The Athletics announced that right-hander Gunnar Hoglund underwent left hip surgery yesterday, specifically a hip labral repair and cartilage debridement to address femoroacetabular impingement. He will miss the entire 2026 season. He is already on the 60-day injured list and will stay there for the remainder of the campaign.

It’s a brutal development for Hoglund, as this will be his second straight season ended by surgery on that hip. In 2025, he was on the mound through the month of May. He hit the IL in early June due to a left hip impingement and went under the knife a couple of weeks later.

Ideally, he would have been healthy again in 2026 but that hasn’t come to pass. He missed all of spring training due to a knee issue and a back issue. He started the season on the IL with a lumbar spine strain. Now yet another hip surgery will wipe out his whole season.

Injuries were already a part of Hoglund’s story even before these multiple hip surgeries. While still in college, he required Tommy John surgery in May of 2021. A couple of months later, the Jays selected him 19th overall in that summer’s draft. While still rehabbing in March of 2022, Hoglund was traded to the A’s as part of the deal sending Matt Chapman to Toronto.

Hoglund was able to make a very brief professional debut late in 2022, tossing eight innings on the farm. He got up to 61 minor league innings in 2023 but with poor results, posting a 6.05 earned run average. He showed some progress in 2024, posting a 3.44 ERA in 130 2/3 innings split between Double-A and Triple-A.

He was added to the 40-man roster in November of 2024, to keep him out of the Rule 5 draft. He began 2025 back at Triple-A and made six strong starts, which led to a call-up to the majors. He put six big league starts under his belt before hitting the IL last year. Ideally, he would have been developing as a pitcher and continuing to build his workload capacity as he moved further from his Tommy John. Instead, he lost most of 2025 and now all of 2026, leaving him as a big question mark going into 2027.

For the A’s, without Hoglund, they have primarily relied on a rotation consisting of Luis Severino, Jeffrey Springs, Aaron Civale, J.T. Ginn and Jacob Lopez. That group has mostly been putting up good numbers, except for Lopez, who has a 6.14 ERA. Depth options on the 40-man include Luis Morales, Joey Estes, Mason Barnett and Chen Zhong-Ao Zhuang.

The A’s are 24-24, which is good enough for them to have the lead in the American League West at the moment. If they continue to hang in the playoff race this summer, the pitching staff would certainly be an area to add before this summer’s trade deadline. The club has a collective 4.38 ERA on the season, which is better than just six clubs in the majors. Since Hoglund won’t be able to come back this year, that should only add to the club’s desire to add arms in the coming months.

Photo courtesy of Matt Kartozian, Imagn Images

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