Roman Anthony’s rehab got a little more clarity on Thursday, even if the Boston Red Sox still aren’t putting a timetable on his return.
Speaking on The Greg Hill Show on WEEI, chief baseball officer Craig Breslow said Anthony’s recent appointment with Dr. Lourie backed up what the team’s doctors had already determined.
"He did have that appointment and Dr. Lourie kind of confirmed the diagnosis and the treatment plans that our doctors had identified that Roman's been on," Breslow said.
"Unfortunately, this is just an injury that is taking longer than expected to heal. But by all accounts it sounds like we are on the right track."
The update matters because the meeting was another look at how Anthony’s injury is healing. Dr. Lourie is a hand specialist and the Braves’ head team physician, and the second opinion was first expected earlier in the week.
Anthony’s injury has been described as a partially torn ring finger CMC ligament, a rare and tricky issue. Dr. Mark Cohen of Midwest Orthopaedics at Rush University told Alex Speier of The Boston Globe that in 32 years, it was the first time he had seen an injury like this.
For now, the Red Sox are still in wait-and-see mode. Breslow said Anthony will continue his rehab in Florida in Fort Myers, and he noted that the club has several injured players in the majors, making the move a way to give Anthony more resources and space to recover.
Anthony has said he is "seeing progress" and "getting stronger."
That’s the best kind of news Boston has right now: another doctor confirming the diagnosis, the rehab plan staying on course, and a path that still points toward a return, even if it’s taking longer than anyone wanted.
In Other News...
Red Sox Just Got A Crucial Willson Contreras Suspension Update
Willson Contreras absence for Boston got a little shorter after MLB ruled on his appeal, trimming the first basemans suspension and giving the Red Sox a clearer sense of when they can expect him back. The discipline traces to the June 30 benches-clearing incident with the Washington Nationals, and it had already put Boston in a spot where every lineup decision around first base mattered a little more than usual.
Contreras began serving the suspension on Thursday, which now sets up a potential return for the second game of the July 17 doubleheader against the Rays. The update matters for a Red Sox club trying to manage the middle of its schedule without one of its more recognizable hitters, especially with the appeal process finally settled and the calendar starting to point toward his return. [Read more 🡒]
Red Sox Have An Obvious Brayan Bello Decision As Pressure Builds
An injury to Ranger Suarez has forced Boston to reshuffle again, with the left-hander landing on the 15-day injured list after the adductor issue he sustained in his July 5 start. The Red Sox also brought up Triple-A infielder Brett Harris to help cover a roster spot, a reminder of how quickly the depth chart can get tested when the pitching staff starts taking hits.
Brayan Bello is now positioned to come back to the major league roster, and the timing gives Boston a straightforward choice about how to handle his return. After being optioned to Triple-A following a rough stretch as a starter, Bello could be slotted into a role that eases him back into the mix while the Red Sox try to stabilize the rotation and keep from burning through more arms. [Read more 🡒]
