The Dodgers are keeping Shohei Ohtani on track for Friday, but they’re not locking themselves in just yet.
With Ohtani working back from a minor biceps injury and also managing knee soreness and blisters after a heavy first half, Los Angeles has spent the run-up to the All-Star break weighing whether to give him one last start before the pause. For now, the expectation is that he takes the ball against the Diamondbacks. Still, Dave Roberts made clear the club has a backup plan if Ohtani doesn’t feel right.
"As he goes through the next couple days, if he doesn't feel great, we'll pivot, and we're prepared to pivot," Roberts said. "But as we sit here, I don't see that changing."
Even with the recent bumps, Ohtani has been one of the most dominant pitchers in baseball this season. He owns a 1.79 ERA across 14 starts with 95 strikeouts, and earlier in the year he was drawing National League Cy Young buzz.
The performance has dipped some lately, though, and the timing lines up with a few other issues around him. The knee and blister problems have shown up at the same time starting catcher Will Smith went down, and Ohtani has not had the same chemistry with backup Dalton Rushing.
Through his first 10 starts, Ohtani gave up just seven runs, five earned, over 61 innings. In his last four outings, he has allowed 14 runs, 12 earned, in 24.2 innings.
That hasn’t changed the bigger picture: Ohtani is still getting the job done, and the Dodgers know they have to be careful with the workload he’s carried over the last few months before the postseason. He’s the kind of competitor who wants to keep going no matter what, and he said as much after the biceps flare-up.
“I can always play, and my desire is to always play,” Ohtani said after his biceps flare up. “I feel good enough to be able to do so.”
He has already seen the Diamondbacks once this season, and that outing was as clean as it gets: six shutout innings, two hits allowed and six strikeouts. If he does make Friday’s start, he’ll get one more chance to add to an already strong 2026 before the break.
Roberts also made it sound like Ohtani’s All-Star Game workload will be limited. He is expected to start at designated hitter and could take one or two at-bats, but pitching in the game and participating in the Home Run Derby both appear to be off the table.
"When you're Shohei, he understands the responsibility he has," Roberts said. "So I do think that there's a middle for what's best for him [during the All-Star Game], with what potentially could be downside, but also what's best for the game.
"So don't see him in the Home Run Derby. Don't see him pitching. But I do see him taking an at-bat or two, yes."
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