Mets at odds with Beltran over knee surgery?
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This year, the New York Mets are hurting before the season even
starts.
Carlos Beltran had surgery on his troublesome right knee
Wednesday and the All-Star center fielder is expected to miss the
start of the season. His decision to have the operation also
sparked a dispute about whether he had received permission from the
team, and perhaps whether the surgery was needed.
Either way, it's more bad news for the Mets, ravaged by
serious injuries to several stars last year while sliding to 70-92
and fourth place in the NL East. Hoping for a fast start to the
upcoming season, New York will likely be without one of its best
players for at least the first few weeks.
A person with knowledge of the situation said Beltran did not
obtain advance written consent from the club to have the surgery,
which was performed by his personal physician, Dr. Richard
Steadman, in Colorado. The person spoke to The Associated Press on
condition of anonymity because the Mets didn't discuss the matter
publicly.
Beltran's agent, Scott Boras, said the guarantee language in
the slugger's contract requires advance written permission only for
elective operations.
"This was necessary surgery, necessary surgery to work,"
Boras told The Associated Press.
The Mets might claim that the operation was elective.
Boras said Steadman spoke with Mets medical director Dr.
David Altchek on Monday and again after Beltran was examined in
Colorado on Tuesday, and that Steadman obtained Altchek's consent
for the surgery.
Boras also said he called Mets executives Monday to tell them
Beltran was going to see Steadman and that they should keep in
touch with Altchek. The agent said he traveled to Colorado with
Beltran for the exam.
The person with knowledge of the situation said Altchek was
not authorized to give consent because he is not a Mets official.
"Dr. Steadman has represented to us that he spoke with the
Mets' physician and he received consent to go forward with the plan
and the surgery," Boras said. "Dr. Steadman has told us that his
office contacted the Mets trainer and obtained the appropriate
insurance forms and received approval for payment to go ahead with
the surgery."
The team said Beltran is expected to resume baseball
activities in 12 weeks, a timetable that likely would keep him out
for most of April - maybe longer.
New York's first official workout for pitchers and catchers
is a little more than five weeks away, on Feb. 20. The Mets open
the season April 5 against Florida.
"The doctor said eight weeks, possibly, and a window to 12
weeks to resume baseball activities. With elite athletes, the
timetable is sometimes shorter than the original prognosis," Boras
said.
In a statement released Wednesday night, the Mets said
Beltran's osteoarthritis worsened during the offseason and he
decided to have arthroscopic surgery to clean out the arthritic
area of his knee.
The procedure was performed by Steadman, considered one of
the top knee surgeons in the world. He is noted for his work
performing microfracture knee surgery on basketball players.
Beltran went to see Steadman last summer for a second opinion
on his aching knee, and the doctor agreed with the Mets' medical
staff that surgery was not needed at that time.
A five-time All-Star, Beltran missed 2 1/2 months last season
with a painful bone bruise on his right knee, coinciding with the
team's plunge. He returned Sept. 8 and was eased back into the
everyday lineup.
The switch-hitter finished with a team-leading .325 batting
average and .415 on-base percentage. He had 10 homers and 48 RBIs.
The Mets said Beltran hadn't felt pain after the season ended
or early in his offseason conditioning, but his symptoms "returned
to the point where pre-spring training conditioning became too
painful."
Boras said Altchek had been examining Beltran once a month
during the offseason.
"Since the beginning of November, he was feeling discomfort
and pain," Boras said. "They found some fragments in there that had
to be removed."
The persistent injury is a major concern for the Mets and
Beltran, who turns 33 on April 24. He is about to enter the sixth
season of a seven-year, $119 million contract he signed before
2005.
Angel Pagan got regular playing time in Beltran's absence
last season and would probably fill in again.
In addition to Beltran, Jose Reyes, Carlos Delgado and Johan
Santana were among the Mets stars who missed long stretches of time
due to injuries last year, along with pitchers John Maine, Oliver
Perez and J.J. Putz.
Reyes and Delgado went down in May and did not return. Many
of the replacements got hurt, too, and New York players spent more
than 1,480 days on the disabled list, more than any other major
league team, according to STATS LLC.
Mets general manager Omar Minaya could not immediately be
reached for comment Wednesday night. Team spokesman Jay Horwitz
said the club expected to hold a conference call Thursday.
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