Padres Pitcher Sparks Postgame Scare After Dodgers Wild Comeback

Randy Vsquez's health scare adds to the Padres' pitching woes as they struggle to maintain their grip on a playoff spot.

Randy Vásquez’s night against the Dodgers ended with more than just a rough stat line.

The Padres right-hander was taken to the emergency room as a precaution after fainting while heading to get an X-ray on his ankle following Thursday’s game in Los Angeles. He is currently stable and conscious, and he’s undergoing tests related to both the fainting episode and the ankle.

Per manager Craig Stammen, Randy Vásquez was on his way to get an X-ray on his ankle tonight when he fainted. He’s currently stable and conscious but was taken to the emergency room as a precaution, and is having tests done.

Vásquez had already taken a shot to the right ankle in the first inning, when a 99 mph comebacker struck him. He stayed in the game and worked two more innings, but the club wanted the ankle examined after the final out.

On the mound, the outing was another difficult one for Vásquez. He went three innings, allowing four runs on seven hits with one walk and no strikeouts. It came after what had been a strong start to the 2026 season, but the recent trend has gone the wrong way.

Overall, the right-hander owns a 4.71 ERA in 84 innings with 60 strikeouts and 27 walks. Since the start of June, he’s 1-3 with an 8.37 ERA, plus 13 strikeouts and 10 walks. He hasn’t worked four full innings in any of his last three appearances, and he hasn’t gotten past five innings since May.

The Padres’ bigger issue is staring them right in the face: the rotation isn’t giving the bullpen enough relief. That’s a concern Stammen has already voiced publicly.

“It’s my biggest worry, because I lived it,” Stammen said recently about potentially overworking the bullpen. “I know what that was like, and I know how we were feeling at the end of the season. … My job as a manager is to try to protect the bullpen in that way, so they are a strength for the entire season, not just in May and June.”

Thursday’s game itself was a brutal swing for San Diego. The Padres built a 6-0 lead by the bottom of the second inning thanks to home runs from Manny Machado, Jackson Merrill and Jake Cronenworth, only to watch the Dodgers storm back with 12 unanswered runs in a 12-7 win. The loss pushed Los Angeles to a 13-game lead in the National League West.

San Diego is now 43-43 and three games out of the final wild-card spot in the NL. The Padres also are in danger of slipping below .500 for the first time since they were 5-6 before their April 8 game against the Pittsburgh Pirates.

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