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Royals C Perez to have surgery on left knee

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SURPRISE, Ariz. — Salvador Perez will open the season on the disabled list instead of as the Kansas City Royals’ starting catcher.

Perez will have surgery on his left knee to repair a lateral meniscus tear. He injured his knee warming up starting pitcher Jonathan Sanchez in the bullpen before a 7-5 victory Tuesday against the Cincinnati Reds. Perez caught the first inning but left with a noticeable limp and was replaced by Cody Clark. A MRI on Tuesday night revealed the tear.

Royals general manager Dayton Moore said Wednesday that in a best-case scenario, Perez would be out three to four weeks and not be ready for the April 6 opener against the Los Angeles Angels. The surgery will determine the severity of the cartilage tear and how much time he will miss.

“I’m very sad,” Perez said with Brayan Pena acting as his interpreter. “It’s my first year, and I was very motivated, and it’s very painful. But hopefully I can bounce back and I’ll be fine.”

He said that while catching Sanchez in the bullpen, he “felt something” in his knee.

“But I didn’t expect that it was something very dangerous,” he said. “Right now they told me that it was way more than I thought it was. It was a pitch inside, so I was trying to move in, and that’s when my knee tweaked. My spike got stuck, and … my knee moved out of place. I’ve learned how to play with a lot of pain. I went out there, and I caught the first inning.

“Then Nick (Kenney), the trainer, told me that I was limping. He didn’t like the way I looked, so he checked me. It really was painful after that. After he shut me down, that’s when I found out it was something serious.”

Perez’s injury leaves the Royals thin in catching. Manny Pina, a rookie backup who made his big league debut last year, had surgery on his right knee after tearing cartilage in a Feb. 22 practice.

Pena is the lone remaining healthy catcher on the 40-man big league roster, hitting .248 in 72 games last year. Nonroster invitee Max Ramirez is the only other catcher in camp with big league experience. He hit .217 in 45 games in 2008 and 2010 with the Texas Rangers.

The 21-year-old Perez hit .331 in 39 games with the Royals last season after a promotion Aug. 10. He signed a five-year, $7 million contract Feb. 27 with a club option for three more years that could be worth $26.75 million if all the performance bonuses are reached.

Clark, 30, is another candidate, playing nine years in the minors and the past two seasons with Triple-A Omaha, hitting .233 in 51 games.

Moore said the Royals would be looking to add catching depth with the knee surgeries to Perez and Pina.

There is the quick update of the day.

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Royals C Perez to have surgery on knee cartilage

SURPRISE, Ariz. (AP) Salvador Perez will open the season on the disabled list instead of as the Kansas City Royals’ starting catcher.

Perez will have surgery on his left knee to repair a lateral meniscus tear. He injured his knee warming up starting pitcher Jonathan Sanchez in the bullpen before a 7-5 victory Tuesday against the Cincinnati Reds. Perez caught the first inning but left with a noticeable limp and was replaced by Cody Clark. A MRI on Tuesday night revealed the tear.

Royals general manager Dayton Moore said Wednesday that in a best-case scenario, Perez would be out three to four weeks and not be ready for the April 6 opener against the Los Angeles Angels. The surgery will determine the severity of the cartilage tear and how much time he will miss.

”I’m very sad,” Perez said with Brayan Pena acting as his interpreter. ”It’s my first year, and I was very motivated, and it’s very painful. But hopefully I can bounce back and I’ll be fine.”

He said that while catching Sanchez in the bullpen, he ”felt something” in his knee.

”But I didn’t expect that it was something very dangerous,” he said. ”Right now they told me that it was way more than I thought it was. It was a pitch inside, so I was trying to move in, and that’s when my knee tweaked. My spike got stuck, and … my knee moved out of place. I’ve learned how to play with a lot of pain. I went out there, and I caught the first inning.

”Then Nick (Kenney), the trainer, told me that I was limping. He didn’t like the way I looked, so he checked me. It really was painful after that. After he shut me down, that’s when I found out it was something serious.”

