Just days before Opening Day, everything changes.
The Padres didnāt just lose a pitcherāthey may have lost their anchor.

Rewritten Article:
A wave of concern is sweeping through San Diegoāand it couldnāt have come at a worse time.
With the 2026 MLB season right around the corner, the Padres have been hit with a major setback: All-Star pitcher Joe Musgrove is now expected to miss Opening Day. And suddenly, what once looked like a steady rotation is now full of questions.

Manager Craig Stammen confirmed what many feared but hoped wouldnāt happen. Musgrove, one of the teamās most trusted arms, is likely headed to the injured list to start the season.
And while the team insists this was āpart of the plan,ā the timing is impossible to ignore.
āHeās most likely going to start on the IL,ā Stammen admitted. āWe knew this was coming. The priority is having him ready for the full seasonānot just Opening Day.ā
That explanation offers logicābut not comfort.
Because Musgrove isnāt just another pitcher. Heās a cornerstone. A stabilizing force. The kind of arm you build a rotation around.
And right now, heās not there.

The root of the issue traces back to elbow surgery following the 2025 season. Since then, Musgrove has been on a careful recovery path. But recent signs suggest that path hasnāt been as smooth as hoped.
During a spring training appearance against Great Britaināhis first outing since 2024āhis arm reportedly didnāt respond the way the team expected.
That moment raised internal alarms.
Not panicābut caution.
āOf course, in a perfect world, heād give us 30-plus starts,ā Stammen said. āBut thatās just not realistic right now. Weāre being smart.ā

Smart, perhapsābut costly in the short term.
Because Musgroveās absence doesnāt exist in isolation. Itās part of a much bigger problem unfolding within the Padresā pitching staff.
This isnāt just one missing piece.
Itās a rotation in transition.

San Diego already lost key contributors from last season. Dylan Cease, one of their most reliable starters, departed in free agency for Toronto. Stephen Kolek was traded midseason. And veteran Yu Darvish? Also sidelined after elbow surgery.
Thatās three major arms goneāand now Musgrove joins the list.
What remains is a rotation that suddenly feels unproven.
Nick Pivetta, Michael King, and Randy VƔsquez are expected to lead the group. But beyond them, uncertainty takes over.
Multiple pitchers are now battling for crucial roles: Walker Buehler, GermƔn MƔrquez, Marco Gonzales, Triston McKenzie, and JP Sears.

Itās no longer just competitionāitās survival of the most reliable.
Early reports suggest Buehler and MƔrquez are leading the race. But even that comes with questions. Buehler posted a 4.93 ERA across stints with Boston and Philadelphia last season. MƔrquez struggled even more, finishing with a 6.70 ERA in Colorado.
Not exactly reassuring numbers for a team with postseason ambitions.
And thatās what makes Musgroveās absence feel even heavier.
Because without him, thereās no clear ace. No guaranteed stability. Just a mix of potential, risk, and unanswered questions.
Still, the Padres are playing the long game.
They believe rushing Musgrove back now could cost them far more later. The goal is clear: get him healthy, get him strong, and bring him back when it matters most.
But until that happens, San Diego will have to navigate the early season without one of its most important weapons.
And in a league where every win counts, that could make all the difference.
Now the pressure shifts.
To the rotation.
To the depth.
To the players who must step up faster than expected.
Because Opening Day is coming.
And the Padres will take the field without their anchorāhoping the storm doesnāt hit too hard before he returns.
Leave a Reply