Truth & Rumors > MLB

Roy Halladay may return to Phillies at end of June

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03:16 AM ET 05.17 | After having his shoulder cleaned out yesterday afternoon in California, the Phillies have already given fans a possible date for when Roy Halladay could begin working toward a return. According to the team, Roy Halladay could begin throwing again in six to eight weeks, barring any setbacks. This information comes via ESPN. And also according to the article, if Doc's rehab remains on schedule, the Phillies could be looking at a mid-July return. But as Philadelphia fans found out the hard way this year with Andrew Bynum, the chances that there are no set-backs after surgery isn't very good. The difference between Halladay and Bynum is that Halladay would kill to be on the mound, whereas Bynum would rather be killed than be on the court. So realistically speaking, early August seems like a fair date to expect Doc back on the mound for the Phillies.

Section 215

Roy Halladay, AP Photo/Michael Perez Roy Halladay, AP Photo/Michael Perez

Halladay surgery called 'best-case' scenario

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07:08 AM ET 05.17 | When the Phillies announced that Roy Halladay's surgery was "successful," they apparently meant it -- even if it's a characterization taken perhaps too lightly. Surgeries seem to have to clear only the lowest of hurdles to qualify as "successful," but Halladay's arthroscopic shoulder surgery is said by people close to him to have been the "best-case" scenario. That means no additional damage was found to his shoulder as to need more extensive surgery, and he is expected back pitching this season. The Phillies star was an uncharacteristic 2-4 with an 8.65 ERA early this season. The Phillies announced that he's likely to be able to begin throwing in "six to eight weeks."

CBS Sports

Roy Halladay, Icon Sports Roy Halladay, Icon Sports

Steinbrenner believes in less-expensive Yanks

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07:06 AM ET 05.17 | The notion, of course, seems absurd in nearly every other MLB city, but Hal Steinbrenner says the success of the injury-depleted Yankees is fortifying his commitment to get the payroll below the luxury-tax threshold of $189 million for 2014. "I always believed it could work if -- if -- the young players, which I've been saying all along, pan out and do their job," he said Thursday. ... "I'm proud of them, my family's proud of them," Steinbrenner said. "They've been fighting hard all year long, and despite significant adversity, they've persevered. It's fun to watch. They're scrappy. Coming from behind, it seems like certain times in the past, it's not something you had confidence in."

Newsday

Derek Jeter, Getty Images Derek Jeter, Getty Images

Bard's career nearing precipice

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07:05 AM ET 05.17 | While the Red Sox earned a much-needed win Wednesday night in Florida, the club learned of more dispiriting news from 1,500 miles away. Pitching for the Double-A Portland Sea Dogs, [Daniel Bard] produced his worst minor league outing of 2013 yet. In one-plus innings, the former all-world set-up man walked five, threw two wild pitches and allowed two runs. He threw just eight of his 30 pitches for strikes, and was particularly brutal after coming back out for the seventh -- walking the bases loaded and throwing a wild pitch before being lifted. ... Pitchers have come back from devastating losses of command before, but Bard appears to be nearing a precipice.

Boston Herald

Daniel Bard, Getty Images Daniel Bard, Getty Images

Seismic shift in MLB high-end contracts

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07:05 AM ET 05.17 | A new day is dawning in baseball, if slowly, that may change the game for its players. One of the game's rising young stars recently told me he was concerned about the flurry of contract extensions in baseball. ... [His] thoughts intrigued me, in no small part because he is a candidate for an extension himself. The player's point was this: Free agency helped make the players union into a powerhouse. But now, with fewer top players reaching free agency, who is going to drive the top of the market? Shouldn't players feel a sense of responsibility to those who came before them and those who will follow? Fair questions, particularly if you look at the next two free-agent classes, which are almost devoid of stars.

FOX Sports

Josh Hamilton, Icon Sports Josh Hamilton, Icon Sports

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