Chris Carpenter looks like he’ll be “out for awhile,” La Russa says
PHOENIX — It is a motion St. Louis Cardinals starter Chris Carpenter has made enough in his career to know nothing good usually comes from motioning for the trainer to come out on the field. But what else was he supposed to do in the fourth inning Tuesday?
He couldn’t fire a pitch without significant pain.
“Couldn’t throw,” Carpenter said. “I tried to throw the last one there and it hurt pretty good.”
Carpenter was removed from the game after throwing his warmup pitches for the fourth inning. The righthander was diagnosed at the scene with a strained rib-cage muscle. Carpenter later described it as an oblique injury, pointing to the left side of his torso as he explained that it was still sore after the game. He said he will return to St. Louis and meet with team doctors Thursday.
While the Cardinals wouldn’t confirm their plans to make move Wednesday morning, it is certain that Carpenter is headed to the 15-day disabled list and the Cardinals will be looking for a starter.
“The most important thing is that Chris Carpenter got hurt,” manager Tony La Russa said after his team’s 7-6 loss in extra innings to Arizona. ” No matter what happens in the game, the most important thing is it looks like he’s going to be out for awhile. That kind of overwhelms everything else that happened in the game.”
The Cardinals are operating under a tight turnaround for making a move before Wednesday’s game, which begin at noon Phoenix time. It’s is likely that the Cardinals will make two moves as a result of Carpenter’s injury. The bullpen was taxed covering the seven innings left in the game, and there will be an opening for a starter Sunday at Wrigley Field. The most likely move for the Cardinals is to promote Chris Perez from Class AAA and consider bringing a starter like Mitchell Boggs, who had spot starts in the majors last season, up as well. General manager John Mozeliak declined to name specific options, but he agreed that two moves were possible — one to address the bullpen and the other two solve the starter vacancy.
“That’s a viable option,” Mozeliak said. “The probability of us making a move is there.”
Internally, Kyle McClellan presents the most likely possibility to start in Carpenter’s place.
The Cardinals’ extra-innings loss at Chase Field ended at the final deadline for our Wednesday editions, so it was impossible to get comments from the team in this morning’s paper. One of the benefits of the blog is the ability to relay the information at any time — even after deadline. All of the comments here are from the post-game press access, and they are printed here in addition to the work down for the print edition.
Carpenter said he felt the his torso pinch taking a swing in his at-bat that ended the top of the fourth inning. He went out to the mound to throw his warmup and try to grit through the pain, but it got worse with each throw and eventually kept him from throwing comfortable at all.
“I felt it just a little bit on that swing,” Carpenter said, “and then every warmup pitch it got worse and worse. There’s nothing I can do about it but come out.”
Mozeliak said the team’s experience with this kind of injury dates most recently back to Woody Williams, “and if I recall that was an extended period of time,” the GM said. “In fairness, I think the doctors need to weight in on that.” The “fortunate thing”, according to Carpenter, is that he’s sure it has nothing to do with his elbow — which is twice surgically repaire in the past two years — nor is it anything related to the nerve condition he had in his right shoulder. The strain is on the opposite side of the body.
“It will just take time,” Carpenter said.
Carpenter pitched three scoreless innings, and the Cardinals had just taken a 3-0 lead for him when he went out to begin the fourth inning. Catcher Yadier Molina, whose two-run double was the biggest hit of that rally, was the first to motion for the trainer to come to the field. La Russa knows the length of that walk well, and knows it’s a longer route when you’re worried about what’s waiting for you on the mound. The Cardinals were careful not to take any pitch Carpenter threw in spring training for granted, and they were even hesitant to over-celebrate his debut, during which he took a no-hitter into the seventh inning last week.
This is why.
“You can imagine,” La Russa said. “I’ve talked enough about how important he is.”
