Tagged: injury

Looking At 2012, 2011 Seasons: Rockies Need Health

During the 2011 Season there were two major things that held the Rockies back; injuries, and starting pitching. In some cases these two things were together, as the Rockies endured some bad injuries to some pitchers, who could have been part of the backbone of the bullpen.  The Rockies had many injuries in the 2011 Season, sometimes resulting in call-ups from the minors. ALthough players from all parts of the field, such as Carlos Gonzalez, who had major wrist problems, to second base that was a constantly changing part, as players were injured or just needed a break. At the end of the year, even as those games were not all that important, the Rockies were faced with some troubling injuries to Cargo, Tulo and Todd Helton, in my opinion the biggest parts of the lineup.  All the injuries took a toll on the Rockies, but some of the worst, and most important were to the Rockies’ starting rotation.

The first starting rotation injury was a ligament tear in Jorge De La Rosa’s arm. Jorge was a solid man on the mound for the Rockies in some previous seasons, but the plan for his starting pitching appearances changed, when he had a bad injury in the very, and too, early season. De La Rosa tor his ulnar collateral ligament in the very early season, and had to undergo Tommy John surgery to help repair the ligament. De La Rosa was a solid pitcher for the Rockies in the past seasons, and was a big loss to the bullpen. The Rockies at the beginning of the season felt that they could have a solid rotation, with previously amazing pitcher Ubaldo Jimenez, De La Rosa, and Aaron Cook. Both Cook and Jimenez were both great at one point in their careers, but had been slowly weakening in the recent seasons. As the season progressed, the rotation became one of the biggest headaches for the Rockies, as all their pitchers were not very consistent, making the loss of De La Rosa an even bigger one.

Jorge’s surgery went as good as the Rockies could have hoped for, but even as they hired one of the best surgeons for this,  there is no guarantee that De La Rosa will be able to pitch as he was before the surgery. The surgery was clean, and went very well, but it is surgery nonetheless, and the human body takes its time when recovering from things like this, as it will with De La Rosa. With this complicated operation, which MLB pitchers have undergone for many years, there is a good probability that De La Rosa will never be the same that he was, in fact this statement is almost always true. Although there have been some comebacks for pitchers after the surgery, the chances of returning to your previous level of pitching is low. At the moment, according the Rockies, Jorge will not be ready to start out on the Roster in 2012. De La Rosa has been training to get back to the majors  since only a few weeks after his surgery, and has been making progress, towards hopefully the Majors again. The Rockies will need De La Rosa in the coming seasons, so hopefully he recovery is on-track, and he will be able to pitch in the near future. De La Rosa may not be able to start the 2012 Season, but there is another light for the Rockies in their 2012 season, as Juan Nicasio should be ready to start this coming Spring Training.

The other big starting rotation injury for the Rockies was the extremely unfortunate injury of Juan Nicasio, a young pitcher, new to the U.S. Nicasio, as Jimenez edged closer and closer to trade, seemed like the future bright spot of the Rockies rotation, and with the inconsistency of the present rotation, maybe the only one. Nicasio was not perfect, but he was in some ways more consistent than anyone else the Rockies could have on the mound. He went 4-4, not an ideal game record, but some of those losses were due to the lack of offense in his starts. Nicasio was a big arrival for the Rockies, a young player with promise and hard work, who seemed like a major future in the 2011 Season, if he improved his skills in the Majors with the Rockies. Then, on August 5, 2011, an event that would forever change his life, and his baseball career occurred. With Ian Esmond up-to bat Nicasio was struck with the ball on a line drive off Desmond’s bat. Nicasio had little time to react, and took the blow directly to his head and neck. Not only that, but on the way down, Nicasio fell on his head, on the dirt of the mound. Trainers, medical personnel, manager Jim Tracy, and players all rushed to the mound to help him. The fact of the matter was, there was little the players could do but watch, and offer the young, talented pitcher support. Juan was wheeled off the field on a medical cart, on a stretcher, where he was transferred to an ambulance, and then sent directly to the hospital.