Perez’s injury leaves the Royals thin in catching. Manny Pina, a rookie backup who made his big league debut last year, had surgery on his right knee after tearing cartilage in a Feb. 22 practice.

Pena is the lone remaining healthy catcher on the 40-man big league roster, hitting .248 in 72 games last year. Nonroster invitee Max Ramirez is the only other catcher in camp with big league experience. He hit .217 in 45 games in 2008 and 2010 with the Texas Rangers.

The 21-year-old Perez hit .331 in 39 games with the Royals last season after a promotion Aug. 10. He signed a five-year, $7 million contract Feb. 27 with a club option for three more years that could be worth $26.75 million if all the performance bonuses are reached.

Clark, 30, is another candidate, playing nine years in the minors and the past two seasons with Triple-A Omaha, hitting .233 in 51 games.

Moore said the Royals would be looking to add catching depth with the knee surgeries to Perez and Pina.

What do you guys think about this.

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Royals Rally Late to Beat Rangers, 7-6.

Posted on: 8:29 pm, March 5, 2012, by Ryan Magnuson, updated on: 08:31pm, March 5, 2012

KCRoyals

Texas Rangers Fall to Kansas City Royals as Cactus…

The Texas Rangers opened their Cactus League season on March 4 with a game against the Kansas City Royals. Unfortunately, the more things change the more they stay the same. The Rangers lost 6-1 to the Royals but the stat that bothers me the most is that Colby Lewis gave up another home run in the game.

Colby Lewis
Wikimedia Commons

The Rangers plan to open the season with Lewis as the Opening Day starter but I don’t see him as the ace on the team. In 2011, Lewis gave up 35 home runs, the most in the American League, and that was the stat that hurt his standing in the Rangers’ organization the most.

Rangers Ballpark in Arlington is a hitter’s park and Texas can’t afford for their top of the line pitchers to give up that many home runs. The Rangers have the fire power to fight back but shouldn’t be put in that position this much. Against the Royals, they couldn’t come back.

The Royals’ player who hit the home run was designated hitter Billy Butler, a slugger who hit fewer home runs over the last two seasons (34) than Lewis gave up in 2011 alone. The home run was a two-run shot in the first inning and was really Lewis’ only really bad pitch of the game. Unfortunately, he throws one too many of those bad pitches.

Texas couldn’t come back from the deficit. Mitch Moreland, fresh off is wrist surgery, hit a home run in the game as well, the only run scored by the Rangers. It was an encouraging sign from the first baseman. Texas passed over both Albert Pujols and Prince Fielder, choosing to stick with Moreland. The young first baseman has a lot of power but needs to work on his pitch selection. His home run in his second at-bat of Cactus League play was a step in the right direction.

Scott Feldman came into the game and pitched two perfect innings, no hits or walks, but also no strikeouts. That is fine because shutout innings is what Texas baseball is all about now.

Michael Kirkman was the first pitcher to make his case for the left handed relievers job and failed miserably. Kirkman pitched two innings, giving up five hits and three earned runs while striking out one batter. That will severely damage his chances of making the roster unless he can make up for it down the line.

The other three Rangers’ pitchers threw three scoreless innings, giving up three hits while striking out four batters. Those pitchers included Robbie Ross (LHP), Sean Green (RHP) and Miguel De Los Santos (LHP).

Offensively, the Rangers only finished with five hits, compared to 11 by the Royals. Ian Kinsler, Josh Hamilton, Nelson Cruz and backup catcher Luis Martinez all joined Moreland with one hit each.

Next up for Texas are the Royals again on Monday afternoon at 2:05 p.m. CT. Derek Holland and Alexi Ogando will be the two starting pitcher for Texas, each throwing two innings apiece.

Author Shawn S. Lealos has a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Oklahoma (2000) and has been a Texas Rangers fan his entire life, watching the Rangers’ Triple-A affiliate play for over 30 years. While Texas has moved their Triple-A team, Shawn still remains a loyal Rangers fan and awaits the year they finally win the big one.

Source: MLB.COM

Note: This article was written by a Yahoo! contributor. Sign up here to start publishing your own sports content.

Gotta run!.

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