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by RotoWire Staff | RotoWire
Cole Hamels: Hangs up cleats
Cole Hamels (shoulder) officially retired from baseball after 15 seasons in the majors Friday.The 39-year-old lefty had been attempting to come back from a shoulder procedure he underwent in November 2021, but Hamels will call it a career after not pitching in a game since 2020. The 2008 World Series MVP will finish with a career 163-122 record alongside a 3.43 ERA, 1.18 WHIP and four All-Star selections.
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by RotoWire Staff | RotoWire
Padres' Cole Hamels: Team hopes he can help by midseason
Cole Hamels (shoulder) has looked better than expected in throwing sessions and the San Diego Padres are hopeful he can be an option for them around midseason, Kevin Acee of The San Diego Union-Tribune reports.Hamels agreed to a minor-league contract with the Friars in mid-February and is being eased back into things this spring following all of the missed time due to shoulder issues. The veteran left-hander appears to be healthy now, though, and has apparently surprised the team by how well he's been throwing. Hamels figures to stay in extended spring training for a while before joining a minor-league affiliate to make some starts.
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by RotoWire Staff | RotoWire
Padres' Cole Hamels: Not slated for Cactus League games
Cole Hamels (shoulder) is not expected to appear in any Cactus League games this spring, Dennis Lin of The Athletic reports.Hamels did throw a successful bullpen session Thursday in San Diego Padres camp, but the plan calls for him to take it easy over the next month or so as he continues his recovery from September 2021 shoulder surgery. The veteran left-hander is slated to begin pitching in games at extended spring training soon after camp breaks. He inked a minor-league contract with San Diego on Feb. 16.
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by RotoWire Staff | RotoWire
Padres' Cole Hamels: Agrees to minors deal with Padres
Cole Hamels (shoulder) signed a minor-league contract with the San Diego Padres on Thursday, Robert Murray of FanSided.com reports.Presumably, he's getting an invitation to spring training as part of a deal which would be worth $2 million if he's in the majors, per Kevin Acee of The San Diego Union-Tribune. The San Diego native made one start in 2020 and none the last two seasons, but he isn't ready to hang it up yet at 39 years of age. Hamels had shoulder surgery back in November of 2021 but reportedly looked good in an audition for teams in January. Obviously, he's a long shot to be a significant contributor at this point, but on a minor-league deal there's little downside from the Padres' perspective.
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by RotoWire Staff | RotoWire
Cole Hamels: Holds audition for teams
Cole Hamels (shoulder) held a showcase for interested teams Friday in Arlington, Texas, Jon Heyman of the New York Post reports.Per Heyman, Hamels looked very good during the workout and could generate a decent amount of free-agent interest coming out of it. The veteran southpaw hasn't pitched in the majors since 2020 because of lingering complications with his throwing shoulder. If he is now indeed healthy, Hamels might get a camp invite from someone at age 39.
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by RotoWire Staff | RotoWire
Cole Hamels: Undergoes surgery
Cole Hamels recently underwent shoulder surgery, Jon Morosi of MLB Network reports.Hamels made just one start during the 2021 campaign due to shoulder and arm issues, but he doesn't plan to retire during the offseason. Following his recent procedure, the 37-year-old is hopeful that he'll be ready to return to game action late in the summer during the 2022 season.
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by RotoWire Staff | RotoWire
Dodgers' Cole Hamels: Not ready to retire
Cole Hamels (arm) said Monday that he has no plans to retire and plans to attempt another comeback in 2022, Jon Heyman of MLB Network reports.While recovering from the left shoulder injury he sustained late in the 2020 campaign as a member of Atlanta, Hamels delayed signing until August, when he reached a one-year deal with the Los Angeles Dodgers. The veteran southpaw was expected to be a rotation option for Los Angeles in September, but those plans were foiled when he experienced renewed pain in his left arm two weeks ago and was subsequently shut down for the season. Despite having made only one start in the majors the past two seasons and having now endured multiple arm-related setbacks, Hamels isn't deterred from giving it a go for his age-38 season in 2022. Hamels will likely have to settle for a minor-league deal over the winter and likely won't be guaranteed a rotation spot with any team heading into spring training.
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by RotoWire Staff | RotoWire
Dodgers' Cole Hamels: Placed on 60-day IL
Cole Hamels was placed on the 60-day injured list with an arm injury Monday, Fabian Ardaya of The Athletic reports.Hamels joined the Los Angeles Dodgers on a major-league deal in early August and was working on building back up to full strength after he missed most of the 2020 campaign due to a shoulder injury. However, the southpaw recently experienced arm pain and will be unavailable for the remainder of the season following his placement on the 60-day IL. Hamels will become a free agent during the offseason and has made just one major-league appearance since 2019. The 37-year-old southpaw's career could be over following his latest arm-related setback.
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by RotoWire Staff | RotoWire
Dodgers' Cole Hamels: Tosses simulated game
Cole Hamels (not injury related) threw one inning in a simulated game Saturday, Fabian Ardaya of The Athletic reports.Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts indicated that Hamels' sim inning went well and said that the left-hander threw some additional warm-up pitches. Hamels was signed to a major-league contract Wednesday after throwing only 3.1 innings with Atlanta last season, so he'll need considerable time to ramp up. Per Juan Toribio of MLB.com, the team would like the veteran hurler to get up to five innings in sim games before joining the active roster.
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by RotoWire Staff | RotoWire
Dodgers' Cole Hamels: Reaches MLB deal with Dodgers
Cole Hamels and the Los Angeles Dodgers came to terms Wednesday on a one-year, $1 million deal, Mike DiGiovanna of the Los Angeles Times reports.Jon Heyman of MLB Network was first to report the Dodgers were nearing a deal with the four-time All-Star, who has made only one MLB start since the 2019 season due to recurring shoulder issues. The 37-year-old avoided offseason surgery, and though he wasn't able to get back to full health in time for spring training, Hamels has been throwing bullpen sessions in showcase events for the past month and looks to be back to 100 percent at this point. Because of his prolonged shutdown, Hamels will have to go through a de facto spring training at the Dodgers' complex in Arizona, so he won't be immediately activated. Assuming he's able to get ramped up over the next month, Hamels could join the Dodgers in late August or early September and fill a depth role in a Los Angeles rotation that's currently missing multiple starters. During his last healthy season in 2019 with the Cubs, Hamels posted a 3.81 ERA, 1.39 WHIP and 143:56 K:BB in 141.2 innings.