Padres Suddenly Have A Yu Darvish Question Again

Yu Darvish remains optimistic about a possible return, as the Padres stay open to his comeback while managing uncertainty around his recovery timeline.

The Padres aren’t shutting the door on Yu Darvish this season, even if a return still feels like a long shot.

Darvish has been out all year after undergoing internal brace surgery in the offseason, and he initially took 2026 off the table, pointing instead to 2027 for a possible comeback. That set off plenty of noise when The San Diego Union-Tribune reported in the offseason that he had planned to retire, but Darvish quickly pushed back and said no decision had been made about his future.

Now there’s at least a hint that he may be closer than expected. Darvish told Times of San Diego during the Padres’ recent homestand that he expects to pitch again soon, and manager Craig Stammen didn’t completely close the book on a 2026 return.

“He looks pretty good, but I don’t expect him back this year,” Stammen said. “Who knows? He could be that October surprise.”

Darvish is on the restricted list, which means San Diego could reinstate him if it wanted to. The club can apply to the commissioner’s office at any time, and once he’s healthy, that path would allow him back onto the roster.

The 40-year-old right-hander chose that route himself, giving up his $16 million salary for the 2026 season. He remains under contract for two more years and is still owed $30 million.

Even with the recent optimism, the Padres are not likely to rush him. Darvish turns 40 in August, and after major elbow surgery, the organization has every reason to be patient.

Still, his value to the team hasn’t disappeared just because he hasn’t taken the mound. The Padres would welcome him back when he’s ready, and he’s already been around the group enough to help other pitchers work through the season.

A.J. Preller addressed Darvish’s status after the right-hander went on the restricted list, making clear the Padres weren’t treating retirement as a done deal.

"He's not saying that he's retiring. That's not where we're at.

But for him, he's going to see how he comes back. He's coming back from a major surgery, a second surgery on the elbow.

So I think he's realistic about where that leaves him," Preller said.

"He’s going to continue with the rehab process and maybe we get to next year and he’s feeling in a different place and he wants to come back and give it a go."

Darvish has been a mainstay in San Diego’s rotation since arriving before the 2021 season, posting a 3.97 ERA over 651 innings with the Padres.

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