Starling Marte left Saturday’s 8-1 loss to the Cubs midway through the second inning due to soreness in his right knee, and he will undergo an MRI on Monday to explore what has been a nagging problem for the Mets outfielder. As MLB.com’s Anthony DiComo writes, Marte has been battling knee discomfort for about three weeks, with the Mets giving Marte a few extra off-days in that stretch to see if the extra rest could correct the problem.
“I thought we’ve been doing a pretty good job, especially with our communication with him and him being honest with me and all of us,” Mets manager Carlos Mendoza told DiComo and other reporters. “That’s why there’s been days where he’s been off when he felt like he could have played….But as of late, that knee continues to bother him. We’ve just got to wait and see what we’re dealing with.”
The Mets don’t play on either Monday or Thursday this week, as they get a pair of off-day sandwiched around their two-game interleague series with the Yankees. DiComo feels that this relatively light schedule might allow the Mets to put Marte on the 10-day injured list, which would both give him time to fully rest up while sitting out less games than he’d normally have to miss in a fuller schedule. That said, the Mets could also view these built-in off-days as a chance to let Marte rest without the benefit of an actual IL placement, so he might not have to miss 10 full days’ worth of action.
It seems likely that the club will first wait and see what the MRI says before making a decision, as if tests reveal an actual injury, Marte will obviously have to miss time regardless of any schedule. Despite the bad knee, Marte’s production hasn’t been slowed down, as he is hitting .304/.360/.457 with one home run over 50 plate appearances in the month of June. Marte’s hot bat has been one reason the Mets have surged back into the playoff picture, as New York has won 12 of its last 16 games.
Another Met headed for an MRI is Sean Reid-Foley, as the right-hander was placed on the 15-day IL yesterday (retroactive to June 20) due to an impingement in his throwing shoulder. A similar injury sidelined Reid-Foley at the start of the season and prevented him from making his 2024 debut until April 22. Talking to the New York Post’s Mike Puma and other reporters yesterday, Reid-Foley described the latest injury as “kind of the same stuff — it’s kind of in the front of the shoulder again. I don’t have X-ray vision or MRI vision, but I would say it’s probably an impingement.”
Even with these shoulder problems bookending his season, Reid-Foley has been one of the Mets’ best relievers this season, with a 1.66 ERA and a 27.8% strikeout rate over 21 2/3 innings. A 3.86 SIERA is perhaps a better reflection of Reid-Foley’s production when factoring in his high 15.6% walk rate and the good fortune of his .255 BABIP, especially since Reid-Foley is a grounder specialist (60.8% groundball rate). Still, that bottom-line 1.66 ERA has still been a big help within an overall inconsistent New York bullpen, so losing Reid-Foley for any length of time is a setback for the club.
In other Mets injury news, Kodai Senga took an important step ahead in his injury rehab, as he had a live batting practice session of 22 pitches today. Senga is tentatively slated for another live BP later this week, but he’ll first reconvene with the team medical staff in New York.
It has been a long road back for Senga, who hasn’t yet pitched this season since suffering a moderate capsule strain his right shoulder during Spring Training. He had a live BP session in late April and seemed to be progressing towards a return in late May (once his 60-day IL stint was over), but he then took time to work on some mechanical issues, and then suffered a triceps injury that required a shutdown period and a cortisone shot.
Senga had already been ruled out until after the All-Star break, and considering the amount of ramp-up work it will take for him to be fully ready to pitch, it would seem early-to-mid August might be the earliest we see the right-hander make his 2024 debut. If the Mets can stick around in the wild card race, getting Senga back would be quite a nice boost to the Amazins’ playoff chances, if he returns at anything close to his 2023 form.
Liberalsteve
I can’t believe no one wanted JD Martinez for more than that. Second best player on the Mets and 3-4 more 850+OPS years away from the HOF
sad tormented neglected mariners fan
Question is will he be able to post those years in his late 30s
Even if he did his defensive value will hurt him and he’d be in a Nelson Cruz situation
Blue Baron
He turns 37 in August. That means he is, in fact, posting this year in his late 30s.
The end eventually will come for him as it does for every player, so you’re not really saying anything.
Liberalsteve
The end didn’t come for Barry Bonds. What line would he have put up at age 50?
Blue Baron
That’s nothing but speculation.
carlos15
Lol come on man
@DaOldDerbyBastard
Crap
Sunday Lasagna
Mets have a 774 OPS vs LHP, 700 vs RHP
Martinez 1095 OPs vs LHP, 780 vs RHP
He is better than the Mets team vs LHP and RHP, yet the Mets are 22-27 in games Martinez has played in and 14-12 when he is not in the lineup.
Seems very odd.
@DaOldDerbyBastard
Because the rest of the hitters have sucked until June.
Liberalsteve
He is an amazing cheerleader
Sunday Lasagna
That’s awesome Steve. Harrison Bader must be a terrible cheerleader. Mets are 34-32 when he is on the field, 2-7 when he’s on the bench.
Liberalsteve
Mets love to play for JD. Those cute eyes are an incentive
ROYALTANK
NEW Mets Notes: Edwin Diaz gets tossed for sticky stuff. DOH!
Rational_Mets_Fan
I think the bullpen has been consistently reliable as long as the starters put up 5+ innings. Hard to be so when the SPs only go 4-5 innings. They’ve got a nice stretch of games against sub par teams from now until late July. It’s make or break time between now and the deadline 21 of the next 29 games against sub .500 teams.