SEATTLE — Los Angeles Angels third baseman Anthony Rendon will undergo surgery for a right wrist injury and miss the rest of the season, the team announced Friday.

Rendon aggravated a previous injury to the wrist during Tuesday’s game against the Los Angeles Dodgers and has not played since. Rendon first injured the wrist in mid-May.

Angels head athletic trainer Mike Frostad said Rendon has a subluxation in which the wrist tendon comes out of the groove where it is meant to sit.

“More often than not, this injury ends up in surgery and we were expecting this to be the outcome,” Frostad said. “We were just trying to get through to the end of the year, and he was trying to get through the end of the year, and he just wasn’t able to get there.”

Interim manager Phil Nevin said Thursday before the Angels began a three-game series at Seattle that Rendon seemed to be doing better and might be available to pinch-hit. But after Rendon had a pregame workout, it became clear surgery was the best option.

“Yesterday was the last straw,” Rendon said. “Trying to get through a new routine, and it was kind of the last thing we were going to try to do to see if I was able to play before the game. I was trying to see if I could get in the lineup, and then we did some more stuff during game time. It’s just what happened.”

Rendon, 32, has played in 155 of the Angels’ 384 games during the first three seasons of the $245 million, seven-year deal he signed before the 2020 season.

Now, he’ll have another season cut short by injury. Frostad said he should be fully recovered before next year’s spring training.

“We’re anticipating that it’s a four-to-six-month recovery,” Frostad said. “So by doing it now, he should have a fairly normal offseason.”

Rendon batted .228 with five homers and 28 RBI in 45 games this season. Last year, he was limited to 58 games and hit .240 with nine homers and 34 RBI.

His best season came in 2019 with Washington when he was an All-Star and led the NL with 44 doubles and 126 RBI while hitting a career-best .319. He homered in Game 6 and Game 7 of the Nationals’ World Series victory over the Houston Astros.

Rendon said the premature end to his season is tough to accept, especially given the Angels’ recent struggles. Los Angeles endured a 14-game losing streak from May 25 to June 8 that cost manager Joe Maddon his job.

“Our team is amazing,” Rendon said. “I love this group of guys and going to battle with them every single day. It sucks and that’s why I just kept trying to push through it and try to fight through it as best as I could.”

Source: www.espn.com