Justin Wrobleski’s rise from bullpen arm to All-Star is complete.
The Dodgers left-hander was added to the National League roster on Saturday, taking the spot of Cincinnati Reds starter Chase Burns. Wrobleski, who began the season outside Los Angeles’ rotation, will now head to Philadelphia for his first All-Star Game.
His case was hard to ignore. In the first half, Wrobleski went 10-2 with a 2.69 ERA across 100 1/3 innings, and Dodgers manager Dave Roberts - who will manage the NL - had already been pushing for him to get the nod. Wrobleski last took the mound Tuesday and threw seven innings of one-run ball, another strong argument for why he belonged.
The path here has been anything but ordinary. Wrobleski opened the year in the Dodgers’ bullpen and probably never gets this chance as a starter if Blake Snell had not started the season on the injured list. The 2021 11th-round pick didn’t really establish himself in the majors until last fall, when he returned from the minors with a cleaner delivery and a trimmed-down arsenal.
That late-season breakthrough carried him into the Dodgers’ World Series bullpen, and he was among the starters Los Angeles used in the Game 7 clincher. This season, he’s kept the same edge, attacking hitters by throwing strikes, getting ahead early, and forcing lineups to react to him. Wrobleski has also leaned on a self-made evaluation model to measure his own outings.
Roberts pointed to the mindset behind it all.
“He has real belief in himself, and it’s not manufactured; I think it’s really authentic and who he is,” Roberts said this week.
Wrobleski’s confidence has roots in some rough breaks along the way. He was hit by a car during his freshman year at Clemson, which wiped out that season.
While he was at State College of Florida, a bad-hop grounder struck him in the face and broke his jaw. Then his final college season at Oklahoma State ended early because he needed Tommy John surgery.
Now he’s got a new nickname to go with the breakout. Hall of Fame pitcher Pedro Martinez dubbed him “The Shark,” and on the eve of his selection, T-shirts showed up in the Dodgers clubhouse with “WROBO” written in the “Jaws” font. That came after Dodger Stadium organist Dieter Rhule started playing the theme after each of Wrobleski’s strikeouts.
The nickname has already stuck. It may even follow him onto the All-Star stage.
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Lowder has already handled the change well in two relief appearances, turning in scoreless innings in both outings and giving the Reds a useful look at how he might fit in different late-game roles. The bigger question is what comes next, because the team is still weighing whether he profiles best as a long reliever, a higher-leverage option or a starter again down the road. [Read more 🡒]
