CLEVELAND -- After running smack into another pitching wall Tuesday, Kerry Wood's future is more stalemated than ever. No one is prepared to say when he will pitch again for the Cubs this season. The possibility exists that he has pitched his final game in a Cubs uniform.
Wood was stopped short Tuesday afternoon in a simulated game at Jacobs Field, encountering more tightness in his right shoulder once he threw his 67th or 68th pitch. It forced him to shut down 70 pitches into the drill. Wood's last big-league game was June 6, when he lasted only 3-2/3 innings and 75 pitches in a 4-1 loss to the Houston Astros.
Even if he never pitches again in 2006, Wood can depart after the season as a free agent and might attract some interesting offers from pitching-poor clubs that would gamble on him with an incentive-laden contract.
Wood, 1-2 with a 4.12 ERA in four starts this season, is eligible to come off the 15-day disabled list this weekend in Minnesota. But pitching coach Larry Rothschild said Wood won't pitch Sunday, which was a possibility if he looked strong in the simulated game.
Trainer Mark O'Neal said Wood eventually will be tested in another simulated game or might have to undergo another rehab assignment in the minors.
"Without question, we will have another simulated game or a game out on rehab,'' O'Neal said.
Wood wasn't at his locker when the media was allowed into the clubhouse before the game. Later, a team spokesman said it was a good day to leave him alone when reporters requested an interview.
Manager Dusty Baker called Wood "distraught'' at his continuing inability to bounce back from surgery last August on his right shoulder by Timothy Kremchek.
Baker also ended speculation that Wood might find a second life as a reliever, as he did last season before having the surgery. The aftereffects from the arthroscopic procedure make it too difficult for Wood to warm up in the bullpen in time to be considered in that role, Baker said.
"It's not a consideration at this point because he has to go through a lot to get ready to pitch,'' Baker said. "Naturally, Woody wants to pitch. He's a little distraught about it. He wants to help us get back in this thing. We have to do what's best for him, best for us and hope simultaneously we can come together. It is what it is.''
Rothschild said the bullpen isn't an option, as it was last season.
"It's a lot different because of the surgery,'' Rothschild said. "Even if you got him up an inning before he would come in a game, he still might not be ready.''
No one wants to face the big question head-on. Could Wood just be unable to fight through this situation, making it impossible for him to pitch again this season?
"That possibility is always there,'' Rothschild said. "But he needs to keep going. We are going to keep throwing. The only way we stop is if the arm says we can't. It takes time with these things. As a player, until you get through it and know you're OK, there is always going to be a little bit of doubt.''
Rothschild said Wood ran into physical problems Tuesday around his 67th or 68th pitch.
"He's pretty good until he gets to that point,'' he said. "It's still a matter of building it up. It's realistic to think he can do it, but it remains to be seen.''
Because Wood has a history of high pitch counts when he is healthy, that also complicates any idea of a smooth comeback when he is physically impaired.
O'Neal said Kremchek and Cubs doctors Stephen Gryzlo and Stephen Adams conferred Tuesday to debate their next step. But O'Neal couldn't specify what it might be.
"The first 50 or so pitches, he felt normal, very good,'' O'Neal said. "Then we kind of hit -- I don't want to call it an inevitable wall -- but we kind of hit that level where he started to get back into some of the sensations he was feeling in his last two starts.
"As far as fatigue and not being able to put a lot on the ball. We have been on the phone all afternoon trying to figure out what our next step is and what we are going to do. Alternatives are we have to see if he can throw a bullpen [session] Thursday or Friday.
"I hate to see it as a total negative. For me, a positive is that he got through 50 pitches as well as he has in any start. But the fourth inning, he had a tough time.''
Everybody keeps trying to spin this into a feel-good story. But it's feeling worse and worse the more it drags on.