The Padres are still waiting on Joe Musgrove, and the latest update makes clear he’s not close to a return yet.
Musgrove has been out all season after a setback in spring training, part of a rehab process that began with Tommy John surgery. He was supposed to be back at the start of this year, but the elbow issue has dragged the timeline out by months, leaving the veteran right-hander without a clear return date.
San Diego has remained hopeful Musgrove can get back after the All-Star break, though that’s far from a promise when elbow injuries are involved. Musgrove recently explained the specific hurdle that has slowed everything down.
“If we were gonna bounce a ball, that bouncing of the elbow is where I get a lot of pain,” Musgrove said to the San Diego Union-Tribune. “And to be able to throw a ball with good intensity and be able to spin the ball and put the ball where I want location-wise, I need to be able to bounce the elbow and lock it out hard. That’s been the biggest struggle for me over the last couple months."
That’s why both sides have chosen patience. Rather than rushing him back, the Padres and Musgrove are taking the long road and letting the elbow heal fully before he returns to game action. Given Musgrove’s injury history, that approach gives him the best chance to come back strong.
Musgrove said he knows what he needs before he can help the Padres the way he wants to.
“I’ve been in this position without a lot of cartilage in there for years, so I know I can pitch with it how it is. I just got to get everything calmed down and get the bone healed up before we start banging on it again," Musgrove said.
He’s not the only rotation piece the Padres are missing. Nick Pivetta is also dealing with an elbow injury, though he is a few weeks ahead in his recovery and is expected back in the second half.
San Diego is also without Lucas Giolito, who was recently put on the injured list with an elbow injury. Germán Márquez remains sidelined by forearm nerve inflammation, and Matt Waldron is out with a right brachialis muscle injury.
That’s a lot of names missing from the same part of the roster, and it leaves the Padres thin in the rotation for now. Still, the club expects all of them back at some point this season, and if that happens with everyone healthy, the rotation could turn into a real strength late in the year.
In Other News...
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The decision point was obvious enough to spark second-guessing, especially in a game that stayed tight long enough to make every move matter. Stammen said the challenge is finding that line between preserving relievers and acting before an inning gets away, and he framed the experience as part of the learning curve that comes with managing in the majors. [Read more 🡒]
Padres Suddenly Have A Yu Darvish Question Again
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What makes this worth watching is that Darvish has denied retirement talk and is still under contract, which keeps the door open for a return whenever he is ready. Stammen even left open the possibility of a late-season surprise, the kind of development that would change the Padres pitching picture in an instant. For now, there is no clean answer on when that might happen, only the sense that Darvishs comeback timeline is no longer as fixed as it once seemed. [Read more 🡒]
