Eric Lauer has gone from afterthought to useful piece fast enough that the Dodgers may already be eyeing him as a trade chip.
The left-hander landed in Los Angeles after the Toronto Blue Jays designated him for assignment and then moved on from him for cash considerations in May. Since then, he’s made seven appearances, six of them starts, and posted a 3.12 ERA in a Dodgers uniform. He’s also given the club something steadier than Roki Sasaki, regularly working six innings and not allowing more than three runs in any outing.
That kind of run naturally raises the next question: how long does he stay? Right after his first appearance as a Dodger, a reporter asked Lauer about his place on the roster and what he might need to do to keep it.
Lauer came off a little petulant, but the question made sense. Blake Snell and Tyler Glasnow are expected back at some point, and the rotation is already set at six.
That’s why Andrew Friedman and the Dodgers front office could be looking at Lauer as a deadline move waiting to happen. Katie Woo and Fabian Ardaya of The Athletic identified him as a possible trade chip for Los Angeles.
The idea fits cleanly with what the Dodgers did a year ago when they traded Dustin May. In both cases, the player was nearing free agency, pitching well enough to boost his value, and getting squeezed out by bigger-money arms returning from injury. May was dealt to the Boston Red Sox, and the Dodgers got the kind of return they wanted: more minor league depth.
If they were able to get two top prospects for May - who had never put together a fully healthy season and was fading after a strong start to 2025 - there’s reason to think they could pull in a similar package for Lauer.
This deadline could be shaped by buyer-to-buyer deals, especially with the American League described as such an unpredictable mess right now. And even if Lauer ends up going to a contender, the Dodgers can live with it if the rotation spot behind him is filled by Snell or Glasnow.
For now, Lauer has given them exactly what they needed, exactly when they needed it. After that, the rest may just be a matter of saying goodbye.
In Other News...
Dodgers Finally Found The Answer Fans Needed In The Bronx
The Dodgers got exactly the kind of start they needed in the Bronx, leaning on Roki Sasaki to steady a game that could have slipped away early. At Yankee Stadium, Sasaki worked through traffic and kept the Yankees from turning the afternoon into a bigger problem, giving Los Angeles a chance to settle in and let the rest of the roster do its part.
From there, the game turned into the sort of tight, late-inning test the Dodgers have been trying to handle better as the second half begins. Their defense helped protect the slim edge in the eighth, Tanner Scott finished it off, and a 2-1 win over the Yankees offered a reminder that when the pitching is sharp and the gloves are clean, this team can still win the kind of game that usually decides October. [Read more 🡒]
Dodgers Finally Got The Injury Update Fans Have Been Waiting For
The Dodgers are getting some encouraging movement on the injury front, with Dave Roberts saying Edwin Daz and Kik Hernndez are both advancing through rehab assignments and could be back on the roster by the end of July. For a club that has spent plenty of time juggling availability, any sign that regular contributors are getting closer matters, especially with the stretch run always lurking just ahead.
Daz has already taken another step in his recovery, while Hernndez is working back into game shape after starting his assignment and handling third base in his first appearance. Blake Snell is also beginning the next phase of his comeback after elbow surgery, and the Dodgers are still waiting on Will Smith to make progress from a neck injury, leaving the picture a little clearer in some spots and still unsettled in others. [Read more 🡒]
Dodgers Bring Back Another Familiar Arm And Fans Know The Drill
The Dodgers have gone back to a familiar formula with pitching depth, bringing back a left-hander who already knows the organization after a brief detour through free agency. He was designated for assignment, cleared waivers, and then returned on a minor league contract, a sequence that has become almost routine for clubs trying to keep enough arms available over a long season.
Now assigned to Triple-A Oklahoma City, he gives Los Angeles another experienced option waiting in the wings if the big league staff needs help again. He has pitched in the majors before with Minnesota and also spent time with the Cubs, so this is less a fresh start than another chance to stay close enough to the Dodgers to matter when the next opening appears. [Read more 🡒]
