DeRosa Suffering Torn Tendon Sheath
MILWAUKEE - Though a statement issued by the team referred only to infielder-outfielder Mark DeRosa’s left wrist strain as reason for him landing on the disabled list, the Cardinals’ June 27 trade acquisition is apparently suffering from a torn tendon sheath that casts doubt on his return immediately following the All-Star break.
DeRosa confirmed the diagnosis Tuesday afternoon and refrained from offering a timetable for his return. This much is clear: DeRosa will refrain from all hitting for the near future. He admits that last week’s optimism was based more on hope than fact, and that Monday’s finding confirmed what he had suspected all along.
“I knew it when I did it,” DeRosa said. ”I tried to play the brave face. I know my body pretty well. I’ve had my share of surgeries and aches and pains. You know the difference between tweaking something that is manageable and something feeling wrong.”
A magnetic resonance imaging found the problem Monday. An exam last Wednesday proved inconclusive due to inflammation and swelling of the wrist, which De Rosa said “popped” during a June 30 at-bat against San Francisco Giants lefthander Randy Johnson. Team medical supervisor Dr. George Paletta examined DeRosa for the first time on Monday.
The diagnosis lands a body blow to the optimism caused by the trade that brought DeRosa to St. Louis as a long-sought answer at third base. DeRosa made three starts and took only nine at-bats before going down. Manager Tony La Russa started Joe Thurston at the position tonight.
“I don’t know all the jargon. But there is definitely something wrong with it,” DeRosa said. “There is definitely a partial tear of the sheath. It’s one of those things where you hope time allows it to heal itself.”
DeRosa took swings off a tee in Cincinnati last weekend. Initially portrayed as a positive sign, the workouts actually exposed lingering discomfort.
“It didn’t feel good but it didn’t feel excruciating,” he said. “I could have tried [to play] but I don’t know what the outcome would have been.”
The club has not offered a timetable for DeRosa’s return, though general manager John Mozeliak said earlier Tuesday that he remained “very optimistic” DeRosa would become available shortly, if not immediately, after the July 13-16 break.


(4 votes, average: 4.5 out of 5)
Just great, what is the over-under for Glaus v. DeRosa?
Can anyone tell me why the Cardinals continue to work with Dr. George Paletta? I don’t know the man personally or how much control over the activation of players etc he has, but man… It seems like the man is always optimistic and hopeful rather than, oh I dunno, A DOCTOR.
I’d have rather heard we wouldn’t see DeRosa until August than another optimistic prognosis from the Cardinals. After hearing as recently as yesterday, **after the exam**, that he would be available today isn’t very confidence building when today brings the news that he’s out for the next few weeks.
You think about all the bumps in the road with Clement, Carpenter, Mulder, etc and then add *this* and you have to wonder what the heck is going on with the Cardinals medical team.
Like I had stated before in my earlier post! This guy is done for the year! Torn tendons just don’t heal when your swinging a bat for living! And revpaul, dont EVER question my knowledge again!
Who could have figured that the Cardinal medical staff would have mis-diagnosed another injury? The Cardinals played short handed since July 1st. Was he damaged good’s when he arrived? Who gave DeRosa a phyical, the Cardinals?
This is of no fault of the Cards medical staff. Please just Shut the F up. This happens all the time, on every team. The grass is not greener.
To Mark DeRosa: Many of us were thrilled when you got traded to us. We know what a fine and classy ballplayer you are. We are not down on you and we have not given up. We are greatly looking forward to you being a key part of our beloved team. Be hopeful!
SON OF A BISCUIT! Did he even get an RBI for the Cards? Call me paranoid, but I smell a labyrinthian Cubs plot…
Wow. This is horrible news. Stick a fork in him, he’s done.
Next time Mo decides to go after a player, can he please call Walt first to get his opinion. Great acquisition. What did Cardinal fans do wrong to deserve Mo?
It’s Dr. Palletta and the Cardinal medical staff’s fault that Derosa gets injured? It’s their fault Derosa feigned optimism even though he knew his wrist did not feel right after the rest?
Sheer lunacy.