Corey Seager took another small step Friday in Atlanta, but the Rangers shortstop still has a long road ahead as he works back from a second lower back injury this season.
According to MLB.com’s Kennedi Landry and The Dallas Morning News’ Evan Grant, Seager was running and throwing during pregame work before Friday’s game. Grant called it “straight line running.”
That’s not the finish line, but it does mark the beginning of a seven-day progression, Rangers Sports Network’s Laura Stickells reported during the broadcast. Seager is trying to climb back from the latest setback after going on the injured list before the All-Star break.
The back issue is the second time this season he has landed on the IL for the same problem. He first went on the injured list in mid-May, returned in early June, and then was sidelined again after the second flare-up. Before the break, Seager said he was frustrated not just by the injuries, but by not being able to identify the source of the problem.
His absence stretched through the Rangers’ final homestand before the break, a stretch in which Texas won four of six and moved into first place in the American League West.
There was no new timetable after Friday’s workout, but Seager will almost certainly need to keep building toward full baseball activity. That means running the bases, throwing from his position and taking cage work.
Live batting practice is generally the last hurdle before a rehab assignment or a return to the Rangers. Seager doesn’t like rehab assignments, though he did one earlier this year at Double-A Frisco after his first IL stint.
Seager’s season has also been interrupted by a 7-day concussion IL stay after he dealt with concussion-like symptoms following a home plate collision in Kansas City.
The 32-year-old is in the midst of the roughest season of his career. He has played in just 51 games and is hitting .182/.292/.374 with 10 home runs and 25 RBI.
The injuries have piled up in recent years, too. Since 2023, he has been on the injured list every season. His 2024 campaign ended because of a sports hernia, and his 2025 season ended because of an emergency appendectomy.
Seager is in the fifth year of a 10-year deal that stands as the largest contract in franchise history. He hasn’t played more than 123 games in any of his last four seasons in Texas after appearing in 151 games during his first year with the Rangers in 2022.
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