The Detroit Tigers' latest medical update wasn’t perfect. It wasn’t clean. But for a team that has been juggling injuries across its roster, this week’s report offered some meaningful progress.
Start with Justin Verlander, because everything about the Tigers’ rotation ultimately circles back to him. The 42-year-old is scheduled to throw a bullpen session Wednesday, another step in what has been a deliberately cautious buildup from hip inflammation.
Manager A.J. Hinch acknowledged recently that Verlander’s recovery has moved “a little slower than anticipated,” and that still holds true. But the key detail here is simple: there’s been no setback. In April, that might be the most important update of all.
Verlander isn’t on the verge of rejoining the rotation any time soon. A rehab assignment or simulated game would still need to follow. But for a staff that has already been stretched thin at times, just having a path forward matters.
There’s a similar tone with Zach McKinstry, who is now in Lakeland beginning rehab work while mixing in light baseball activity. Considering how his injury happened — a headfirst slide at the plate followed by a collision at third base — the fact that he’s already progressing to on-field work is notable.
The Tigers aren’t putting a timetable on his return, but this is what early recovery is supposed to look like. Momentum is a good thing!
#Tigers medical update: Zach McKinstry (left hip/abdominal inflammation) is rehabbing with light baseball activity at the spring training complex in Lakeland. pic.twitter.com/y4bxhXkmzY
— Evan Petzold (@EvanPetzold) April 21, 2026
Tigers Injury Update: Parker Meadows, relief pitchers make progress in recovery
On the pitching side, there’s quiet but important progress happening beneath the surface.
Troy Melton has returned to the mound and is throwing bullpens again after an elbow strain sidelined him in spring training. He’s eligible to return in late May, though the reality is more complicated. A full ramp-up and rehab assignment still stand between him and Detroit, but crossing the “back on the mound” threshold is a significant checkpoint.
Beau Brieske is in a similar phase, throwing bullpens as he works back from a left adductor strain. The Tigers are taking a wait-and-see approach with how his body responds, but like Melton, he’s trending in the right direction — even if his return also projects closer to late May.
Center fielder Parker Meadows, of course, remains the long-term absence in all of this. After undergoing surgery to repair a left radius fracture — while also dealing with a concussion — Meadows is still expected to miss multiple months. There’s no real gray area here, no accelerated timeline to hope for.
Meadows' absence continues to reshape the Tigers’ outfield, pushing players like Javier Báez, Matt Vierling and Wenceel Pérez into expanded roles. It’s a structural change the Tigers will be living with for a while.
Fortunately, for now, the Tigers are no longer adding names to the injured list at the same rate as they were earlier in the season. Perhaps more importantly, they’re starting to move players forward instead of sideways.
For a team trying to stay competitive while navigating early-season adversity, that’s not a small development. It’s the first sign that help — even if it’s still weeks away — is actually on the way.
