The Dodgers thought Roki Sasaki had turned a corner.
For about a month, the right-hander looked like he had shaken off the early-season issues that had made his first stretch in Los Angeles so uneven. Then the last three starts arrived, and the old problems came right back into view.
His most recent outing against the San Diego Padres was the latest example. Sasaki got through just four-plus innings, allowed three runs and issued five walks. For Dave Roberts, it was enough to leave the manager trying to square what he had seen lately with the better version Sasaki had shown in May.
“I am a little surprised, because there was such good momentum going on,” Roberts said. “But the last - I don’t know if it’s the last one or the one before - where it just wasn’t what he was doing in May. Hopefully we can get him back to throwing the way he did in May.”
Roberts said the Dodgers had seen something click when Sasaki’s velocity returned, but the consistency has still not followed. That’s been the recurring issue, and it has surfaced again at a bad time.
Beginning with his May 17 start against the Los Angeles Angels, Sasaki put together four straight quality outings. Since then, though, the numbers have swung the wrong way: 13 runs allowed over his last 14 innings. That kind of drop-off has been the story of his young career, where repeatability has been elusive.
“I’m surprised that he can’t repeat it start to start, certainly recently, but I do think that we unlocked something where the velocity came back," Roberts said. "But yeah, to kind of take a step back with the command is a little surprising. But I don’t think that he’s lost that feel for the power, because the velocity is still there."
Through 14 starts this season, Sasaki has a 4.88 ERA. Even with the rough patch, he said he still believes he is moving in the right direction with his stuff.
“I actually felt different than I never felt before, mechanically," Sasaki said. "So I need to go over it and see what was really happening. But overall I am trending in the right direction so I’m just going to keep working on it."
The Dodgers need him to pair that progress with sharper outings. San Diego wasn’t his worst recent start, but it still left Los Angeles wanting more in the moment.
He gets another crack at the same Padres club on Thursday night.
In Other News...
Dave Roberts Just Cemented His Place In Dodgers History
Dave Roberts has already built a rsum that puts him among the most established managers in the game, but the latest entry adds another layer to what he has done with the Dodgers. The longtime Los Angeles skipper reached 1,000 career wins, a mark that only a small group of managers in MLB history have hit, and it keeps him in rare company within franchise history as well.
More notable for Roberts, though, was the way the moment landed. After the final out at Sutter Health Park, players, coaches and his wife, Tricia, were there to celebrate with him, underscoring the people around him as much as the number itself. Roberts leaned into that theme afterward, reflecting on how much of a managerial career is really about the relationships built along the way, not just the wins that get counted. [Read more 🡒]
Dodgers Farm System Just Delivered A Breakout And A Call-Up Clue
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Great Lakes got the loudest individual performance, while the rest of the pipeline kept adding to the feeling that there is real momentum building at multiple levels. There were player activations and assignments across the affiliates, plus the kind of reshuffling that often follows a strong week, and the next question for the Dodgers is which of those performances translate into a bigger role once the organization starts sorting out who is next in line. [Read more 🡒]
Dodgers Face A Deadline Choice Fans Know Could Sting Again
With the trade deadline approaching, the Dodgers appear to be thinking less about patching the big-league roster and more about strengthening the organization for the long haul. That means the conversation is turning toward prospects again, a familiar lane for a front office that has not been shy about using established players to add younger talent when the market makes sense.
Tarik Skubal remains part of the conversation, and if Detroit really does entertain moving him this summer, the Dodgers would have another chance to chase a premium arm. But even with a system that still looks healthy overall, a deal of that size would come at a cost in prospect depth, which is exactly the kind of tradeoff that has defined some of their boldest deadline decisions before. [Read more 🡒]
