Starling Marte underwent core surgery in November, and the outfielder talked with reporters (including MLB.com’s Anthony DiComo) today about the somewhat unexpected nature of that procedure. Marte ended up requiring surgery on both sides of his groin, providing an unwelcome answer to he’d been bothered by leg and lower-body problems for a big portion of the 2022 season. Marte played through quad and groin soreness but didn’t go on the injured list until he suffered a fractured finger in September, sidelining him until the playoffs.
Despite all the injuries, Marte’s first Mets season was a success, as he hit .292/.347/.468 with 16 homers over 505 plate appearances. Both Marte and manager Buck Showalter indicated that the veteran outfielder will be ramped up somewhat slowly in the early days of Spring Training, yet Marte is expected to be ready to roll for the Opening Day lineup.
More from around the National League…
- Pirates reliever Robert Stephenson is suffering from some right arm discomfort, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette’s Jason Mackey tweets. It seems to be a precautionary slowdown at this point, and Stephenson threw as recently as Saturday. Heading into his first full season with the Pirates, Stephenson had a 3.38 ERA and a whopping 36% strikeout rate over 13 1/3 innings after the Bucs claimed him off waivers from the Rockies in late August. Assuming that this arm issue isn’t overly serious, Stephenson is an interesting high-leverage bullpen arm for Pittsburgh, given that he posted good results in 2019 (with Cincinnati) and 2021 (with Colorado).
- Dodgers manager Dave Roberts told The Athletic’s Fabian Ardaya and other reporters that J.D. Martinez will be the club’s designated hitter “99.9 percent of the time,” though Martinez isn’t necessarily expected to play all 162 games. This plan differs from the Dodgers’ rotational use of the DH spot last season, and in particular, Will Smith will be slated for more full rest days with Martinez on board, as Los Angeles often used Smith at DH on days when he wasn’t catching. As productive a bat as Smith has been, he might be even better with a bit more rest, and ideally Martinez’s offense would further enhance the Dodgers’ lineup punch.
- Jameson Taillon is on a new team and he is now learning a new pitch, as the Cubs right-hander has started to work on a sweeping slider. As Taillon tells The Athletic’s Sahadev Sharma, he was one of the relatively few Yankees pitchers who didn’t use the “whirly,” as his 2020-21 offseason was spent recovering from Tommy John surgery and adjusting after being traded from the Pirates, and Taillon’s 2021-22 offseason work was hampered by the lockout and recovery from ankle surgery. “This year, healthy offseason, I signed on the earlier end, got familiar with the pitching coaches and I’m comfortable with my delivery. So I feel like it’s the perfect storm for being able to tinker a little bit,” Taillon said. The righty inked a four-year, $68MM free agent deal with Chicago in early December.
In Seager/Hader We Trust > the 70 MM DH Ohtani
Probably a better deal than Eovaldi, but I could be wrong
TheMan 3
Stephenson should take his time recuperating, there will be plenty of time for Shelton to both overuse and destroy his arm
This one belongs to the Reds
He has had a history of arm issues.
10centBeerNight
The Long Island loudmouths tend to blame low hanging fruit like Ruf for NYM being overtaken by ATL last September. Marte missing last month was primary reason. He is the catalyst to that offense.
cornwhisperer
From his time here in Pittsburgh, we learned about Marte’s upbringing and hardships. He’s an easy guy to root for. Hope he has an incredible season in NY
padam
His absence definitely hurt. While the Braves lost players as well during the course of the season that I would deem as more impactful, Marte was by far a pleasant surprise and signing. At the time I thought he was a good signing, but just from the first year and the role he plays, it’s one of the better signings they’ve had in some time. Hopefully he’ll continue the success he’s had.
JackStrawb
@10centBeerNight Not anticipating that their old, often injured players would be, well, injured particularly towards the end of a long season was by far the primary reason for the Mets being overtaken by ATL.
It’s the only reason, really. Everything else is entirely trivial.
The Mets were actually lucky wrt health, and still managed to screw it up. Cohen’s playing GM and Billy Eppler was a very poor choice for paper GM and consigliere. They need to get someone in that front office who is at least an average MLB GM.
Cap & Crunch
Id like to see Smith get a couple token starts at 3b/1b this year
I think best universe situation for LA long term is to get Smith and Cartaya in the lineup together
I think he could get on par with Muncy at 3b defensively which is adequate enough
yogineely
There’s no way Roberts has the self control to have JD only play 1 or 2 innings in the field
JackStrawb
The Mets were extremely lucky wrt health last season for one of the oldest teams in the league, and they’re only that much older in 2023.
When your primary backup OFer may well get more starts than the healthiest of your starting three, failing to pick up a real backup OFer and instead hoping the ghost of Tommy Pham’s career miraculously comes to life is absurd, as is failing to add a starter who rates to be alive and kicking come October, a pitcher whom you actually WANT to see taking the mound in the postseason.
And come to that, do they really think it’s likely to oldest pair of setup men in baseball are going to be effective in Games 163 and after? Steve Cohen, get a real GM. You’re just not good enough at this, and Eppler as your backup, well, there are too many reasons he was fired then trolled by the Angels.