Cubs' Lilly gets good news from MRI on knee
Ted Lilly was as relieved as a starter could be when he got the
news: There's no major damage in his sore right knee and the
Chicago Cubs' reliable left-hander continued to work his way back
Friday from offseason shoulder surgery.
Lilly has not yet thrown off the mound and when his knee
started bothering him the last couple of days, he was checked out
Thursday by a doctor. The MRI revealed just wear and tear.
"There is no significant damage that would require surgery,
basically. So obviously that's good news," Lilly said.
He was back on the field throwing on flat ground Friday,
trying to get his left shoulder in shape for the season, even
though he's not expected to be ready by opening day. He had
arthroscopic surgery in November.
He said the knee felt fine and so did the shoulder. He'll
have to relieve stress on his knee when possible.
"I think I'm going to have to make a few adjustments to my
conditioning, not pound on it too much, which will be tough," Lilly
added. "I'm still expecting to try to catch up with the rest of the
guys."
Manager Lou Piniella said Lilly may have to cut back on all
the running he does to stay in shape and switch to an exercise
bicycle.
"We are just going to monitor him and see how he is," said
Piniella, whose team was ravaged by injuries last season. "It would
have been a lot worse."
Lilly is 44-26 in his three seasons with the Cubs, including
12-9 last year with a 3.10 ERA in 27 starts.
He went on the disabled list last July with inflammation in
the shoulder before returning to the rotation. He had hoped rest
would make his shoulder better -- it didn't -- and that's why he
waited a month before having surgery in the offseason.
The surgery was done by Dr. Lewis Yocum, who found no major
damange in cleaning up the shoulder.
"It wasn't like he had a big tear and we're behind because he
needed Tommy John or rotator cuff cleanup," general manager Jim
Hendry said. "It really wasn't any big deal that it was done when
it was done, to be honest with you."
With Lilly's status for the beginning of the season unclear,
the Cubs will have Carlos Zambrano, Ryan Dempster and Randy Wells
at the top of the rotation. The fourth starter, until Lilly
returns, and the No. 5 man will likely emerge from a group that
includes Jeff Samardzija, Tom Gorezelanny, Sean Marshall and Carlos
Silva.
Even though regulars are not scheduled to report until
Monday, all but six players are already in camp.
Showing up Friday was veteran Kevin Millar, who was signed to
a minor league contract.
The personable Millar, who was with the Red Sox when they
ended an 86-year World Series championship drought in 2004, hopes
he can help do the same for the Cubs, whose last title came in
1908.
The 38-year-old Millar, a free spirit known as a strong
clubhouse presence, will try to win a job as a backup infielder and
outfielder. He was a teammate of current Cubs Dempster and Derrek
Lee while with the Florida Marlins. In 12 major league seasons, he
is a .274 career hitter.
"I don't have a whole lot of tools. I never had. I don't even
think I have a tool box," Millar said. "That's not what made me.
What made me is that I've loved it more than anybody else."