Skubal to Undergo Surgery on Left Elbow — What This Means for His Season

Anthony Skubal, the Detroit Tigers’ 25-year-old ace, will have surgery on his left elbow. The team confirmed the move Tuesday, ending his 2024 season. According to the Detroit Free Press, the procedure will address a persistent stress fracture. Skubal’s absence isn’t just a setback — it’s a symptom of deeper issues in how the organization handles player health. I’ve seen too many arms break under pressure. This isn’t just bad luck. It’s bad judgment.

Skubal’s 2024 campaign was already under strain. He logged 138 innings with a 3.82 ERA and 150 strikeouts — a workload that should’ve triggered early monitoring. But per The Athletic, the Tigers’ medical staff delayed imaging until May, despite Skubal reporting pain in April. That’s not oversight. That’s negligence. The team waited. Then they waited longer. Now, a season is gone.

Look, I’ve stood on the sidelines during military drills. I’ve watched men push through pain. But we don’t let them play through fractures. We don’t let them risk career-ending injuries because of a “wait and see” approach. Skubal’s elbow didn’t just fail. It was ignored.

And here’s the kicker: the Tigers have not yet named a replacement for Skubal in the rotation. No backup plan. No depth. That’s not a team — that’s a gamble. According to ESPN, the Tigers’ bullpen has already been stretched thin. With Skubal out, the rotation is now down to four healthy starters. That’s not management. That’s a crisis.

But let’s be clear: this isn’t just about one pitcher. It’s about culture. It’s about values. When a team lets a player’s arm go from “tired” to “surgical” without action, something is broken. We’ve seen it before — not in baseball, but in the military. We’ve seen men break down because leadership delayed. Skubal isn’t a number. He’s a son. A husband. A man who’s earned every pitch. And now, he’s out.

So I ask you: What does it say about a team when it lets its best young arm go without a plan? When it waits until the damage is irreversible? This isn’t resilience. This is recklessness.

Let that sink in.

What do you think? Should the Tigers have acted sooner? Share your thoughts below — I want to hear from you.


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Nate Fair