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An Ode to Mets Athletic Trainer Ray Ramirez: The Snakebitten Trainer for a Snakebitten Team

Article reposted from Sports Illustrated
Author:  Jack Dickey

Let me stipulate that some jobs are truly and unavoidably thankless. They are suicide missions. They are jobs where you will be noticed if and only if your employer falls short of its objective as it seems to concern you—even if you personally are blameless. Armored car driver, White House ethics lawyer, that kind of thing. I cop to precisely zero knowledge about whether head athletic trainer for a famously snakebitten baseball club is or isn’t such an appointment.

One man who might have an opinion, Ray Ramirez, was officially separated today from his longtime gig as the New York Mets’ head trainer. He’d been a survivor, all things considered. He’d held the job since fall 2004 and served under three managers and two general managers amidst ceaseless griping about the team’s perpetual injury problem. Until recently, speculation had been that Ramirez would retain his job despite an organizational purge that claimed manager Terry Collins and pitching coach Dan Warthen.

Athletes get hurt; that comes with the territory. But it sure seemed like the Mets got hurt more, and more cruelly, than most. Each member of the team’s vaunted young rotation has suffered at least one season-ending injury in the last two seasons. The exception is Noah Syndergaard, who earlier this year refused an MRI, pitched through pain, tore a muscle, and wound up missing five months. Zack Wheeler, Matt Harvey, and Steven Matz all enter the offseason with their big-league futures in serious doubt. Yoenis Cespedes, the team’s best hitter, missed half of the 2017 season with presumably manageable leg injuries, and David Wright missed the entire season after injury setbacks in spring training.

And as with the Syndergaard affair, the team’s initial diagnoses and treatment approaches tended to misfire. In 2015, what turned out to be Wright’s degenerative spinal condition was first identified as a mere hamstring strain. In 2009, with bone chips in his elbow, reliever J.J. Putz received a cortisone shot instead of surgery. He tore his UCL. In 2008, outfielder Ryan Church was held off the disabled list—and flown on a road trip to high-altitude Colorado—after sustaining his second concussion of the season.

During the Ramirez era, Johan Santana turned from an innings-eater to cautionary tale, and Moises Alou, always injury-prone, managed the astounding feat of playing in just 102 games between 2007 and 2008. Every big-ticket acquisition other than Curtis Granderson wound up missing extended time at one point or another. (To be sure, this group consists primarily of older players, and as such may very well be more prone to injury than the entire population of baseball players.) Overall, in 2017, the payroll-challenged Mets ranked second in baseball in total salary lost to the disabled list, according to Spotrac. And from the start of the 2010 season through mid-2017, according to FiveThirtyEight, the team ranked eighth overall in potential player contributions lost to the disabled list.

All the while, Ramirez made a terrific scapegoat. So much was going wrong with the Mets. But there was no direct and effective way to bemoan the post-Bernie Madoff parsimony of the team’s owners or the Sandy Alderson regime’s struggles in the draft. The M.D.’s from the Hospital for Special Surgery don’t sit in the dugout. And even in New York only a certain subset of fans is willing to boo the home team. Ramirez, though, was present, every third night jogging onto the field to wrestle with some fresh hell, something that could happen seemingly only to the Mets.

How culpable, personally, was he? (Who knew? Who cared?) For better or worse, the question now becomes his successor’s to answer. As for Ramirez? As Mets injury nomenclature would have it: His tenure with the team is day-to-day with a calf strain.

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New York Mets: How Is Athletic Trainer Ray Ramirez Still Employed?

Article reposted from Elite Sports NY
Author: Matt O’Leary

How does the most infamous trainer in all of sports, the New York Mets trainer Ray Ramirez still have a job?

It’s not always easy to call for someones head. You have to realize that these guys are people too and they have to make a living. As fans, sometimes we forget that athletes, coaches, and in this case trainers are people just like us.

But in reality, if your job performance is subpar and mistakes are consistent, you would lose your job. Ray Ramirez has been with the Mets since 1983 and for the past 12 years he’s been the head athletic trainer.

Over the span that he’s been trainer, the Mets have completely mismanaged injury situations time and time again. From sending Ryan Church on an airplane with a concussion to the most recent Yoenis Cespedes debacle.

It just seems physically impossible for a team to be this injured this often. It happened in 2009 when Jose Reyes, Carlos Delgado, J.J. Putz, John Maine, and Johan Santana all went down with season ending injuries.

The same has happened in 2016 as the Mets could currently field a starting 9 with players who are on the DL.

The R.A.Y. system perfectly sums up how the Mets manage injuries. They rest for a few days, then have a few pinch hit appearances followed by the Mets finally deciding to DL the player.

In the most recent case of Yoenis Cespedes, he should’ve been placed on the DL weeks ago, but instead he tried to play through injuries, hit poorly and then re-injured himself while playing when he should’ve been resting. He could be getting ready to come off the DL soon, but instead is just now going on.
No one knows when Zack Wheeler is coming back, that timetable keeps changing and it looks like Lucas Duda is done for the year.

When is someone going to be held accountable? It absolutely must fall on the head of the trainer. Whether it’s fair or not, everyone knows Ray Ramirez’s name, which is a bad thing and he has to be the one who takes the fall here.

Will it help anything? There’s no way to tell but, you can’t tell me that Ramirez has done good during his time as head trainer. It’s time for him to pack his things and hit the road. He can take the bone spurs with him while he’s at it.