Anthony Rendon says his injury is actually a fractured tibia, but Angels didn't announce it

One of the most bizarre situations in MLB over the past several weeks has been Anthony Rendon and his refusal to provide any updates to reporters on the injury that has sidelined him since July 4.

The situation somehow got weirder on Friday.

After nearly two months on the injured list — officially due to a left shin contusion — Rendon toldreporters that, actually, his injury is a fractured tibia, which would make his lengthy absence make much more sense. However, he said he doesn't know why the Angels haven't told anyone about the diagnosis, which he apparently received via a second opinion a month ago.

The Athletic's Sam Blum noted that the Angels have long said the former All-Star's injury is not a fracture, so it appears we might be migrating from a player vs. media standoff over the injury to a player vs. team one.

Rendon's status had been a sideshow in the Angels clubhouse, as he went to unusual lengths to avoid providing anything notable to the media contingent about the leg injury or other issues. Here's a sampling, via the intrepid Blum:

That's not exactly the stuff you want to see when you're a team that gave Rendon a seven-year, $245 million contract after the 2019 season, and it didn't help the third baseman's reputation of not caring about baseball, which he once said he finds "boring."

CLEVELAND, OHIO - MAY 12, 2023: Anthony Rendon #6 of the Los Angeles Angels runs off the field during the second inning against the Cleveland Guardians at Progressive Field on May 12, 2023 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by George Kubas/Diamond Images via Getty Images)
What is happening with Anthony Rendon and the Angels? (Photo by George Kubas/Diamond Images via Getty Images) (Diamond Images via Getty Images)

Rendon's revelation Friday suddenly shifts the perspective with all those avoidances and brings up the ever-popular question of what on earth is going on in the Angels clubhouse.

As things stand, Rendon, the highest-paid player on a team that employs Mike Trout and Shohei Ohtani, has been out nearly two months after hitting a career-worst .236/.361/.318 in 43 games, and he waited until Sept. 15 to allege that the team has basically been lying about his injury, all in a season that was already a smoking trainwreck.

Rendon was famously injury-prone even before he signed with the Angels, but that issue is now reaching exotic new heights.

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