Patton with labrum tear?
http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/baseball/bal-osnotes0220,0,2248999.story
what the hell do the Orioles have to do to climb out of the pathetic mess they have put themselves in after 10 years of poor drafting, bad decisions and overall mismanagement.
the dysfunction continues, as it really sounds like the prize of the Tejada trade is damaged goods, that the "biceps strain" the Astros shut him down with actually turns out to rhyme with "fabrum bear".
Mr. Patton, maybe we'll see you in Camden Yards in 2010.
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WTF?

"Everyone always says 'You don't have to do this.'"
by Jonnypops on Feb 20, 2008 9:11 PM EST reply actions
Ugh
Please, not that!
This ain't good. No matter how good the surgeon, no matter how successful the procedure, his shoulder will never be 100% again.
I'll spare you the stories of my shoulder 'scope, because I'm sure there's a dozen of you that have had worse than me. But as my ortho said, "It will never be the same. It will be close - maybe 90, maybe 95% as good as it was. But it will never be the same."
Thankfully, in my case, that's plenty good enough. I don't wrestle with my wrestlers, so it's not like they're missing anything. No residual pain, it doesn't even tell me when it's gonna rain.
But I'm not paid to throw a baseball, either.
IF it's a torn labrum, and it requires surgery, this ain't good.
How, of all did, did the ORIOLES miss a torn labrum on a guy's physical? I mean, I can't imagine that PGA doesn't order an MRI on the shoulder and elbow of every pitcher the FO even thinks about trading for or drafting and demands to see the films himself. Isn't that what he did with Aaron Sele?
This isn't as bad as the Sox and Schilling (because Patton sure as hell ain't making $8 million with us this year, nor is he the ace of the staff), and after the Mitchell Report, getting anything beyond a bag of balls for Tejada might qualify as a fleece. But if this is true, we sure got a lots less for Miguel than we were slapping ol' Andy on the back for about 2 months ago.
I remember 14 straight foul balls in one at-bat.
physicals
For the Seattle trade, only Jones and Sherrill had a physical. This is quite surprising though given that Angelos is usually anal regarding physicals.
Rocky Cherry, O's pitcher, not John C. McGinley's love child.
One more point
"How all all TEAMS, did the ORIOLES...."
And to think I used to write for a living.
:(
I remember 14 straight foul balls in one at-bat.
FYI, guys
if he was shut down
call the rest of us jaded, or overly pessimistic, or downright Orioles fans, but this just ain't good.
a pitcher CAN pitch with a "flap tear" as Patton alludes to in the article. HOWEVER, in the grand scheme of things, i don't think anyone would prefer the main guy you trade a former MVP for having any kind of tear in the mechanism that allows him to throw 90 MPH.
i was a pitcher in H.S. and college, and let me tell you, once the shoulder starts to disintegrate, you're pretty much screwed. elbows are MUCH MUCH easier to recover from.
by Dave at Bottomfeeder Baseball on Feb 21, 2008 12:30 AM EST up reply actions
Hah!!
Now that is a great motto for us.
by dfleis on Feb 21, 2008 9:28 AM EST up reply actions
According to orioles.com
re:
They can talk all they want about his upside potential being worth the risk. None of us know the extent of the injury, but the O's fan in me expects the worst.
"This is Birdland"
well, yeah
- Someone probably was able to leak to them that the shit was about to hit the fan with him and the Mitchell Report.
- It really wasn't that hard to guess that it would, even if nobody gave them a heads up off the record.
- Tejada wanted to go.
- MacPhail wanted him gone.
- He made no sense for this team.
- The Astros front office and owner have never even heard of steroids, making them the perfect trade partner.

