Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 13
Tarik Skubal Returns in 6 Weeks After 1.9-Millimeter Elbow Surgery
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 13

Tarik Skubal Returns in 6 Weeks After 1.9-Millimeter Elbow Surgery

3 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jul 13

Summary

  • Six weeks after elbow surgery, Tarik Skubal was back throwing 99.9-m.p.h. fastballs for Detroit after doctors removed a loose bone fragment from his joint.
  • The procedure used a 1.9-millimeter NanoNeedle Scope 2.0 instead of a standard 4-millimeter arthroscope, reducing bleeding, scarring and inflammation and sharply cutting recovery time from the usual three months.
  • Skubal avoided a second torn U.C.L. — an injury that could have sidelined him for more than a year — but still missed too much time to make this week's All-Star Game in Philadelphia.
  • His rapid return lands as M.L.B. grapples with rising injury rates tied to harder throwing and swinging, while improved surgical and rehab techniques are getting elite athletes back faster.
  • That comeback also sharpens attention on Skubal's expiring contract, with rich teams expected to pursue him this winter for deals approaching $500 million and the Aug. 3 trade deadline looming.

Insights

Will breakthrough surgeries like the 'Skubal Scope' soon make traditional injury recovery timelines obsolete?
Does the 'recovery revolution' risk athletes' long-term health for short-term on-field gains?