Updated Feb 15, 2013 - 3:46 pm
New Mariner Jon Garland eager to prove he's healthy
Shortly after news got out that the Mariners were going to sign Jon Garland to a minor-league contract, I received a text from a scout who said he believed Seattle may have found something in the pitcher who had been out of the game since 2011.
While with the Dodgers that year Garland began to feel pain in his shoulder. He threw his last game on June 1 and had season-ending surgery shortly after. He agreed to a minor-league contract in 2012 with the Indians but as he prepared for spring training he realized that physically he was not ready to go.
![]() New Mariner Jon Garland last pitched in 2011 with the Dodgers, missing last season while continuing his recovery from a right shoulder injury. (AP) |
"I thought, when I get into spring training and really bring on a workload, I'm not going to hold up," he remembered. "And I wasn't going to go into a team knowing that in my mind and my heart, I wasn't going to do that. I think it is one of the best decisions I made and I think it's going to show this year.
"I think I am going to prove it to a lot of people."
Garland, who prior to 2011 had not started fewer than 32 games in a season since 2002, worked out for representatives from several teams this winter and had a few teams looking at him for possible rotation spots. He liked what he saw in the Mariners, and a phone call from manager Eric Wedge locked him in.
Having already thrown two bullpens in Peoria he said that he felt strong and ready to go. Despite coming off injury, he is on the same program as the other pitchers, and insists he would have it no other way.
"The situation I am in, where I am in my career, I don't want to hold back," he said. "I don't want to try and take extra days here and there. I want to go full bore and to make sure I am capable of doing this for a full season. I want to find out now what I am capable of and I don't want to take a spot up on this team if I can't help them through a full season."
As for the team around him, the veteran of 12 big-league seasons likes the moves that general manager Jack Zduriencik made in the offseason.
"I think a lot of people could be surprised. If you keep everyone healthy for a full season, go out there and and everybody does what they are capable of doing, sometimes it is good to be that underdog and almost forgotten about because you could shock a lot of people, and I think this team has that opportunity," he said.
One addition he said Seattle should be particularly excited about it Kendrys Morales, who was a teammate of Garland's in 2005.
"This guy comes to play every day," he said. "He's a switch hitter that has the chance to hit .300 with 30 home runs every year and he's not talked about like a Josh Hamilton or some of these other guys. A guy like that, you don't talk about him or if he thinks he is underrated – that could just drive him more."
Garland is anxious to see how the team comes together. He feels confident that he is healthy and ready to resume his career, and he hopes to be in Seattle on Opening Day.
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Bob Stelton is the co-host of "Bob and Groz". He came to 710 ESPN Seattle from 101 ESPN in St. Louis and had previously worked for Sporting News Radio in Chicago and Santa Monica, Calif. Bob began his radio career in Seattle in 1997 after a failed attempt to become a rock star.
Dave Grosby is the co-host of "Bob and Groz." The Groz has spent the last 21 years of his 39-year broadcast career as a Seattle sports talk show host. Dave is also the play-by-play announcer for Seattle U basketball on KTTH 770. Before coming to Seattle, Dave worked at KFI in Los Angeles and KFBK in Sacramento. He's been married to his wife Bonnie for 23 years.
After two years as the producer for "Brock and Salk," Colin Paisley now produces "Bob and Groz." Colin also hosts "Seattle Sports at Night" with Tom Wassell and Matt Pitman. Colin came to 710 ESPN Seattle after five years at various FM music stations in Bellingham and Seattle. In addition to his time as producer and host, Colin likes to spend his time embracing his "Slacker Gen-Y" persona by napping and not caring about stuff. Plus he likes tons of bands you've never heard of, and once you hear of them he'll stop liking them.


























