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02.17.2008 12:53 pm

Clement unlikely to be ready for Opening Day

JUPITER, Fla. — Cardinals starter Matt Clement, more than a year removed from shoulder surgery, will alter his throwing program in the coming days and is not expected to be ready for opening day, as previously planned.

“In all honesty, I will be surprised if he’s ready for opening day,” pitching coach Dave Duncan said. “And I’m not too sure even if he is ready, we wouldn’t likely have him compete somewhere else just to get him in the swing of things.”

Clement threw his third bullpen session of the spring, and it was after watching it that Duncan discussed how the righthander is behind the best-case schedule.

While the health of his shoulder checks out and he’s had no physical setbacks in his recovery, Duncan said Clement hasn’t shown the arm strength needed to advance. Duncan does not have a start scheduled yet for Clement in Grapefruit League play, but added that it’s probable that it would be in the middle of March.

That will depend on how Clement takes to a shift in his schedule. 

Instead of throwing a bullpen every two days, Clement will switch to a long-toss program between bullpen sessions to strengthen his right arm. The long toss is meant to increase his arm strength.

From there, Duncan said Clement will have to regain his competitive form.

Clement did not pitch in the majors last season as he recovered from significant shoulder surgery. The Cardinals signed him to a one-year deal with an option for 2009, and the club had cautiously hoped that he would be part of the opening day roster as part of the rotation.

General manager John Mozeliak said while watching Clement throw his bullpen Sunday morning that the rule of thumb with the righthander is “patience.”

Much more on the righthander in Monday’s Post-Dispatch.

-30-

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26 comments

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Maybe the Cardinals should use the commemorative bricks intended for Musial Plaza to add a hospital wing to Busch Stadium.

— Techno Phobia
5:47 pm February 17th, 2008

What a suprise that the Cardinals were the only team to bite on Clements - and that he jumped at the offer. The icing on the cake is to hear the Prior is looking strong this spring…

— RMarti03
5:59 pm February 17th, 2008

Color me red (briefly), but I think there’s still a lot to like about the Clement signing and certainly the contract he’s on. Also, there’s a big difference between a pitcher experiencing a lack of strength on Feb. 17 with six weeks to go and having the same trouble on April 25, or August 12. That said, there’s a lot of evidence that the Cardinals are too optimistic about their April rotation and there’s a lot of innings that seem unoccupied — today.

RMarti03 brings up a fun parlor game: Prior, who has a May target for return, or Clement.

Who has a better 2008?

Everything is extremes in spring. Great. Disaster. Amazing. Agonizing. Love. Hate. Elbow. Shoulder. Kennedy. Colby. The reality sets in March 31, and it’s often in the middle of the spring spectrum.

dg

— Derrick Goold
6:11 pm February 17th, 2008

here we go again. this reminds me alot of last spring. i hope, but i don’t think we’re deep enough. mo needs to get busy and find a couple of arms. weaver? lohse? sombody to eat some innings. sure wish we would have gone after livan hernandez.

— roger from tahoe
6:15 pm February 17th, 2008

is this a baseball team or a M.A.S.H. unit?

— roger from tahoe
6:23 pm February 17th, 2008

Sounds like the same old stuff the Cubs would hear every year about Mark Prior and/or Kerry Wood. If they say he may not be ready Opening Day, figure at least June or later, sorry Cards fans. Why are so many veteran players still on the market? Lots of good guys that could come right in and help…

— Imo Fugazi
8:21 pm February 17th, 2008

Bernie,
You hit the nail on the head. When I hear ANY of the Cardinals front office speak I hear “blah, blah, blah.” The front office cares nothing about being honest to the fans and loves blowing smoke where the sun don’t shine (of course some fans drink the kool aid). I have been a Cardinals apologist for years, but I have soured on the front office and their comments to the fans like ‘We’re counting on Mulder in our 2008 rotation’ or a hundred other lies and half truths they shovel on us. But who cares what any of us think? The front office will never change no matter what we say.
D

— Darin
8:49 pm February 17th, 2008

As a 68 year old cardinal fan living in montreal I can not believe the “stupidity” of my fellow fans
after the Cards signed such trash as Ron Gant,Preston Wilson,Kip[loser] WellsMike Maroth
Junior Spivey,trading three ballplayers Danny Haren,Kiko Colero and afirst rounder for an overrated lefty piece of trash Mulder.Also when rolen was traded Albert should have moved back to 3rd base because Dave’s boy Duncan will never be an outfielder if he practices out there for the next 300 years.The cards are now about making money only…they don’t give (an unseasoned buffalo wing)
about the fans.They don’t deserve our support.

— Bernie Altman
9:29 pm February 17th, 2008

Mr. Altman,

Try to keep the language PG here, or least compliant with standard newspaper style. I did my best to get the flavor of your frustration without the color, if you will, because it’s a fair comment and it allows me to — once again — hammer home two truisms that should be well and widely known by now.

– Said this many times: Albert Pujols is not a third baseman. His strained elbow ligament is but the biggest reason why Pujols is not a third baseman and will spend his career at first. Move him back to third and he’ll be under a doctor’s care by May.

– Said this just as many times: Chris Duncan is a better outfielder than he was at first.

Perhaps I should fly a banner over spring training.

Back to the subject at hand.

dg

— Derrick Goold
9:45 pm February 17th, 2008

Derrick,
Thanks for saving the rest of us the trouble of having to point those two facts out to the Canadian. I am disgusted, but not surprised, to hear that we have once again either been misled or the Cards have been way too optimistic. How can professionals be so wrong so much of the time? To me, what is troubling about this Clement signing is that they thought it was going to be enough. The starting rotation was a shaky proposition under the best-case scenario, i.e., Clement ready to go on opening day, but it’s much more alarming now since the Cards didn’t acquire any depth in the offseason. I’m curious to know what part of last season they didn’t get. Did Wellemeyer, Thompson, or Reyes morph into something different in the offseason? What’s the saying…’do the same things you’ve always done and you’ll get the same results’?

— LPD
11:11 pm February 17th, 2008

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