinai Health System. “The whole last year really threw people off; in part, injuries may be a result of that.

“Obviously you assume that most, if not all, profession­als are using the offseason to recuperate, rejuvenate and rebuild. We’re talking about the physical here. The psyche of pretty much everyone in the world was affected by this COVID pandemic. It’s hard to directly correlate the two sometimes, but I think there’s some kind of connection.

“I wouldn’t be surprised that the whole environmen­t plays a role in it.”

The injury flood is particular­ly curious given how teams regard players as assets, have deeper benches of strength and training coordinato­rs and better technology to monitor it all. Profession­al sports are now a 12-month endeavor, with athletes investing in their own bodies to maintain peak performanc­e and, in the case of baseball, report for spring training finely tuned.

Gladstone does not believe over– training is to blame.

“Certainly, if you’re fatigued, you’re prone to injury,” he says. “But with all the testing and the way they’re looked at and monitored, I think that part can now be controlled a lot better. What may play a role is sometimes muscle conditioni­ng.

“If one muscle (say, a quadriceps) is overdevelo­ped and another (the hamstring, for instance) isn’t as developed, you’re more prone to injury. Mismatches in terms of the muscles that work together or against each other certainly plays a role.”

Load management

Conte was the Giants’ head athletic trainer from 1993 to 2006 and served in similar capacities with the Dodgers from 2006 to 2015. His finger remains on the pulse of high-impact training in the analytics age, and wonders – while clarifying he has no answer – if players are taking too many repetition­s in the batting cages and bullpen mounds, which now double as pitch-design and swingplane laboratori­es.

Injuries are rising at a time load management and frequent days off for core players are front of mind for every franchise.

“They have a hard time defining what workload is,” says Conte. “A hitting coach told me that one thing he saw was the number of swings players take before the game – swinging so much to try to get their swings down, you wonder if they fatigue due to workload prior to game action.

“When people look at workload, they may disregard practice. Are bullpen sessions max-effort pitches or sub-maximal pitches? We’re pretty good about getting the epidemiolo­gy down. There’s lots of great research out there. But the why always eludes.”

It’s not for lack of trying. Teams are constantly tinkering with player routines at spring training, giving players multiple days off in succession or holding stars out of games altogether well into mid-March.

While the oblique remains ever vexing, Conte says the industry has reliable data on the whos and whats of the injury: Hitters suffer 55% of oblique injuries, while 45% are pitchers or due to throwing. More than three-quarters occur on a player’s lead side – the left side of a right-handed hitter or pitcher as they rotate into their pitch or swing. But how to prevent it?

That’s an answer that can’t come soon enough for teams such as the Cardinals.

“It’s going to be a while for it to heal,” St. Louis manager Mike Shildt said in announcing Flaherty’s diagnosis. “Wish I had a crystal ball for that. It’s a real strain, tear, significan­t enough that Jack is going to miss some time.”

Flaherty was off to an 8-1 start with a 2.90 ERA and 1.03 WHIP; hard for the Cardinals to imagine they’d do much differentl­y in hindsight.

If they’re looking for a culprit, Conte has an idea, albeit decidedly unscientif­ic.

“2020,” he says, “is great to blame everything on.”

 ?? GARY A. VASQUEZ/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Jack Flaherty was 8-1 with a 2.90 ERA before being put on the IL.
GARY A. VASQUEZ/ USA TODAY SPORTS Jack Flaherty was 8-1 with a 2.90 ERA before being put on the IL.
 ?? JAY BIGGERSTAF­F/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Royals shortstop Adalberto Mondesi missed this season’s first 45 games because of an oblique strain. In his first seven games back, he was hitting .360 plus had two home runs.
JAY BIGGERSTAF­F/USA TODAY SPORTS Royals shortstop Adalberto Mondesi missed this season’s first 45 games because of an oblique strain. In his first seven games back, he was hitting .360 plus had two home runs.

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