5:49PM: Further tests revealed Yamamoto has a strained rotator cuff, manager Dave Roberts told DiGiovanna and other reporters today. No timeline was given, as Roberts indicated that the injury is “not season ending, but it’s going to be some time.”
2:15PM: The Dodgers announced this afternoon that they’ve placed right-hander Yoshinobu Yamamoto on the 15-day injured list with triceps tightness. The club also placed right-hander Michael Grove on the 15-day injured list due to lat tightness. In corresponding moves, the club has recalled right-hander J.P. Feyereisen and selected the contract of right-hander Michael Petersen. To make room for Petersen on the 40-man roster, the Dodgers transferred right-hander Joe Kelly to the 60-day injured list.
That Yamamoto is headed for the injured list is hardly a surprise, as manager David Roberts indicated last night that a trip to the IL was likely for the righty after he exited his start last night after just two innings. Yamamoto’s departure from the rotation won’t require the Dodgers to turn to a spot starter, as right-hander Bobby Miller was already slated to return from the injured list and retake a spot in the starting rotation on Wednesday. That will allow him to seamlessly slide into the starting five alongside Tyler Glasnow, James Paxton, Walker Buehler, and Gavin Stone while Yamamoto is on the shelf.
What remains unclear, however, is just how long Yamamoto will be out. Mike DiGiovanna of the Los Angeles Times indicated earlier this afternoon that the Dodgers plan to send Yamamoto for further testing beyond what had already been scheduled for him in the aftermath of his start last night, and it’s possible the specifics of the right-hander’s injury as well as his timetable for return will remain uncertain until the results come back from those tests. Of course, an absence of any length for Yamamoto is a frustrating turn of events for the Dodgers. The club’s $325MM man has been more or less exactly as advertised this year, with a 2.41 ERA and a 28.5% strikeout rate across his past 12 starts.
As for Grove, Bill Plunkett of the Orange County Register reports that his injury is expected to be a relatively short-term one. The right-hander has served in multi-inning relief for the Dodgers throughout the year to this point and has struggled in terms of results with a 5.06 ERA in 37 1/3 innings of work, although it’s worth noting that the righty sports a strong 28.7% strikeout rate and a 3.14 FIP that suggests some of his struggles could be due to a deflated 62.5% strand rate. Interestngly, Grove struggled badly at the very start of the year with an 11.74 ERA across his first four outings, and has again begun to struggle lately with a 9.00 ERA in his last three appearances. In 21 appearances between April 10 and June 7, however, the right-hander was dominant with a 2.45 ERA, and incredible 37.1% strikeout rate, and a 2.75 FIP in 25 2/3 innings of work. If a trip to the IL allows Grove to rediscover that form going forward, it would surely provide the Dodgers bullpen with a massive boost headed as the calendar flips to July.
Joining the roster in the duo’s place are Feyreisen and Petersen. Feyreisen rejoins the club after missing the entire 2023 season due to injury and struggling somewhat in his first games back this year, with a 6.00 ERA and 4.81 FIP in nine appearances. Those struggles have continued at the Triple-A level, where he’s posted a 7.47 ERA in 15 2/3 frames thanks in part to a deflated 16.7% strikeout rate and four home runs allowed in that time. There is some room for optimism regarding the 31-year-old, however; the righty looked excellent in his seven appearances with the Dodgers at the big league level during the month of May prior to his demotion, where he struck out 26.9% of batters faced in 7 1/3 scoreless frames. If Feyreisen can return to the form he showed in the majors last month, he could be an asset for the club alongside fellow middle relief arms Yohan Ramirez and Anthony Banda.
As for Petersen, the 30-year-old is in his first year as a member of the Dodgers organization and will make his MLB debut when he first gets into a game. The right-hander was selected in the late rounds of the 2012, ’13, and ’14 drafts before finally signing with the Brewers after being selected in the 17th round of the 2015 draft. He spent five years in the lower levels of the minors with Milwaukee before joining the Rockies prior to the 2020 campaign, although he didn’t pitch during the 2021 campaign and made just one appearance in 2022.
Petersen had his first full season since 2019 last year and pitched quite well between the Double- and Triple-A levels, with a combined 3.46 ERA in 41 2/3 innings of work with a 26.3% strikeout rate. That performance was enough to get Petersen a minor league deal with the Dodgers this past winter, and he continued to show solid results at the highest level of the minors during his time with the club at the Triple-A level. This year’s results were even better than the last, as he posted a sterling 1.61 ERA while striking out a whopping 36.9% of batters faced. Those exciting results were enough to get Petersen his first look at the big league level, where he’ll join Feyreisen in the middle of the L.A. bullpen.
