Dodgers Suddenly Have A Bigger Concern With Roki Sasaki

The Dodgers are taking a closer look at Roki Sasaki's recent challenges as they work to get their pitcher back on track.

Roki Sasaki’s latest start left the Dodgers with more questions than answers, and now the club is digging in to find out why the right-hander has slipped back into trouble.

Sasaki was hit hard by the San Diego Padres over the weekend for the second time in as many starts, lasting just three innings while giving up six runs on seven hits, including three home runs. The Dodgers’ bats bailed him out by erasing the 6-0 deficit with 12 unanswered runs, but the outing only added to a stretch that has become hard to ignore.

Over his last 17 innings, Sasaki has allowed 19 runs, and Los Angeles is now taking a closer look at whether something more specific is behind the damage. Manager Dave Roberts said the Padres seemed locked in on everything Sasaki was throwing and suggested pitch tipping could be part of the issue.

“They were on everything Roki threw. You could see it,” Roberts said.

“We’re going to do a little dive. I don’t know if he was tipping his pitches, but they were on everything.”

Catcher Dalton Rushing echoed that thought, saying pitch tipping would make sense given how well San Diego handled Sasaki.

“That would be a big explanation as to how they felt like they were on every pitch,” Rushing said.

For Sasaki, the rough stretch has pushed his season ERA back up to 5.40. He had put together a solid four-start run and looked like he might be settling in after May, but the consistency still hasn’t held. The Dodgers have invested plenty of trust in him as a full-time major league starter, yet the results have been uneven, with the bad outings standing out more than ever.

After the latest setback, Sasaki said he knows he has to come back sharper.

“I’m sure there are many reasons [for the struggles],” Sasaki said. “I have to figure out what they were and address them heading into the next start.”

That next start will come against the Colorado Rockies, and if the Dodgers do uncover a tipping issue, they’ll work to clean it up right away.

In Other News...

Max Muncy Opens Up As Dodgers Debut Carries Heartbreaking Weight

Max Muncys rise this season has come with more than just the usual on-field work, and he has been open about the role the Dodgers mental skills coach, Brent Walker, has played in helping him stay grounded. Walker, hired in 2020, has become a steady presence for players who need a quick conversation, some pregame work or simply someone available around the dugout and on the plane. For Muncy, that support has helped him keep his mental health in a good place while performing at a level that earned him an All-Star starting nod.

The same kind of human backdrop was part of the day when rookie catcher Eliezer Alfonzo reached the majors, a moment that carried far more weight than a standard debut. Alfonzo has been dealing with the recent loss of family members in the Venezuela earthquakes, and the timing of his first big-league appearance made the occasion especially emotional. He spoke about wishing his stepmother could have been there to see him make it, a reminder that sometimes a debut is about much more than the game itself. [Read more 🡒]

Dodgers May Be Giving This Catcher A Bigger Chance Than Expected

A little extra catching depth turned into a more meaningful opportunity for Eliezer Alfonzo, who was brought up by the Dodgers to back up behind the plate while Will Smith stays on the injured list. Los Angeles also added Carlos Duran to the 40-man roster, a move that helped shuffle the catching picture and opened the door for Alfonzo to stick around with a clearer role than a typical emergency call-up.

Manager Dave Roberts made it clear the club wants a closer look at Alfonzo while Smith remains sidelined, and that could mean semi-regular playing time in the coming stretch. For a team trying to manage an injury-hit roster without losing stability at catcher, the next few games may tell the Dodgers whether Alfonzo is simply filling space or beginning to carve out a more lasting place on the staff. [Read more 🡒]