Right-hander Taylor Clarke suffered a right meniscus injury and is getting a second opinion to see if surgery can be avoided, Brewers manager Pat Murphy told MLB.com and other media. Clarke will certainly start the season on the 15-day injured list, and the hope is that he can avoid a significantly longer amount of downtime.
Milwaukee acquired Clarke in a December trade with the Royals, hoping that Clarke could bounce back from a rough 2023 campaign. The righty posted a 5.95 ERA in 59 innings for Kansas City, as big spikes in Clarke’s barrel and home run rates resulted in 12 homers out of the park over those 59 frames. His 24.4% strikeout rate was slightly above average, but his walk rate increased sharply to nine percent, after Clarke had posted a very impressive 3.9 BB% in 2022.
Surely the Brewers are hoping Clarke pitches closer to that 2022 form (when he had a 4.04 ERA in 49 innings for K.C.), but for now the priority is just getting him healthy and onto the mound. Meniscus-related injuries carry a wide range of potential timelines based on the extent of the damage, and whether or not Clarke needs surgery. If he does have to go under the knife, an absence of 4-6 weeks is probably the best-case scenario for a meniscus surgery.
Turning to another injured Brewers hurler, Brandon Woodruff’s recovery from shoulder surgery will prevent from pitching during the 2024 season, the right-hander told Curt Hogg of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. The right-hander was already expected to miss most of the year rehabbing, which was reflected in both the Brewers’ decision to non-tender Woodruff and in the backloaded nature of the two-year, $17.5MM deal he signed to rejoin the Crew last month. Woodruff will earn $2.5MM in 2024 and a $5MM salary in 2025, plus a $10MM buyout of a $20MM mutual option for the 2026 season.
The rehab process seems to be going well in these early stages, and Woodruff has started to lightly throw from 30-foot distances. The two-time All-Star is confident that he’ll be able to return to his old form when he returns to the mound in 2025, and that his knowledge of pitching will allow him to overcome any potential loss of velocity.
“Honestly, I’m going be the strongest I’ll ever be at any point in my career because I’m going have a year and just basically get my body ready for pitching….I’m just going to learn so much more about my body,” Woodruff said. “I’m learning a new shoulder. But as far as everything goes, I expect to be the same guy. And you know what? God forbid if anything else happened, like, I ain’t going to forget to pitch. So I can go out there and still figure it out.”
Despite the injury, several teams reportedly had interest in trading for Woodruff before Milwaukee non-tendered him, and also inquired about signing him after the righty hit the open market. Woodruff ultimately chose to return to the Brewers due to the trust and comfort level built from his career-long stay in the organization.
“Why don’t I keep betting on myself? Money is not the issue. I want to win. I’m comfortable here,” Woodruff said. “I know the medical staff and they know my shoulder inside and out. I think I’m just in a good spot in terms of coming back here. There was a lot of stuff that I weighed out, but I’m able to kind of do – I wouldn’t say do what I want – but I kind of dictate and help run this rehab the way I want. I’m not learning new people and that was a big part of it.”
In other Brewers news, Christian Arroyo was reassigned to the team’s minor league camp earlier this week, thus giving Arroyo an opt-out decision since he didn’t make the Opening Day roster. Murphy told Hogg and other reporters that he doesn’t think Arroyo will opt out, plus the infielder also has a minor wrist injury.
This issue could hamper Arroyo’s chances of quickly catching on with another team in free agency, on top of his underwhelming .182/.217/.227 slash line in 23 plate appearances this spring. Arroyo could take some time at Triple-A to get healed up and then perhaps weigh his options, or simply see if an opportunity might still emerge in Milwaukee. The Brewers’ projected candidates for second base, third base, and utility infield roles (Brice Turang, Joey Ortiz, Sal Frelick, Andruw Monasterio) are all rather inexperienced, and in Frelick’s case, learning an infield position for the first time. Arroyo could therefore represent some veteran depth should any of the youngsters struggle, or need more seasoning in the minors.
“Why don’t I keep betting on myself?”
Ohhh, maybe not the best phrasing at this current moment in MLB history….
Lol. Ohtani is holding a presser tomorrow on his own volition. I think he’ll be on the clear with MLB after that regardless of what the true facts are. We’ll probably never know them.
“I’m so sorry I’ve brought great shame to MLB.” Ohtani breaks down in tears.
Ohtani’s dog runs into the press conference, jumps onto his lap, licks his face and high fives Ohtani.
You cannot possibly believe its truly a decision made on his own. This was made by handlers, lawyers, the Dodgers (even though they say otherwise), and definitely MLB.
Most certainly not but that’s the narrative all parties are spinning.
The FBI could have something to say
Its unfortunate that Arroyo cannot avoid the injury bug no matter where he goes
No burnes no woodruff no devin no counsell
Brewers better start thinking who they’ll take with #1 pick next yr
Even without them, our bench is still better than the entire Oakland As.
Now there’s something to build on!
Brewers 2024 Mantra: “We’re slightly better than the A’s! “
Hopefully not a pitcher. The last 1st round pick pitcher taken by the Brewers was Ethan Small, before that Kodi Medieros, before that Taylor Jungmann, Jed Bradley ,Dylan Covey, Eric Arnett, Mike Jones.
They are better off drafting a position player and trading them for pitching.
Brewers drafting has been messy. They do not do well with first rounders Corey Ray and Keston Huira being a few misses.
The last couple years Sal Frelick, Garrett Mitchell, Tyler Black, Brock Wilken, all non pitchers are quality. All teams have 1st rnd busts, picks that don’t work out, its just that drafting a pitcher in 1st round ,very rarely does it work out.
They certainly have had there fair share of misses. I like the group you listed. Not sure why the Brewers have such an issue developing a first baseman.
They have done very well in recent years. Besides, the MLB draft, if not in the top 5 (and maybe 10), is a complete crap shoot.
Counsel is a toss up woodruff was out basically the whole year last year Devin Williams has said moments where he’s been out.
But they have a former #1 overall on the bench right now
@carey
Brewers?
No they dont
They got Rickie Weeks waiting for Murph to have another heart attack and Chourio ready to take balls back from over the wall. Not to mention a new scoreboard so get your tickets now..
MLB seems to have created an experiment now that there are 3 WCs where both Central divisions are testing how much re-tooling they can get away without the wheels falling off in the hunt for the division/WC3. The Spiders and Brew Crew are pushing this question to its limits.
Mariners started that. It’s called “the rule of 54”