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(11 votes, average: 4.73 out of 5)
Derrick Goold said he was going to Mizzou for capital-J journalism, but after growing up in the Time Zone Baseball Forgot he was really drawn to MU sitting between two major-league cities. Goold joined the Post-Dispatch in 2001 after working for The Times-Picayune and Rocky Mountain News, covering sports from LSU to NHL and every level of baseball in between.
How does a pitcher hurt himself batting?? I mean, we’ve got perhaps ONE pitcher that should actually even be swinging at the ball. All the rest should either be bunting just waiting for three strikes.
Lame, lame, lame.
Also, LaRussa is acting like an a$$ in his postgame news conference. Carpenter being injured and unavailable is NOTHING new to this team, why act like they sky is falling? All winter we thought that anything Carp did this summer would be a bonus.
So, he’ll be back in 15 days, we’ll get one or two more starts and he’ll be gone again. Bank on it.
“This is horrible for the terd on the bat. I love how after a great beginning AFTER ONE GAME the cardinal nation was ready to crown themselves playoff contenders. AFTER ONE GAME! Sure, Milton Bradley is out for us, but that’s not nearly as critical for us as Carp is to you. He’s a helluva pitcher when healthy, but that hasn’t happened for some time.
— Cubs Fan
8:36 am April 15th, 2009″
Wow, typical Cubbies fan. You’ve got a lot of nerve coming here and talking about Cardinals fans crowning themselves playoff contenders after one game. Just what are Cubbies fans doing in this refrigerator by the lake where I live? All I’ve heard, from Cubbies fans, the media, announcers…is how they might as well not even play the regular season, or the NL Playoffs, because it is a forgone conclusion the Cubbies are going to the World Series. Why, from everything I’ve heard, they’ve got the best starting rotation in the NL, best lineup in the NL, best catcher in the baseball (Geovany Soto based on 1 season - Ha!), best manager in baseball, best relief pitcher in baseball (Carlos Marmol - Ha!) best fans in baseball (Ha!), best ballpark in baseball (Ha! - Maybe the best urine-smelling, fratboy/Lincoln-Park-Trixie/drunk infested dump in baseball), and on, and on, and on…
How you can come here and say anything about Cardinals fans getting a little excited about their team is beyond me. Why don’t you quit trolling and go back to your buddies at Bleed Cubbie Blue, where you can whine about every call the Cubbies don’t get, cry about missing the great Soto for three or four games, and sing the praises of the worst announcer in the history of any sport, Ron “Elect My Undeserving Butt To The Hall Of Fame Because You Should Feel Sorry For Me” Santo. You’re pathetic.
How about offering an incentive-loaded deal to Pedro Martinez? He has to be getting a little antsy by now…..
Well now, isn’t that just great! I sure hope this team doesn’t implode like they have the past 2 years without Carp. Low hanging fruit?
Stuck_In_Chicago: LOL!!!!!
The Cards may be cheap, but the Cubs are just cursed. Even if the cubbies win the central, their season will end 7 days later when they lose to the wild card team, probably the rockies or padres. I think Wrigley field is what is insulting the baseball “gods”. Consider imploding that cess pool and maybe your fortunes will improve.
!@#$%!!!!
“It will just take time,” Carpenter said.
Yeah, I’m sure it will “Just take time,” all while you collect your bazillions of dollars and the promising team takes a nose dive.
I agree it sucks that Carp is out and TLR is not smart for not bringing in Lud to pinch hit. But my question is Why didn’t Oquendo send Skip home on Big Al’s base hit to right field? Are you telling me that Skip couldn’t score from second base? Seriously. That could have ended the game.
A lot of ignorant comments here about Carp. Don’t you realize that the oblique pull is the injury of the “now”? Too much weight training is making the guys too muscle bound and body tight. Pujols has had it, Ankiel has had it, and I heard Matheny say on the radio this morning that he had it twice. This is something that is going to be common and just be happy it wasn’t an elbow or shoulder.
Carpenter hurt?
I’m shocked, shocked at this news.
Let’s see. I’m sure DeWitt will move quickly to acquire a top-flight starter.
Yeah, surrrrreeeee.