Gone but not forgotten...
by Scott Christ on Feb 21, 2008 9:59 AM EST up reply actions
RE:
by BirdFanInPhilly on Feb 21, 2008 10:17 AM EST up reply actions
LOL...
"Mom! I want to get my picture taken with the bear. Ow! My shoulder"
Some research...
On the bright side...
Jason Schmidt had labrum surgery in 2000. He's had some great seasons since then.
Jose Valverde had labrum surgery and he's had a couple good seasons.
So I wouldn't call it a death sentence for Patton, especially at his age. It's not encouraging for sure, but one would hope that MacPhail knew exactly what he was getting into after reading that article on orioles.com. One could also surmise that we wouldn't have been able to get a pitcher of Patton's quality in a package for Tejada if that pitcher was completely healthy.
RE:
by BirdFanInPhilly on Feb 21, 2008 10:18 AM EST up reply actions
re:
No it's not. Kerry Wood is maybe the stupidest pitcher I have ever seen. "Fuck, that hurts my arm. Let me try again. Fuck, that hurts my arm. Let me try again. Fuck, that hurts my arm. Let me try again. Fuck, that hurts my arm."
I'm not calling the man himself stupid, but as a pitcher, he is a real shit-for-brains.

Gone but not forgotten...
by Scott Christ on Feb 21, 2008 10:29 AM EST up reply actions
It's posts like this...
"Fuck, that hurts my arm. Let me try again..."
I remember 14 straight foul balls in one at-bat.
A couple corrections
2- I'm not sure if what Wood had done was as serious as some of the other major labrum reconstructions, or even as serious as what Mark Prior has had done. Wood's injury was more in the rotator cuff as opposed to the labrum...
3- I think Dusty was pretty set on keeping him in the rotation, regardless of whether he wanted to be or not.. Dusty rode him and Prior pretty hard during his tenure. I don't blame Dusty for injuring Wood, but there were things he could have done that he didn't do.
granted
do the names Matt Clement, Mark Prior, Anibal Sanchez and Tony Armas Jr mean anything? these are all guys who had labrum surgery and are trying to come back this year. would you want any of them?
how about Brain Bullington, Kenny Baugh, Bobby Livingston? all are former first round picks who had labrum surgery. ever heard of them?
how about Kurt Ainsworth?
i'm not trying to be depressing here, just realistic. few pitchers come back from labrum surgery at all, let alone be successful. most never come back.
this is old, but still interesting reading:
http://www.slate.com/id/2100895/
here's the science:
http://www.physsportsmed.com/issues/1999/06_99/richards.htm
by Dave at Bottomfeeder Baseball on Feb 21, 2008 12:28 PM EST up reply actions
I hear ya
by silverstadium on Feb 21, 2008 3:01 PM EST up reply actions
Patton
"Of the 36 major-league hurlers diagnosed with labrum tears in the last five years, only midlevel reliever Rocky Biddle has returned to his previous level. Think about that when your favorite pitcher comes down with labrum trouble: He has a 3 percent chance of becoming Rocky Biddle. More likely, he'll turn into Mike Harkey, Robert Person, or Jim Parque, pitchers who lost stamina and velocity--and a major-league career--when their labrums began to fray."
-----------
I asked Keith Law if Patton is done if he has a torn labrum or slap tear. He said, "I wouldn't say done, but it's very bad news for Baltimore. Shoulder problems often lead to long-term velocity loss, and he can't afford that."
IMO, it's highly doubtful Patton will turn out to be worth anything. The Tejada trade will most likely turn out to be useless. Scott may turn out to have some value. Costanzo doesn't look too bad. But overall, I'm not optimistic about the trade.
I wouldn't say done, but it's very bad news for Baltimore. Shoulder problems often lead to long-term velocity loss, and he can't afford that.
Rocky Cherry, O's pitcher, not John C. McGinley's love child.
Don't be forgetting

"Everyone always says 'You don't have to do this.'"
by Jonnypops on Feb 22, 2008 7:27 AM EST up reply actions
Yeah
Rocky Cherry, O's pitcher, not John C. McGinley's love child.
Man

"Everyone always says 'You don't have to do this.'"
by Jonnypops on Feb 22, 2008 6:43 PM EST up reply actions
Why must pitchers be so fragile?
Because it's not a natrual motion
I'm always surprised at pitcher who last more than a few years. The wear and tear on tendons, joints and muscles by pitching is extreme.
I remember 14 straight foul balls in one at-bat.
this why there's an old adage...
by jq higgins on Feb 21, 2008 3:11 PM EST reply actions
Yep
by silverstadium on Feb 21, 2008 3:56 PM EST up reply actions
I like to follow the minors
MVP.
re:
"This is Birdland"

by Dave at Bottomfeeder Baseball on 

















