Will Smith’s neck injury is stretching far beyond what the Dodgers expected, and Dave Roberts isn’t hiding how unusual this has become.
Smith has been out for a little over three weeks and has missed 20 games with an inflamed disc in his neck after being scratched against the Los Angele Angels on June 6. What started as a situation that was supposed to cost him just one game, and then only the minimum stay once he landed on the injured list, has turned into something much more open-ended.
Roberts said the club is still waiting for Smith to make real progress.
“I think we’re all surprised how long it’s taken,” Roberts said. “I hope he’s back before the All-Star break.
But the more time he’s off, he’s going to have to play some [rehab] games. So that kind of cuts into the time of return to us.
"So I don’t really know. I don’t want to add any pressure to him. I want him to be healthy and then once he’s healthy we can have that conversation.”
In another media scrum, Roberts made it clear that the concern is tied to the length of the absence, not fear of a long-term problem.
“I think it’s concerning in the sense that it’s a lot longer than we’d expected,” Roberts said. “It’s not concerning because we don’t think it’s a long-term situation.”
For now, Smith is still nowhere close to a return. He did not travel with the team on its road trip and appears unlikely to be back before next week at the earliest. A minor league rehab assignment may be needed before he can rejoin the Dodgers.
The timing also points to a return after the All-Star break more than before it, even though Roberts left that door open. The break runs July 13-16, and if Smith does not make it back before then, he would miss at least six weeks with the injury.
The 31-year-old catcher has appeared in 52 games this season and was already trying to get into a rhythm before getting hurt. He has six home runs, 23 RBIs, a .249 batting average and a .720 OPS.
Smith is in his eighth season in the league, all with the Dodgers, and has been one of the club’s standout players since arriving in 2019. With Dalton Rushing and Chuckie Robinson handling the catching duties, Los Angeles is feeling the absence. The sooner Smith is back, the better for a team that is thin behind the plate.
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