The Dodgers’ pitching picture is finally starting to clear, and that could leave Eric Lauer as the odd man out.
Los Angeles has spent the first half of the 2026 season grinding through injury after injury on the mound, but help is beginning to arrive. Evan Phillips is back in the bullpen after spending the past 13 months recovering from Tommy John surgery, and he was available for Monday’s 8-7 win over the Colorado Rockies. He didn’t pitch, but his return gives the Dodgers a needed lift in relief.
That’s only part of the turnaround. Blake Treinen and Edwin Díaz are also on track to return in the second half.
Treinen, who went on the 15-day injured list on June 20, was cleared to play catch last Thursday. He has been much better in 2026 after a rough 2025, posting a 3.52 ERA in 29 games.
Díaz, signed by the Dodgers to a three-year, $69 million deal over the offseason, has been sidelined after surgery in April to remove loose bodies in his elbow. He threw his first bullpen in late June and is expected back in the second half.
The rotation is headed toward a similar crunch. Blake Snell and Tyler Glasnow are expected to return in late July or August, which could make life harder for Lauer.
The 31-year-old left-hander has done his part since arriving from the Toronto Blue Jays in mid-May, turning in a 3.12 ERA over seven appearances, six of them starts. But with the Dodgers’ arms trending healthy, there may not be much room left for him.
Manager Dave Roberts laid out the situation plainly: “Eric coming over here knew that this was the deal, right?” Roberts said recently.
“Until [Snell and Glasnow] get back. We just don’t know when.
He’s just got to stay focused on doing his job. Then when that time comes we’ll see what happens.”
That uncertainty is what has Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic wondering whether the Dodgers could flip Lauer before the Aug. 3 MLB trade deadline.
Lauer is set to become a free agent after the season, and Rosenthal noted that Los Angeles could be looking at a pitching surplus that spills into the bullpen. He pointed to last year’s deadline, when the Dodgers sent May to the Boston Red Sox for outfield prospects James Tibbs III and Zach Ehrhard, as a possible template.
“On paper, at least, the Dodgers potentially are looking at an excess of pitching, creating the possibility of spillover into their bullpen. So, could they exploit the market the way they did at last year’s deadline, sending May to the Boston Red Sox for outfield prospects James Tibbs III and Zach Ehrhard?”
Rosenthal wrote. “It’s classic Dodgers, turning a seemingly fringe piece [in Lauer] into something of value.”
There’s still plenty of time before Aug. 3, and Lauer’s role could change if the roster takes another turn. But with reinforcements on the way, the Dodgers may decide that the best use of his value is to turn him into prospects rather than keep him around as depth they may no longer need.
If that happens, it would be a striking twist after Los Angeles sent cash to Toronto to bring him in only a few months ago.
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Dave Roberts and Dalton Rushing both pointed to the possibility that Sasaki was giving away something in his delivery, a concern that can turn a bad night into a bigger diagnostic problem. Sasaki acknowledged he has work to do and said he needs to identify what went wrong before his next turn, which only adds to the intrigue as the Dodgers try to get him back on track. [Read more 🡒]
