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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Rolen returns to DL


St. Louis third baseman Scott Rolen will try to heal his ailing shoulder with rest. 
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Associated Press

ST. LOUIS – St. Louis Cardinals third baseman Scott Rolen, who has complained of pain at the plate since returning from shoulder surgery in mid-June, was placed on the 15-day disabled list Friday.

Manager Tony La Russa indicated it was Rolen’s call.

“He just doesn’t think he can be competitive,” La Russa said. “It’s not working, so we go to the next step, which is to shut him down and try to get him healthy.”

Rolen was injured May 10 in a baserunning collision with Dodgers first baseman Hee-Seop Choi and missed 33 games following surgery. The six-time Gold Glove winner has been up to his standards in the field since returning from the DL, but has struggled at the plate.

“The idea was I was going to progress along the way and just swinging the bat was going to help my shoulder, and the reality of it was I did not progress along the way,” Rolen said. “It got worse. I’ve had swings in the last week that were just bad, painfully bad.

“It’s time to not swing anymore.”

Rolen was batting .207 with no homers and eight RBIs in 87 at-bats since his return, and his season numbers – .235 average, five homers and 28 RBIs – also are significantly down. Rolen had four consecutive 100-RBI seasons before this year.

The numbers, 2 for 21, are even worse since the All-Star break.

“The last two days I realized I wasn’t able to put a swing, good competitive at-bat together,” Rolen said. “To be pretty upfront about it, I’m not healthy enough to … I’m not healthy enough right now.

“I tried and I have no regrets.”

La Russa said Thursday that he thought the Cardinals could nurse Rolen through the injury and warned that the alternative to a Rolen at less than 100 percent was no Rolen for the rest of the season. Medical tests administered earlier in the week showed tendinitis and inflammation to the rotator cuff, but also showed that the left shoulder was stronger than the right shoulder.

“We felt if we were careful, we could keep playing him,” La Russa said. “It just didn’t work out. Hopefully by resting it we’ll get him back.”

“We hope to get him 100 percent functional by the end of the year,” trainer Barry Weinberg said.