MILWAUKEE — Milwaukee Brewers president of baseball operations Matt Arnold said the back surgery that Christian Yelich underwent Friday should enable the 2018 NL MVP to be ready for the start of the 2025 season.
''By doing this sooner, it does allow him to hopefully be ready for opening day next year,'' Arnold said before the Brewers faced the Cleveland Guardians.
Arnold was asked about the possibility the three-time All-Star could be available for the beginning of spring training.
''That's my understanding, but you never know with a back and how that's going to respond with the surgery he had,'' Arnold said. ''We're optimistic about him being ready for opening day.''
The 32-year-old Yelich was leading the NL in batting (.315) and on-base percentage (.406) in his 12th major league season when he went on the injured list in late July.
He hasn't played since getting removed from a game at the Chicago Cubs on July 23. Yelich has been dealing with back issues for several years.
Arnold described Yelich's procedure as ''a diskectomy of some kind'' without going into specifics. A diskectomy is done to remove the damaged part of a disk in the spine.
Yelich said Thursday in a video posted on social media that surgery ''was just the best option that we really had left.'' Dr. Brandon Rebholz performed the operation in Milwaukee.