LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles Dodgers manager Don Mattingly said Sunday that the team doctor told him second baseman Mark Ellis was within several hours of possibly having his left leg amputated if Ellis hadn’t had emergency surgery.
“That was scary,” Mattingly said of the injury, which is expected to keep Ellis out of action for six weeks. “I didn’t realize how bad that was.”
Ellis, 34, suffered the injury Friday when he was upended by the St. Louis Cardinals’ Tyler Greene to break up a double play. Ellis reported to the clubhouse Saturday but told head trainer Sue Falsone and others that the leg still bothered him.
“I could tell he was kind of _ you could see the pain a little bit,” Mattingly said. “And Sue had a funny look on her face. I’m like, ‘I don’t like that look on your face, Sue.’ And Mark’s like, ‘I don’t either.’ “
Falsone and her staff then decided to get Ellis to a hospital near Dodger Stadium immediately, and he had surgery to drain blood and other fluids that had created pressure on the leg’s muscles.
Mattingly said team physician Neal ElAttrache told him that “if that thing goes another six or seven hours, you’ve got a chance of losing a leg. Doc said the muscle basically dies, doesn’t get any blood flow.”
Mattingly praised Falsone’s response and said “it just amazes me that you go from that play to something that could have been that serious if you don’t pick it up.”
He said doctors also said the injury was “really rare,” one more likely to be seen in an auto accident in which “something got smashed.”
Mattingly visited Ellis at the hospital Saturday night and said the infielder was “in as good a spirits as you could be.”
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