Update: Latest Joe Jimenez injury update suggests Braves may have avoided worst case scenario

When fans think about the losses the Atlanta Braves experienced this offseason, most of the attention is understandably on the guys who left in free agency.

Charlie Morton and especially former ace Max Fried were critical pieces of the Braves’ rotation that are playing in different uniforms in 2025.

On the bullpen side, AJ Minter signing with the Mets is a real loss. However, few have given the injury to Joe Jimenez the weight it deserves.

Atlanta still has Raisel Iglesias for the closing spots, but losing their primary setup man in Jimenez is a massive deal and one the team was unable to resolve during the offseason.

While the team clearly knew something was ailing Jimenez, few expected the news that he needed knee surgery that threatened to cost him the entire 2025 season.

Fast forward to spring training this year and the news is slightly better on Jimenez these days. While there is no world where Jimenez will return in the first half, it does sound like a second half return for Jimenez could be in the cards.

From July through the end of the season, Joe Jiménez pitched through damaged cartilage in his left knee. It didn’t bother him much pitching, but teammates could tell he was in pain.

Talked to Jiménez about the injury, surgery and road ahead:https://t.co/P4VPfqOul3

— Justin Toscano (@JustinCToscano) February 23, 2025

Joe Jimenez’s recovery from knee surgery is going well, could return in 2025

The explanation of Jimenez’s status is actually pretty straightforward.

He underwent surgery to repair cartilage damage in his left knee right after the season with a timeline to recover between eight and 12 months.

If it takes him 12 months to bounce back, that is the entire 2025 season lost.

If he stays on track and can get back on the mound in the eight/nine month range, he could be pitching out of the Braves’ bullpen for most of the second half of the season.

Right now, it is still too early to take any real guesses as to when Jimenez will be ready, although his toughness in pitching through the injury to begin with at least implies that he could come back sooner rather than later.

When asked about his recovery at spring training, Jimenez said, “Obviously it’s a long process, but I come here every day to work and try to do everything that I can just to make it right now. Obviously, hopefully I pitch this year.

We don’t know yet. As of now, I’m focusing on my rehab every day and see how it goes.”

Assuming Jimenez doesn’t experience any setbacks, which is not something that should be taken for granted given how 2024 went for the Braves, not adding an impact bullpen this offseason could end up working out fine.

If things go sideways, fully expect Atlanta to be very active at the trade deadline trying to shore up their bullpen.

Related Posts

POWER HUNT IGNITED: The Mets are circling a 56-home-run force as free agency opens doors tension hums in front-office corridors where ambition meets risk and numbers turn into destiny every call, every whisper, every pause on the other end feels like a spark waiting to detonate the chase for raw power isn’t just about home runs — it’s about identity, fear, and the hunger to reshape October futures and if this pursuit goes all the way, New York may trade quiet patience for a bat built to break seasons apart..ll

The New York Mets have plenty to fix this offseason, and David Stearns knows it. Pitching remains priority number one, but there’s another hole quietly

POWER DRAIN EXPOSED: The Red Sox feel another crack as the Mets swoop in and steal their director of pitching whispers of instability turn sharper as leadership bleeds talent and futures shift in silent hallways every exit raises the stakes, every departure cuts deeper and as New York builds while Boston leaks, a new question rises in the shadows — is this a minor loss, or the beginning of a front-office unraveling..ll

For the fourth time this offseason, the Red Sox are losing a member of their front office to another team.

NEXT-LEVEL RISING: How Cam Schlittler, Ben Rice, and Will Warren can each elevate their games every move, every adjustment, and every effort could redefine their careers their skills colliding with opportunity as the season unfolds and expectations skyrocket..ll

The trio’s emergence was a boon in 2025, but development doesn’t stop once your reach the majors.

ROAD TO RETURN: Yankees ace throws off the mound every pitch a step closer to reclaiming glory progress is measured in inches tension builds with each throw and questions loom over whether he can dominate again this season..ll

New York Yankees ace Gerrit Cole shared a video of a throwing session off a mound, a major step with an early-2026 return in mind

BROADCAST BLUNDER: Yankees Hall of Famer slams Fox’s Joe Davis every call, every misstep, and every awkward pause draws fire the legend demands accuracy, fans erupt online, media scrambling to respond and the embarrassment lingers as the game moves on..ll

Former New York Yankees and Oakland A’s slugger Reggie Jackson hit 18 home runs in 318 postseason plate appearances. Los Angeles Dodgers third baseman Max Muncy has 15 homers in the postseason, in 323 plate appearances. Should those statistics be given equal treatment on a World Series broadcast — or is further context necessary? MORE: One image…

TRADE CHAOS WARNING: Yankees must block out all noise around Bryce Harper every rumor and every whisper threatens to distract the team from their championship goal media frenzy, locker room tension, and fan speculation swirl endlessly while management struggles to maintain focus every move counts and one wrong step could redefine the season’s fate..ll

It wouldn’t be an offseason without the New York Yankees being mentioned in just about every rumor imaginable. From free-agent pitching targets to blockbuster