Baseball: Should Mets Pitcher Matt Harvey Apologize? Update: Retires

Should he apologize/was he wrong to post it?


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Matt Harvey tweets middle finger photo on anniversary of Tommy John surgery

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It's been six months since Matt Harvey underwent Tommy John surgery. What better way to celebrate the milestone than by sharing a photo of yourself flipping the bird?

"Can't believe it's been 6 months. I guess this is how I really felt! #tommyjohn" Harvey wrote on Instagram.

On second thought, there are probably better ways to celebrate the anniversary. The Mets asked the rehabbing ace to remove the photo.
"We just felt the photo was inappropriate and we asked Matt to take it down," Mets PR boss Jay Horwitz said.

The photo disppeared from Twitter (but not Instagram - yet), along with Harvey's entire account (@MattHarvey33).

Horwitz said the Mets did not ask Harvey to delete his Twitter account. That decision, Horwitz said, was Harvey's.

*****

Matt Harvey’s rehab from Tommy John surgery seems to be going fine. Every other part of the process, though, has led to trouble.

Harvey again irritated the Mets organization Tuesday by posting a picture on Twitter of himself flipping the bird to the camera taken right before he went into elbow surgery. This after butting heads with the organization over when he expected to return to the majors and where his rehab would take place.

It came on the six-month anniversary of the elbow operation, and when Mets officials asked him to take the picture down, he deleted his entire Twitter account.

He wasn’t, however, sorry for the picture, which he said was taken by his mother.

“It was me showing little bit of my personality before surgery,” Harvey said in the dugout before Tuesday’s game against the Cardinals at Citi Field.

“I’m not going to apologize for being myself and having a good laugh at a funny little picture, but I’ve kind of had enough with Twitter.”

The team also had a negative response to one of his older tweets, when he wrote “2014 Matt Harvey Day will happen” on March 8, a post he had deleted earlier.

So Harvey had to know the picture might not be well-received by the team, especially given his previous run-ins with the organization, right?

“Honestly, I didn’t think there was anything officially wrong with it,” Harvey said. “You listen to the radio and hear a lot of rap music and things that are a lot worse than what I was showing. It was genuine excitement and a little bit of laughter. To stop the controversy, deleting the Twitter [account] was an easy out of not worrying about it anymore.”

Prior to his explanation, Harvey went through his normal throwing program of 90 throws from 20 feet and said his arm felt “great.”

“The biggest thing is maybe not coming back this year and being healthy, but being healthy the next couple of years,” said Harvey, who has taken notice of the alarming number of pitchers who have found themselves in need of a second Tommy John surgery this season.

“The research is definitely starting to build as to why those guys are going in [again],” Harvey said. “We’re about four months away from any possibility of being back at all. Once that time comes, I think the information will come.”

Harvey said his agent Scott Boras has done studies on the topic in hopes of avoiding a similar fate, which would clearly be more significant than any of the fireworks he has created since he underwent surgery.

Still, this Twitter disagreement was just another sign of a disconnect between the team and its star pitcher, who made headlines when he expressed a desire to be with the team in New York instead of rehabbing the whole time in Port St. Lucie.

It was a sentiment he reiterated Tuesday.

“I love being in New York,” Harvey said. “I love wearing a uniform. The hardest part is not being able to play.”

In fact, that was Harvey’s lone apology.

“If there’s one thing I’m sorry for, it’s not being able to play,” Harvey said.
 
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Angels give up on Harvey, DFA former All-Star



The Los Angeles Angels have given up on their $11 million investment in Matt Harvey, designating the 30-year-old right-hander for assignment Friday.

Harvey was 3-5 with a 7.09 ERA in 12 starts. He gave up 6 runs, 7 hits and 5 walks over 6 innings in a 6-2 loss to the Houston Astros on Thursday night.



"The decision was made because we felt like it would increase our chance of winning games," Angels manager Brad Ausmus said after discussing the move with general manager Billy Eppler. "Matt was a very well-liked teammate, a guy that everyone pulled for, including myself. But we're in the business of winning baseball games. In talking to Billy, we just felt like this was the best move to make in order to help us win games."

New York Mets. He started the 2013 All-Star Game at Citi Field but hurt his elbow later that summer and never consistently regained his 98 mph fastball or command following Tommy John surgery.

Harvey lost his spot in the Mets' rotation after four starts last year and had a 10.50 ERA in four relief appearances. When he refused to accept a minor league assignment, the Mets traded him to the Cincinnati Reds. Harvey went 7-7 with a 4.50 ERA in 24 starts for the Reds, became a free agent and signed with the Angels.

He did not pitch for Los Angeles between May 23 and July 13 because of a strained back, and his fastball velocity averaged 92 mph in two starts after his return. He gave up 48 runs and 63 hits in 59⅔ innings this season with 39 strikeouts and 29 walks.

"He's not throwing 97, but he's not throwing 89 either," Ausmus said. "He's got four pitches. He's got the stuff to get major league hitters out. He just has to find a way to harness it."

The Angels called up right-hander Jaime Barria from Triple-A Salt Lake City before the series opener against the Seattle Mariners on Friday. Barria struggled in his return to the majors, giving up 10 runs on nine hits in 3⅔ innings of relief as the Angels lost 10-0.
 
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