MLB News Update

Smoltz wants to return…Big Mac making a comeback…Alvarez arbitration hearing…More on Pujols surgery…

Smoltz wants to return
ATLANTA — John Smoltz thinks a checkup Wednesday will show that his surgically repaired right shoulder is progressing ahead of schedule.

The 41-year-old Smoltz, who this year became the 16th pitcher with 3,000 strikeouts, also looks forward to showing Atlanta Braves general manager Frank Wren that he’s worth a new contract in 2009.

“I’ve been down this road before,” Smoltz said Tuesday. “It’s not like it’s the only time I haven’t proved what I’ve said in the past.”

Smoltz left open the possibility that he would consider pitching for another team next season after spending his entire major league career with the Braves. His first preference, however, is to stay in Atlanta.

“I really don’t even know why I’m answering that question,” he said. “I’ve been here for 21 years and I’m going to be here as long as there’s a position for me.”

The only pitcher in major league history with 200 wins and 150 saves, Smoltz has been on the disabled list 11 times before. He returned to pitch effectively each time, most notably in 2001, the first of three-plus seasons he spent as one of the NL’s most dominant closers.

“I’ve been written off before and I’m sure this is finally the time when everyone says, ‘Finally! This is the end,”‘ Smoltz said with a laugh. “But I certainly don’t think that.”

The 1996 NL Cy Young Award winner will drive to Birmingham, Ala., to meet with orthopedist James Andrews, who repaired a torn labrum and injuries in his AC joint and biceps when Smoltz underwent season-ending surgery June 10.

If Andrews gives him the go-ahead, Smoltz, who feels no pain in his shoulder and says he faces no limits in his daily physical routines, will begin soft-tossing in October.

“I’m sure it’ll be a little more than that,” he said with a grin. “I think in 15-20 days, I’m think I’m going to know. I think I know now, but what’s the difference?”

Atlanta’s rotation has been in flux since Smoltz went on the disabled list April 28 with biceps tendinitis, but the pitching staff bottomed out when Tim Hudson and Tom Glavine underwent season-ending surgeries in the last two months.

The Braves were second in the NL with a 3.79 ERA before the All-Star break. Since then, Atlanta’s 6.10 mark ranks as the second-worst in the majors.

Smoltz returned to the rotation in 2005 and over the next three seasons went 44-24 with a 3.22 ERA in 100 starts, a span of 667 1/3 innings. This year, before one failed attempt as a closer, he was 3-2 with a 2.00 ERA in five starts.

“I never thought three months (ago) from today (that) I’d be in position to feel good about my rehab,” he said. “There were a lot more unknowns then than there are today.”

Smoltz’s contract, which pays him $14 million this year, ends this season. Had he reached 200 innings, an option would’ve triggered a guaranteed $12 million deal in ’09.

He said it’s too early to discuss contract terms with Wren, who has a similar situation regarding 300-game winner Glavine, another Braves icon who has stated he wants to return next year at 43, but only if he can pitch for Atlanta.

Smoltz insisted he’s not pressuring Wren into beginning negotiations.

“It’s not on my radar screen,” Smoltz said before later adding that contract talks are a “non-issue” at this point.

“If I can pitch, I want to pitch,” he said. “And my first desire is to pitch here as it’s been for the previous 21 years.”

Smoltz also doesn’t know if he would return as a starter or a closer. He blew his only save opportunity in a 4-3 loss to Florida on June 2, giving up a two-out, two-run single to Jeremy Hermida.

That setback carries no weight with the right-hander, whose .917 save percentage in 168 chances from 2001-04 was second only to the .962 posted by Eric Gagne, then with the Los Angeles Dodgers.

“There’s all kinds of exciting controversy that seems to surround the innocence of answering that question,” Smoltz said before adding later that he will put his rehab under a timetable of sorts.

“I know I’ll be here unless they say I’m not good enough. How can I say 100 percent when I don’t know? If I can pitch pain-free, I think that bodes well for the comeback that most people either, A, don’t think I should or, B, don’t think I can. Quite frankly, I’ve been down this road many, many times.”

Source: AP NEWS

Big Mac making a comeback
Rick Hummel of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch interviewed Mark McGwire about the 10th anniversary of breaking Roger Maris’ single-season home run record. At the end of the article McGwire indicates that he thinks he can still play.

Today, McGwire says, he works out twice a day and still weighs 245 pounds. “I can still hit, if somebody wants me,” he said. “Now, wouldn 19t that be a shocker?”

Let me say that McGwire may have been joking. However, Hummel gives us no indication that this is the case.

Earlier today, Joe Stiglich reported that the A’s would seek to add power to the lineup this off-season and that they would be more likely to acquire a power-hitter through free agency. Would Billy Beane try to coax McGwire out of retirement? McGwire did play 11 seasons for the A’s and they do have an opening for a DH in ’09 along with a dire need to add an impact bat.

The possibility does seem far-fetched, but this is the type of move that Beane would not shy from. And if McGwire did decide to lace up the sneakers for one more season, this is the exact situation under which it would have to happen.

Source: MLB Trade Rumors

Alvarez arbitration hearing
NEW YORK — An arbitrator will start a hearing Wednesday to determine whether the Pittsburgh Pirates and Major League Baseball broke rules when they extended last month’s deadline to sign No. 2 draft pick Pedro Alvarez.

Alvarez agreed to a minor league contract with a $6 million signing bonus shortly after the midnight deadline on Aug. 15 had passed. Alvarez then refused to sign his contract with the Pirates, and was placed on the restricted list by the commissioner’s office.

Pirates president Frank Coonelly said that Kansas City’s deal with No. 3 draft pick Eric Hosmer, who like Alvarez is represented by Scott Boras, was submitted to MLB after Alvarez’s deal.

The players’ association then filed a grievance, saying the Aug. 15 deadline was altered without its permission. The commissioner’s office withdrew approval of Hosmer’s contract pending the resolution of a grievance and told the Royals he couldn’t play for Kansas City or its farm teams.

Pittsburgh claims Alvarez wants to re-negotiate his deal.

Arbitrator Shyam Das must decide whether he even has authority to hear the grievance — MLB claims he doesn’t because it involves minor league contracts.

After Wednesday, the hearing is expected to resume the week of Sept. 22. It’s unclear what the remedy would be if Das rules for the union.

Source: AP NEWS

More on Pujols surgery…
ST. LOUIS — Major League Baseball batting leader Albert Pujols may be headed to reconstructive elbow surgery that could sideline him into next season. Or he might not.

A day after the St. Louis slugger told KSDK television that he was considering having the operation, the Cardinals said it’s not clear whether surgery is needed.

“We are sensitive to Albert’s stated concerns,” general manager John Mozeliak said in a statement. “At no time would we ever ask Albert to consider anything other then what is best for his career and future health.”

Pujols has been playing with a torn ligament since 2003, but the Cardinals said in a statement that management, Pujols and his representatives agree that the injury “does not appear to be season-threatening nor do they have a clear indication that it will or will not require future surgery.”

Mozeliak said the Cardinals will conduct a follow-up medical exam at the end of the season to determine future decisions.

Pujols discussed the possibility of surgery on Monday with KSDK.

“I’m thinking about it,” he said. “I’m thinking really hard. I think in the long run the sooner that I get it done, the better it’s going to be for me because I’m going to heal quicker than if I wait two or three years. But it needs to be done.”

Pujols and the Cardinals have said since last winter that at some point, the former National League MVP might require surgery.

Source: AP NEWS