As for Kelly, the move to the 60-day IL appears to be more or less procedural for the right-hander. He’s been on the injured list with a shoulder strain since the beginning of May and has not yet begun a rehab assignment, suggesting that the 36-year-old was already likely to spend at least the next couple of weeks on the shelf. He’ll now be eligible to be activated for the first time on July 5.
Well Hung
Rotator cuff, see you spring training 2026 yama on no
dodgerskingsfan
Doomsday a bit much there, hombre??
Until more tests are done, we don’t know. So stop speculating.
Mojo37
DKF…he’s not speculating, he’s trolling
Fever Pitch Guy
Dodger- Agreed! Hopefully for the good of the game this generational talent is back soon.
Fever Pitch Guy
Mookie departed after being hit on the hand.
For the good of the game hope he’s okay.
LordD99
Unfortunately, it looks like a fractured hand. No word on how long he’ll be out. No surgery, though, so maybe he can be back in a month.
homeunderdog
hey guys this kid says we’re not allowed to speculate so no speculating lol
Well Hung
The whole point of the chat is speculation
LordD99
Careful. Trolling and humor not allowed with Yamamoto.
Blue Baron
Right, certain posters can’t handle any dissent with their religious reverence for Yamamoto and the holy game.
Tigers3232
@Baron And some posters are on here acting as if they are fans of the game. Yet feel when players are injured and the game is deprived of their talent that it in no way harms game or the fans experience of witnessing the premier talent in the sport.
Mojo37
@Tigers
Worse, some seem to delight in injuries. Sad.
Blue Baron
Tigers3232: If you’re talking about me, you are incorrect.
I don’t believe any individual player is bigger or more important than the game, and every injury can create an opportunity for another player to rise to the occasion and show what he can do.
Nobody becomes a “premier talent” without getting the chance to play.
Blue Baron
Mojo37: You are correct, it is sad.
I don’t personally know anyone like that, do you?
Mojo37
only from what I read here Baron
Tigers3232
@Baron I do agree injury creates opportunity. But let’s b honest when players such as Trout, Acuna, Yamamoto, etc are out the player getting the opportunity very very rarely has even half the talent.
Pro sports are the pinnacle of their realm. When any top players are hurt it takes a bit from the sport and the fan experience.
Now I also agree no player is bigger than the sport. That is not what I’m trying to say here by any means. Just saying the sport is at its best when the top talent is on the field.
baseball_is_boring
Has anyone ever figured out why Asian pitchers have that interesting foot kick thing when the deliver the ball, and why Asian born batters have a shuffle-like move on the swing follow through. I’ve found it peculiar, hope some of y’all baseball experts have some insight.
Tigers3232
@baseball Good observation there. I don’t really have a guess even on the pitchers. With the hitters I’d assume it’s they’re taught a version of game where contact and placement is paramount. Opposed to hard hitting culture here in America.
In softball to this day I watch foot shuffling from OF, it’s usually a tell tale sign someone is trying to turn the ball opposite field. In college I played IF, I hated seeing shuffling. Playing off reaction the 2nd guessing it created often slowed by first step.
Personally I’d love to see shuffling in batters box of any kind made illegal. Any movement should be an attempt for contact with ball in my opinion. To me its akin to a balk only the deception is to the fielders.
GarryHarris
I write off as hitting and pitching instructor fads.
Remember Charlie Lau students how they all batted a certain way while he was en Voge.
Tigers3232
The batting style he’s speaking of has been going on for over 20 years at least, Ichiro did it. That’s a bit longer than being just a fad.
Very Barry
Padres were the only ones with brains here. All Dylan Cease cost was some kids to get a top of the rotation starter making $8 million per for the next two years. Yamamoto gonna be done until 2026. How is the Giants signing Blake Snell instead of giving up some kids working out?? Jordan Montgomery and Arizona???? Not sure if the Dodgers are gonna have the $$$ to make a run at Chusei Mannami when he is ready to come over from Japan. Beast! He ain’t taking deferred money.
nando390
Hows bogarts working out.
CBeisbol
VB
“He ain’t taking deferred money.”
1) Why wouldn’t he?
2) How would you know?
Butter Biscuits
Dylan pitching great today
StreakingBlue
Padres and brains?? Are you sure? Look at the contracts they overpaid on. The Dodgers are going to be fine. Yamamoto is going to be fine after a short IL stint. Stop overreacting with your Dodger hate.
CBeisbol
SB
“Yamamoto is going to be fine after a short IL stint.”
How do you know?
Very Barry
Dodgers spent all that money in the offseason including paying a dude $70 million to do nothing but hit. It’s June 16th and the Phillies are now the favorite to win the NL. Karma! You can already feel how tense Dodger fans are getting. Dudes are really edgy. They feel it slipping away. In June. Do the Dodgers even get to the NLCS??? With that pitching staff???
