Barmes' grocery fall likely to cost rookie star 3 months
DENVER -- Clint Barmes went to the grocery store and came home with a spot on the disabled list.
The Rockies' rookie sensation is expected to miss at least three months after breaking his left collarbone while carrying groceries up the stairs in his apartment building after a game Sunday night.
Surgery is scheduled for Tuesday.
"Obviously, accidents happen," said Barmes, a shortstop who is leading National League rookies in most offensive categories. "It's very unfortunate for this to happen the way it did."
Barmes said he was returning home with a bag of groceries cradled in his left arm and a sweat shirt in his right hand. He got tired of waiting for the elevator and decided to take the stairs to his fourth-floor apartment.
"I figured, I'm an athlete, I can walk up the stairs, it's not that big a deal," Barmes said in an interview Monday, his left arm hanging in a sling. "Obviously, if I had to go back, I would have waited, or at least been a bit more careful going up."
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Barmes said when he felt himself slipping, he dropped the sweat shirt and tried to grab onto the railing. Next thing he knew, he had landed directly on his shoulder. Once in his apartment, he said it didn't feel too bad, but he moved it around, felt some cracking and knew something was wrong.
"It hit hard enough, I guess," he said. "It hit hard enough to make it hurt for about three months."
Barmes hovered around .400 and led the major leagues in batting average for about the first six weeks of the season. After a mild slump, he was still leading NL rookies in hitting (.329), runs (40), hits (74), doubles (16), home runs (eight) and RBI (34) heading into Monday's game.
He was definite rookie-of-the-year material, but now those hopes are gone due to what he called "the craziest thing that's happened to me, by far."
"I was stunned," teammate Brad Hawpe said. "Those are the freakiest of injuries. Clint is the kind of guy you expect to be in the lineup every day. Someone like that doesn't want to sit down."
Barmes' slip and fall adds to a long list of freak injuries sustained by baseball players over the years.
Some of the more memorable included:
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