The Cardinals got a jolt of concern on Thursday when Dustin May was struck by a comebacker in the first inning against the Atlanta Braves, but the early read was encouraging. Derrick Goold of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported that there weren’t any indications of a break, which at least keeps the worst-case scenario off the table for now.
What happens next is still up in the air. May’s next scheduled start is not guaranteed, and if St. Louis needs to fill that spot, Hunter Dobbins looks like the cleanest answer waiting in Triple-A.
Dobbins is working in Triple-A with a 3.79 ERA across 12 starts. He has also already logged four major league appearances this season, posting a 3.63 ERA in a Cardinals uniform.
St. Louis acquired him from the Boston Red Sox this past offseason in the Willson Contreras deal, and the club eased him along during Spring Training after his 2025 rookie season ended early because of a torn ACL.
His Triple-A work has kept him in position for a call if the Cardinals need one. Dobbins last started on June 30 against the Charlotte Knights, so he should be lined up for another outing early this upcoming week.
The timing matters, because St. Louis is in the middle of a brutal stretch that may shape the season.
The Cardinals opened a 14-game run on Tuesday against the Braves, Cubs, and Brewers, and they already took two of three from Atlanta to start it off. Even with that strong first step, the road ahead is still demanding, and the rotation is the area that could be tested first.
If Dobbins isn’t the move, the Cardinals could turn to Brycen Mautz or Quinn Mathews. For now, May has already received positive updates, but St. Louis has to be ready in case he misses a turn.
After Thursday’s win, the Cardinals sit at 45-39 and remain in third place in the National League Central, 7 1/2 games behind first. They also hold the No. 3 National League Wild Card spot.
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Jordan Walker gave the Cardinals exactly the kind of early jolt they were looking for against Atlanta, launching a three-run homer in the opening inning to put St. Louis on the board quickly. It was his first home run since June 13, a timely reminder of how central he has been to the Cardinals offense throughout the season, and it pushed his total to 18 with three RBIs added to the ledger.
The setting only made it feel bigger for Walker, who was back near the area where he grew up in Stone Mountain, Georgia. For a hitter who has carried a heavy load for St. Louis all year, the question now is whether this was just one loud swing in a familiar place or the start of another power stretch at the right time. [Read more 🡒]
Cardinals May Already Have Their First Real Payoff From The Selloff
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Baez has mostly played shortstop, where his arm stands out and the tools are obvious enough to keep the organization intrigued. The remaining questions are the ones that usually decide whether a prospect becomes more than a bat-first gamble, with his range and error rate still areas to clean up as he moves up the ladder. For a Cardinals club trying to measure the long-term value of moving veteran pieces, Baez is the kind of return that can make a trade look a lot better in a hurry. [Read more 🡒]
