Freddie returned from his ankle injury on Friday, coinciding with the delivery of his bobblehead to the first 40,000 fans, who spent an average of $145 per ticket, a preseason record. Those in attendance at the game against the Cubs were eager to go home and place Freeman on their shelves.
Freddie Freeman finally returns to action
Freeman missed the start of the season with the Dodgers due to a right ankle injury that he had been carrying since March, after a domestic accident. Despite his absence, the Los Angeles team managed to maintain its competitive pace and continue to rack up victories
“I feel better than ever since I got injured. Better than before the series against the Detroit Tigers… I feel really good. I’m sorry to say it, but maybe I needed those 10 days,”Freddie said after his return against the Cubs
After his last performance on March 29 against the Tigers, where he shone with a home run in the 7-3 victory, Freeman is back and claims to be in great shape. The Dodgers, who have strengthened their roster despite the losses, face a tough division in the National League West, and having Freddie at 100% could make all the difference.
Why is Shohei Ohtani’s pitching comeback taking so long?
The Dodgers’ superstar might not take the mound until the second half of this MLB season. Here’s why.
WASHINGTON — Inside an empty stadium, the most popular ballplayer on Earth got to work.
Shohei Ohtani strolled out to the outfield grass at Nationals Park on an abnormally brisk April afternoon. In his wake strode a small army of Los Angeles Dodgers coaches and staff. Ohtani, who two days prior had gone 3-for-4 with a home run and a triple, picked up a ball and began to throw.
It being two hours before first pitch of Wednesday’s game, the yard had yet to open to the public, and so the stands were almost completely vacant. As Ohtani threw, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts conducted his daily media session, capturing the attention of the club’s rather large media contingent. The only people watching Ohtani, besides the throng of Dodgers pitchers waiting to stretch, were a few Nats Park ushers, a handful of well-placed media members and a security guard or two. When Ohtani sailed one clanging into the seats, an opportunistic usher slid the prized ball into his pocket.
Eventually, Ohtani and his Dodgers shadow, the lot of them bundled in winter wear, moved to the visiting bullpen. There, the Japanese supernova conducted a brief bullpen session, throwing about 15 pitches off the mound to a squatting catcher. He threw fastballs and splitters but no breaking balls. He smiled with glee after unleashing a quality offering and grimaced with frustration when he missed a spot.
Not knowing the context, the entire scene might’ve looked rather routine for a professional baseball player. But very, very little about Shohei Ohtani is ever routine.
Over the past decade, Ohtani grew into a singular force because of his two-way skill set. Nobody else in the entire sport both hits and pitches, let alone at the elite level Ohtani can. But since undergoing elbow surgery in September 2023, the three-time MVP has not toed a big-league rubber. In the time since then, he has switched teams, endured a gambling scandal that sent his former interpreter to prison, won an NL MVP award and captured his first World Series crown. His fame, already sky-high, has multiplied exponentially.
Yet his path back to the two-way lifestyle has been anything but simple. As of Thursday, one year, six months and 21 days have elapsed since he went under the knife on Sept. 19, 2023. Considering where the Dodgers dynamo is in his recovery process, there’s still quite a ways to go.
“I’m still at the stage in which I have limits on the types of pitches I can throw and limits on speed,” Ohtani told media, including Yahoo Sports, through interpreter Will Ireton this week.
The general expectation around DodgerLand right now is that an Ohtani pitching comeback before the end of June looks unlikely. A return around the All-Star break in mid-July would put Ohtani’s total rehab time at about 22 months, significantly longer than the typical Tommy John recovery. Compare that to fellow Dodger Tony Gonsolin, who underwent Tommy John just 19 days before Ohtani. Gonsolin, currently on the IL due to a back problem, made his first minor-league rehab start on Sept. 10, one year and nine days after surgery.
That said, it’s worth noting: At no point in the process have Dodgers brass used the word “setback” to describe the trajectory of Ohtani’s recovery.
An important piece of context: This is Ohtani’s second elbow surgery, after he had Tommy John at the end of the 2018 season. Teams often craft a more conservative return timeline for players who have already undergone the operation. Jacob deGrom, for instance, needed about 15 months of recuperation and rehab before his comeback from a second Tommy John last season. Still, the 20-22-month timeline feels a bit extreme.
A different injury, the one Ohtani suffered during the playoffs, might be playing a role. During Game 2 of the World Series, the Dodgers leadoff man hurt his left shoulder while sliding into second base on a steal attempt. He played through the issue for the remainder of the Fall Classic but underwent surgery to repair the shoulder in November. That operation would’ve necessitated a rehab process, one that almost certainly forced Ohtani to pause or otherwise reorient his throwing program, further extending his pitching timeline.
The Dodgers’ offense is formidable enough to overcome subpar starting performances, as was the case Wednesday against Washington. A year ago, this team won 95 games, the NL West and the World Series despite a rotating carousel of starting pitchers. They’re set up even better this go-around. And because the Dodgers are a near-lock to make the playoffs, timing Ohtani’s return with those most meaningful games makes a whole lot of sense.
The only possible concern with L.A.’s Ohtani strategy is if the player himself grows frustrated with the methodical approach. That does not, in any way, appear to be the case right now. Roberts, when describing the team’s level of collaboration with its star, used the word “lockstep” this week.
Ohtani, through Ireton, reflected that sentiment: “The Dodgers are consulting with the doctors just to make sure that, since this is my second operation, it’s really important to be conservative and be thoughtful.”
And so, the impatient public, the millions and millions of Ohtani fans around the world, will just have to wait a little longer.