Nicasio had broken his C-1 vertebrae, the top vertebrae of your spinal cord, and also had very bad damage to his skull. Although the mood was of worry in the Rockies clubhouse, and obviously in the hospital, the wonders of modern medicine were then put to work, as Nicasio underwent tests, and eventually had surgery on his head and neck. The doctors placed a metal plate in the back of part if Nicasio’s skull, and several metal screws on the back of his neck. Nicasio was aware of the decisions he had to make involving his health, and was always in the interest of being able to play in the big leagues again. This surgery, was the best shot Nicasio had at getting back to being able to pitch again, so he was very interested in the operation. After being able to leave the hospital, Nicasio went to the Rockies Clubhouse, where he was greeted with smiles, support, and his teammates, as they saw him again after a terrible incident, on the field. One of Nicasio’s concerns was his neck brace, showing that he really did want to be able to get back to normal, as the talented and strong young major league pitcher he was.

The Rockies will need Nicasio to help out in the Starting Rotation, if some other pitchers don’t come around to the Rockies, but even if some do, the talent and attitude of Nicasio would greatly help the Rockies, as they look to erase a 2011 Season, that had disappointment and pain some of the characteristics, looking back. Although this season lacked the flourish the Rockies were hoping for, there were good parts, as well, and some great players from the minors called up, but not all of them made it out of the season with full health.

One of these talented, but now injured players was Charlie Blackmon, a young outfielder with a lot of promise, and great play. Blackmon was brought up to the majors, as the Rockies looked to find help with their unsteady outfield, as Dexter Fowler faced injury, along with Carlos Gonzalez, and the Rockies needed a player to count on in the outfield. Blackmon only played with the Rockies for a short amount of time, before breaking his left foot, while rounding the second base bag during a game, when there was noticeably nothing very wrong with the way he ran the bases. Blackmon was not a huge loss for the Rockies, but his injury still maintained the gloomy state of mind, that came to me when thinking of the state of the Rockies’ 2011 health. Blackmon played mostly left field while with the Rockies, and may help out in the outfield in the 2012 Season, if needed. Blackmon batted a respectable .255 batting average in his Major League games, and had an impressive .296 Slugging %.

The bottom line is, in the 2012 Season, the Rockies, if they will be able to play to the extent that fans want, will need good health, luck, and fans!

Rockies Sign Giambi for 2012, But Decline Cook’s Option

Hello readers! Over the past several weeks the postseason has played out, and the Rockies News Blog has covered some of the big moments in an extremely exciting, 7 Game World Series. The Cardinals took the trophy, their 11th World Series Victory, and their win meant that Texas still has no WS rings. Game seven was not as exciting as game six, in my opinion, not being a huge Cards fan. But nonetheless the Cardinals won, spurring partying on the streets outside of Busch Stadium, and in the greater St. Louis area.

But the Rockies News Blog, given the fact that it is the Rockies News Blog, still has the main subject of the Rockies. The Rockies News Blog, as our readers most likely know, is written by two Rockies fans, including me, xrockiestalk. I am a huge Rockies fan, but I am also very interested in the events around the MLB. So, given I am a Rockies fan, I am eager to write about the Rockies in this offseason. The season is over for MLB, but for several weeks to come the MLB will hand out awards to the best players, and every team will have decide what players to sign, and what players to not. In the past few days several items of news for the Rockies worth noting occurred.

First up, Jason Giambi, the former long-time Yankees slugger, signed with the Rockies for the 2012 Season, as he and the Rockies used a $1 Million dollar on his contract. Giambi played for the A’s, and was a reoccurring subject in the new movie, Moneyball. Giambi also became a fan favorite while slugging with the Yankees, before he left, and the Rockies picked him up. Giambi has started several games for the Rockies this season, as Todd Helton needed some rest or was injured for some periods of the season. The biggest change Giambi has had to except, is going from his Yankee/Athletics starting almost every day, to a bench player who has become a guy you throw in when you need a big hit.

Giambi hit  a respectable .260 Batting Average, and recorded 13 homers, along with 32 RBIs. During the 2011 Season, Giambi homered every 10.08 at bats, a stat that topped MLB, for any player with more than 150 at bats. Giambi only had 131 at-bats for the Rockies this year, but came though several times, with over his current three seasons with the Rockies, hitting three walk-off homers. In his time with the Rockies, Giambi hit for a .254 Average, along with 21 home runs, and 78 RBIs. Giambi also has some impressive all-time places, at 42nd on the all-time MLB home runs list, and 71st on the total all time RBIs list, as well as 39th place in the all-time walks list.