CBeisbol
VB
Imagine knowing so little about how money works that you think $2 million in 2024 and $68 million in 2034 equals $70 million in 2024.
I hope you’re in elementary school.
Mojo37
It’s probably much more relaxing to be 8 games back.
amk1920
Glasnow is better than Cease and Thorpe is better than Pepiot. So now what?
Cam
It’s a bit strange reading Padres and brains in the same sentence. The last few years suggest they don’t belong together..
Blue Baron
VB: The Mets teed off on Cease today like it was batting practice.
JoeBrady
All Dylan Cease cost was some kids t
=======================
Nice timing trying to rub it in.
fox471 Dave
Gee Barry, suggesting that the Padres are the only team with brains seems a bit counterintuitive. Most of their big contracts are garbage. Keep on, keeping on though.
Oh and the guy who is being paid only to hit seems to be working out rather well. What do you think the Yankees are paying Judge and Soto for – shagging fly balls? How about Harper? Is he playing first base because he is a wizard with a glove? Are you sure you are on the right site! Have you ever seen a baseball game? Hate to ask all these questions but you appear to be lost.
Johnny utah
His era is 292 not 241
Either way very good rookie season
Not sure he’s worth $325mil but LA is a cash factory what do they care
AHH-Rox
For some reason the writer just gave the stat for the last 12 starts, instead of all 14 of the season. Which makes no sense in a sentence that is about how he has performed “this year”.
BlueSkies_LA
Yeah it was absurd of them to commit to that much for just one year.
Blue Baron
Especially their own money that didn’t come from any of our pockets.
CBeisbol
Blue Baron
If a baseball teams steals your money, you should report that too the authorities.
If you willingly give them your money, then they are free to do whatever they want with it.
Blue Baron
And whose money did they steal?
CBeisbol
BB
Tax payers’ if it was a publically funded stadium
But fans are choosing to spend their money on MLB’s product. Then MLB spends that money, which is now their money, on things like…paying their labor.
Blue Baron
If you read up on Dodgers history, you’ll learn that Walter O’Malley owned the Dodgers when they moved west, and he privately financed Dodger Stadium.
But any facility that is publicly funded is done through municipal bonds issued with voter approval via ballot referendum.
So it’s actually impossible for a team to “steal” the public funds for the stadium.
CBeisbol
BB
I mean, Dodger Stadium was a pretty bad example given its history
But, that’s a completely different discussion
Johnny utah
slightly off topic, but is roki sasaki definitely entering mlb after this season? wonder what he would get if he waited like yamamoto, probly more than $325 million. heard he got hurt which might change his mind about posting
3 finger split
You all realize that the Triceps goes from shoulder to elbow so without knowing where the “tightness” is there are any number of outcomes. And to be honest it could be a muscle strain or attachment issues behind the shoulder or elbow. He will be back when he is back.
CBeisbol
3fs
some people understand that
Others are just ignorant
And a few are trolls
Jerry Hairston Jr's Toupee
Depression is real….
sad tormented neglected mariners fan
Oh shoot yoshi aint coming back until august
Dodgers trade for a starter again at the deadline? Could they get verlander if the astros are willing to take money? Crochet sleeper candidate?
deej
He ain’t coming back this year.
pinstripeblue
A strained rotator cuff!? Yikes. I’m guessing he’s going to be out a month or two if lucky. At least he’ll be back for October. But who knows what a strained rotator cuff is foreshadowing.
Mickey Solis
Sucks to see so many guys injured. Doesn’t matter what teams you root for or hate (hopefully most people hate the Dodgers), but this rash of pitcher injuries especially is ridiculous. Plus, even if you do hate the Dodgers, you don’t want them to be beat up and have the excuse that they weren’t at full strength. Never root for athletes to get injured in sports, just for them to fail.
BennyGiant
Oh darn, what a shame.
CBeisbol
OD
What a dumb comment
PutPeteinthehall
9 million is one thing, 325 million is another when the player injures his shoulder 87 days into the contract. This is definitely is not a good thing. Kelly is gone after this season and so is his salary. I am more concerned with Yamamoto.
Well Hung
A ten year contract, odds of a tommy John surgery at some point seems likely, regardless of the pitcher
jvent
The Mets have Quintana, Severino or Manaea for ya, plus McNeil for a young pitcher.
Well Hung
2026 yamasoso returns and Othani goes down with his next tommy John midseason 2026. Purely speculation
douglasb
No worries. The Dodgers have Walker Buehler. He seems to be rounding into form nicely. He is the next Matt Harvey. Or perhaps the next Noah Syndergaard.