TORONTO — Along one wall of the living room in his Kansas City home, it sits on a shelf, among the vases and houseplants and other knickknacks: a plastic bag, fairly nondescript except for the bright orange biohazard warning. And what’s inside.
“It’s my rib. They cut it out of my neck and gave it to me as a souvenir,” Twins reliever Josh Staumont said of the odd conversation-starter he keeps on display. “It sits on our mantel. People would probably find that funny. But that surgery was a big event in my life, so it means a lot.”
Almost as much as it meant for Staumont, a 30-year-old righthander, to return to the mound on Thursday, getting the final three outs of the Twins’ 11-1 victory over Seattle. It was his first major league outing since last June 5 while with the Royals, and his first completely healthy performance, Staumont figures, in many years — perhaps the first of his life.
“TOS [thoracic outlet syndrome] is about the worst, weirdest injury you can have, because there’s nothing you can point to as being wrong. Mine was an anatomical anomaly, something I was born with, so you don’t even realize you’re having symptoms,” Staumont said of his condition, in which his blood flow was restricted by the rib pressing on an artery. “By the end, I would be standing on the mound and couldn’t feel my hand. But my whole career, I was never anatomically sound. So how many times did I [pitch poorly] because of the TOS without knowing it?”
In that respect, Staumont feels like this is practically a new start to his career, one he feared was over when he finally discovered what was happening in his shoulder.
“Baseball was taken away from me, and to keep going, I had to stop playing and have surgery that has a terrible success rate,” he said. “So it was like, you’re probably done or maybe you could be the outlier. And I was like, sounds fun. Sounds like a challenge.
“It wasn’t easy. It still isn’t. But I didn’t want that to be my last chapter. You have a lot of chapters in life, and baseball is only a couple of chapters in my book. I didn’t want it to end this way.”
Which is why the former second-round pick, who compiled a 4.01 ERA over five seasons with the Royals, became emotional after his scoreless inning on Thursday, and why his wife, Angelina, posted “Proud of the journey” — along with a photo of that rib — on Staumont’s Instagram account.