Orioles third baseman Jordan Westburg has been diagnosed with a partial tear of the ulnar collateral ligament in his right elbow, president of baseball operations Mike Elias announced to reporters this morning (via Jake Rill of MLB.com). For now, Westburg will not undergo surgery. He’ll receive a platelet-rich plasma injection today in hopes of avoiding an internal brace or Tommy John procedure, either of which would sideline him for the majority or entirety of the year. Westburg will miss at least the month of April. A further timetable will hinge on how well the PRP injection works.
Given the timing of the injury, it makes sense that Westburg would opt for an injection, rest and rehab rather than immediately going under the knife. The recovery timetable for position players coming back from UCL surgery is shorter than for pitchers but still tends to take at least six months just to return as a designated hitter, though timelines vary depending on whether a full reconstruction (Tommy John surgery) or a less-invasive repair (internal brace) is required.
For instance, Bryce Harper had Tommy John surgery in Nov. 2022 and was on the field as a DH about five and a half months later. Trevor Story had an internal brace procedure in Jan. 2023 and made it back to the field as a shortstop seven months later. Every injury is different, and we don’t know the extent of the tear with which Westburg is dealing. Based on some recent precedents like Harper and Story, immediate surgery would probably have resulted in a best-case scenario of Westburg returning as a DH in August, with a chance of playing some third base very late in the regular season.
Of course, there’s also the strong possibility that undergoing surgery right now cost Westburg the entirety of the 2026 campaign. If the O’s and the medical experts with which Westburg consulted feel that was the likely outcome and that he’d be be sidelined until next spring anyhow, then this is a logical course of action. By going the PRP route, Westburg gives himself the best chance of being available for a decent chunk of the 2026 season — and if he has to undergo surgery in May, he’ll still be expected to be ready for next year’s spring training.
Elias detailed (via Andy Kostka of the Baltimore Banner) that Westburg felt elbow discomfort while throwing during his rehab from the oblique injury that he was already known to have. Imaging revealed a partial tear in his elbow, which doctors now believe to have been there for some time. There’s no telling right now whether the PRP will prove sufficient, but Elias suggested that Westburg could return as a designated hitter first if the injection looks to be taking hold.
Even if Westburg “only” misses a couple months of the season rather than the entire year, it’s still a critical loss for Baltimore. The O’s will already be without second baseman Jackson Holliday on Opening Day following his recent surgery to address a hamate fracture, so they’ll be down 50% of their starting infield.
Westburg, 27, has been a well-rounded, productive player ever since debuting in 2023. He’s a career .264/.312/.456 hitter with 38 homers, 53 doubles and eight triples in 1027 career plate appearances. Injuries have far too frequently kept him off the field, however. He’s missed time due to a broken hand, a pair of hamstring strains and an ankle sprain in his two-plus seasons at the MLB level. He’s yet to top 107 games in a big league season, and today’s injury revelation casts some major doubt on whether he’ll be able to further that career-high mark in 2026.
With Westburg and Holliday both shelved, the Orioles’ Opening Day infield will have quite a different look than expected. Former top prospect Coby Mayo has been focusing his offseason and spring work on third base and figures to open the season there in place of Westburg. Trade acquisition Blaze Alexander can handle third base if Mayo struggles considerably, but he’s also one of the lead options to open the season at second base in place of Holliday. Utilityman Jeremiah Jackson could log time at either position.
It’s also feasible that the Orioles could bring in some veteran infield depth. Old friends Ramón Urías, Jose Iglesias and Emmanuel Rivera remain unsigned, as do veteran utility options like Luis Urías (Ramon’s younger brother) and Jon Berti. Spring training always leads to the placement of a few dozen players on waivers, as non-roster veterans or prospects make their clubs and are selected to the 40-man roster with their current team. Some of those non-roster vets who don’t make the cut with their current club could opt out or be granted their release later in camp, which could give Baltimore other options to consider.

The spring of UCL tears is here
This was supposed to be the summer of George!!
Before we go any further, I’d just like to point out how disturbing it is that you equate eating a block of cheese with some sort of summer paradise.
I’m gonna read a book from beginning to end. In that order!
Why do so many oriole players get hurt they are cursed
@balls
Braves rays dodgers astros
Happens to alot of tms
Need better conditioning, medical tm, coaching philosophies and just overall luck
bing – Plus when you have a player with a prior injury, odds are much higher they will have the same injury again.
Westburg just can’t stay healthy, he makes O’Neill look like Ripken.
O’Neill Is Ripken would be an awesome screen name. Maybe not.
Still hoping the Orioles are competitive in that bear of a division this year. Hope Mayo breaks out and we have a replay of the 1979 World Series this October!
Gary Roenicke! John lowenstein platoon!
This injection is probably just for this year. He’ll get the surgery while there’s a work stoppage for 2027. Unfortunately.
That or he could play out the year and if the O’s don’t make the playoffs have it in Sept or October and still be ready for opening day or miss the first 2-3 weeks of the season. Can’t really count on 2027 being canceled we have no clue how it’ll end up but neither side no matter what they say want the season to be delayed or not played at all.
Not good. And why are so many HITTERS getting UCL problems.
Microplastics
5G
Long Covid
From sniffing coke off of toilet seats
From NOT sniffing coke off of toilet seats
Herpes.
Her peas
Gluten… or gluten-free, depending on whichever side you’re on
Ah yes, the budding plants & flowers, the crack of the bat, the gentle spring rains….the pop of the elbow…
Does PRP therapy ever work, as in allow return to playing without surgery? I can’t think of a case in which surgery wasn’t the next thing to happen.
It may still be what happens next but this will hopefully delay it for this season.
Masahiro Tanaka avoided TJ this way
It’s the non-invasive option to surgery that MIGHT work, but there has to be a steady stream of prayers accompanying it.
Seth Lugo is another positive case
As much as I was against it before, I think a move to 2nd base this season is in the cards.
The only way that happens is if they move Gunnar to 3B and Holliday to SS. Westburg may end up being another of the many “what if?” Players, as in what if he could ever stay healthy
That would work if Holliday was healthy himself. But Holliday is going to miss opening day as well. Hopefully he’ll return soon after.
Damn this is rough. Even if he’s opting to rehab and miss minimal time it’s not really something that you expect to be magically fixed and have no impact on his productivity on the field. Hopefully he’ll fully recover and Mayo can prove himself capable at third as well as being consistent with the bat. Definitely not the way I wanted the O’s to start this season with injuries to a couple of key guys.
All of these paper tigers breaking down day after day. Gone are the times when overweight men could play the game day in, day out, and never get hurt, pitch 300 innings a year and not go on the DL.
Tough break. He looked like a nice core piece when he broke out in ‘24, but has been struggling with injuries since.
Very happy to still have mayo. I can live with his fielding if his hitting potential comes to fruition
Not great, but I guess this counts as “good news” for the time being, at least compared to the more dire initial rumors.
Fingers crossed.
Do I hear a Ramon Urias reunion in the future?
Either or both of the Urias brothers
They need to bring back Urias!
Baltimore should trade Dylan Beavers and a prospect to Houston for Isaac Paredes.