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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Sport
Matthew Roberson

Max Scherzer diagnosed with oblique strain, will miss six to eight weeks

NEW YORK — Max Scherzer’s official injury diagnosis is in.

The Mets’ pitcher will miss six to eight weeks with a “moderate to high grade” internal oblique strain, according to the team.

Something was definitely wrong when Scherzer, perhaps the most intense competitor of his generation, took himself out of the game on Wednesday night. In the middle of a sixth-inning showdown with Albert Pujols, Scherzer immediately made a signal to the dugout indicating that he was done. The initial language from the Mets was that he was experiencing “discomfort in his left side.”

After the game, Scherzer called the feeling a “zing” and said he didn’t believe it was a major strain. The tests, unfortunately, proved that to be untrue.

This marks the first left-side injury of Scherzer’s career. Before Thursday’s series finale against the Cardinals, manager Buck Showalter also said that Scherzer had been dealing with blisters as a result of the new baseball that’s seemingly irritating everyone around the league.

He’ll have plenty of time for the blisters to heal now, as it doesn’t sound like the 37-year-old will see a big league mound until July.

“He’s been pitching with a blister issue, another thing with the baseball and the seams being different,” Showalter revealed. “He’s been pitching with that for his last two starts. That’s one of the reasons he’s really struggled with his breaking ball. He couldn’t command it. He was trying to keep that from ripping open again.”

As for the ball, Showalter said it’s not just the players who are growing frustrated with it.

“I’m telling you guys, it’s different,” Showalter said. “We’ve had batting practice pitchers talk about it, that throw batting practice for a living.”

No roster moves have been made yet, whether sending Scherzer to the injured list or bringing up someone to replace him. Showalter did say that Starling Marte is most likely going to join the team in Colorado on Friday “at the latest” and he hopes the outfielder will be able to fly there with the team. Marte, who returned to the Dominican Republic to be with his family, is on the bereavement list following the death of his grandmother.

“With the state of mind we’re assuming he’s in, we’re going to give him that space,” Showalter said of Marte.

In addition to Marte’s brief absence, the injury bug is also starting to make a home in the Mets’ clubhouse. Catcher James McCann had surgery on the fractured hamate bone in his left hand and is expected to rehab for about six weeks. Jacob deGrom is continuing to heal but still a ways away from making an official return. Starter Tylor Megill and reliever Trevor May are both on the shelf with injuries to their throwing arms. With Scherzer now suffering something of his own, the manager knows that the preparation of both him and the players in the organization is crucial.

“Every loss is an adjustment that organizations have to make,” Showalter said. “Shame on you if you haven’t at least thought about what you’re going to do if a player isn’t able to play for an extended period of time. There’s another opportunity for someone to step up. It creates good morale in an organization when Tylor Megill and [David] Peterson and [Patrick Mazeika] think that we’re going to look within first before we start coveting someone else. We’d like to have the answers be here.”

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