New York Mets Ace Kodai Senga Dealing With Arm Fatigue as Spring Training Gets Underway

Kodai Senga, fresh off an elite rookie campaign, is dealing with some arm fatigue just one week into the New York Mets' Spring Training camp in Florida.
New York Mets Ace Kodai Senga Dealing With Arm Fatigue as Spring Training Gets Underway
New York Mets Ace Kodai Senga Dealing With Arm Fatigue as Spring Training Gets Underway /
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New York Mets starting pitcher Kodai Senga is dealing with arm fatigue, manager Carlos Mendoza said in a press conference Wednesday afternoon.

"After his side session yesterday, he came in and experienced some arm fatigue," Mendoza said. "So he stayed inside and we're taking a look at it."

When asked asked if Senga would undergo an MRI as part of the training staff's further evaluation, Mendoza didn't have any answers beyond the fact that the 31-year-old right-hander took Wednesday off.

"We'll see," Mendoza said. "We gotta get with the trainers cause that was late, obviously. I gotta get more information, but he got on the mound yesterday and today he came in and, you know, just overall arm fatigue."

Senga thrived in his first MLB season in 2023, making the All-Star Game as a rookie. In addition to finishing second in NL Rookie of the Year voting, Senga also placed seventh in the NL Cy Young race.

The righty went 12-7 with a 2.98 ERA, 202 strikeouts and a 4.5 WAR last season, serving as one of the few bright spots on a Mets team that fell well short of expectations.

Senga is set to take on additional pressure at the top of the Mets' rotation heading into 2024, considering the team dealt away future Hall of Famers Max Scherzer and Justin Verlander at last summer's trade deadline. While New York did manage to replace them with veteran free agents Luis Severino and Sean Manaea – as well as Milwaukee Brewers trade acquisition Adrian Houser – the front office entrusted Senga to take over as their ace.

Before arriving in Queens, Senga was an All-Star in Nippon Professional Baseball. It took a five-year, $75 million deal to lure him out of Japan. Senga's payday likely would have been larger if it weren't for his "iffy" physical that resulted in some team-friendly contingencies being built into his contract.

It remains to be seen if Senga's arm fatigue is a sign of a more serious issue, or if he will have to spend any time on the injured list.

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Sam Connon
SAM CONNON

Sam Connon is a Staff Writer for Fastball on the Sports Illustrated/FanNation networks. He previously covered UCLA Athletics for Sports Illustrated/FanNation's All Bruins, 247Sports' Bruin Report Online, Rivals' Bruin Blitz, the Bleav Podcast Network and the Daily Bruin, with his work as a sports columnist receiving awards from the College Media Association and Society of Professional Journalists. Connon also wrote for Sports Illustrated/FanNation's New England Patriots site, Patriots Country, and he was on the Patriots and Boston Red Sox beats at Prime Time Sports Talk.