Ryan Boldt knew something wasn't right. The Red Wing outfielder, projected to be a first-round pick in next month's Major League Baseball draft, went to sleep with an achy right knee Saturday night and woke up with limited range of motion.
After a quick phone call, Boldt's doctor at TRIA Orthopaedics Center also knew there was something more going on than what an inconclusive magnetic resonance imaging exam found after Boldt injured his knee in Red Wing's season opener April 26.
On Monday, Boldt traveled to the Twin Cities for arthroscopic surgery that fixed a partially torn meniscus. He injured it initially on a slide. It gave out later in the game when he stepped into a hole in the outfield.
The surgery ended the speedy outfielder's high school career after the first game of the season.
Boldt's draft stock had risen after a monumental summer with USA Baseball and at other All-American events. He has committed to the University of Nebraska.
"I laid in bed [Saturday] and woke up. Something must have happened overnight," Boldt said Thursday. "I knew it right away and called the doctor. Obviously everyone was shocked."
Instead of getting to show his improvement since last summer, Boldt is no longer projected to be a first-round pick by analysts Keith Law (ESPN) and Jim Callis (Baseball America). Before news of Boldt's surgery became public on Wednesday, Law ranked him the 13th-best prospect.
Mike Radcliff, Twins vice president of player personnel and former scouting director, said much hasn't changed.