In a relatively separate story, Giambi was nominated for a GIBBY Award, or Greatness In BaseBall Yearly Award. Giambi was nominated for his three run game, in Philadelphia, against one of the best pitching teams, the Phillies. Those three bombs made Giambi the second oldest player to hit three home runs in a MLB game, at 40 years old, following Stan Musial. Musial hit three home runs at his oldest age against the Mets on July 8th, 1962, at age 41. The GIBBY Awards are given in 19 different categories yearly. Giambi’s big game is a candidate for the year’s top hitting performance. Individual awards are given to the top: starting pitcher, setup man, closer, breakout player, rookie, top everyday player, wow factor, comeback player, defensive player, postseason performer, manager, and executive. Fans as well as executives and coaches can vote for the GIBBY Awards, and fans can vote online until Dec. 4th. Fans are allowed to vote up to 25 times per category at this link: Vote for the 2011 GIBBY Awards. The awards will be announced on Dec. 16th from 7-9 PM, MT. The video feed of the award ceremony can be found on the MLB Network TV channel, or at MLB.com.

On a different story, the Rockies decided to decline an option for long time Rockies pitcher Aaron Cook. The option that the Rockies declined was a $11 Million deal, after Cook completed a $30 Million deal over the past three years. Cook, at the hight of his days was worth every bit of the option that was in his contract, but after an injury riddled 2011 Season, the Rockies are finally saying goodbye. Cook began his career with the Rockies, and has been with them ever since. Cook was kept from the amount of starts Jim Tracy would have liked from him, but the times he started were commonly unsteady and unreliable. His unfortunate stats tell the story, as he went 3-10 with a poor 6.03 ERA. Cook began the year on the sixty day disabled list, after he broke his finger in a Spring Training mishap.

Aaron Cook is the Rockies all-time wins leader, as he made his wins number 72, leading Jason Jennings, in second place by 14 wins. Jennings was a former Rockies pitcher. Cook also holds several other Rockies all time records such as innings pitched, at 1,312 1/3, as well as starts, with 206. Cook has played for the Rockies for 10 years, in which he has made a 72-68 record, and 4.53 ERA. Cook was an All-Star in 2008, the year previous to the Rockies NLCS Championship, as he 16-9 record and a 3.96 ERA. Cook is now free to negotiate with any team, including the Rockies Organization, but I think a deal between them is a little far-fetched, and would be strange.

Helton Experiencing Back Problems, Out of Linuep in Opener vs. D-Backs

Todd Helton, last year had a lot of problems with his back, but this year, his health and his game have been great until now. Although Todd is not experiencing a serious problem, he has some back stiffness. This issue, which is not unfamiliar to Todd and the Rockies, proved a problem for him last year, but this year, for Todd has been great.

Although Todd did not play today, in a series opening loss against the NL West leading Diamond Backs, Jim  Tracy said that it is not out of the picture for Todd to be back on the starting lineup card Tuesday. Tracy said, “Todd’s got a little bit of back stiffness, and we’re not going to push that, I won’t rule out [Todd Helton playing] tomorrow, but I won’t rule it in either until I have further conversation with [Rockies Head Athletic Trainer, Keith Dugger].”

Helton, who is batting a great .306 average, and is in the top ten in the NL with that average, is doing much better than last year, when he was batting .256, a career low. Not only does Todd have a fabulous average this year but also has racked up 69 RBIs and a solid 14 homers. Those stats proving that Todd Helton will be an important part in a September pennant race for the Rockies.

Spilborghs to Return to Rockies, in Time for Padres Series

Ryan Spilborghs, the Rockies outfielder who we haven’t seen for a while, is back. We have not seen him for 24 games to be exact, as he was out with a right foot injury. Spilborghs was batting only .214 in the big leagues, when he left. Those numbers do somewhat reflect the pain, and the problem it caused for him, but not completely, as later in the season, a batting average changes slowly. Ryan was batting a great .444 in his ten rehab games in Triple-A Colorado Springs.