The Dodgers face more adversity in their roster: now it’s an annoying injury to one of their mainstays as Dodgers learn the hard way with…

The Los Angeles Dodgers have several fronts to address if they do not want to have problems that will take their toll in the medium term

The Los Angeles Dodgers, who are already struggling to overcome injuries to their pitching staff, were without second baseman Tommy Edman in their starting lineup for the first game of Friday night’s series against the Atlanta Braves.

Edman, who ranks second on the team with eight home runs and 24 RBIs, injured his right ankle in Tuesday night’s 15-2 victory over Miami. After missing Wednesday’s game and having a day off Thursday, Edman was still not ready to start in the first of 10 consecutive road games, and his availability in the short term is in doubt, so the alarm bells are already ringing at Chavez Ravine.

The Dodgers face more adversity in their roster: now it's an annoying injury to one of their mainstays

The player worked out before Friday night’s game in what manager Dave Roberts said could be a key session. “I hope he’s available to pinch hit,” Roberts said, adding that he believes Edman’s status is “a day-to-day issue”, however, that statement does not bode well.

When asked if Edman could be on the injured list, Roberts said: “Today could be revealing.”

The Dodgers’ ‘hospital’

The Dodgers began May with three starting pitchers on the injured list. Left-hander Blake Snell (shoulder inflammation) is with the team in Atlanta. Roberts said Snell is scheduled to begin throwing when the team continues its trip to Miami next week.

The rotation also features the absences of Tyler Glasnow (shoulder inflammation) and Clayton Kershaw (recovering from toe and knee surgery). The Dodgers also have two key relievers Blake Treinen (forearm soreness) and Michael Kopech (shoulder impingement) on the injured list.

Dodgers learn the hard way with Roki Sasaki and have to make a difficult decision

The Los Angeles team must remedy the error of the premature debut of the Japanese pitcher who was compared to Paul Skenes

Dodgers learn the hard way with Roki Sasaki and have to make a difficult decision

All that glitters is not gold, goes the old and well-known saying that could well be applied with brutal precision to Roki Sasaki, the Japanese pitching sensation who promised to take Major League Baseball by storm like his compatriot Shohei Ohtani.

Everyone was expectant before such a 23-year-old prodigy who threw blazing fastballs and boasted samurai-like control. All the franchises were vying for who would get him, and all emitted siren songs to attract this overseas sailor who was touched by the gods of the ball.

Sasaki is so far a disappointment

But time gave its verdict, and as relentless as it is, it left everyone fascinated only to suffer an equally intense disappointment when Sasaki arrived in MLB with the Los Angeles Dodgers. He was unable to overcome his stage fright, making six appearances with a 0-1 record and a 3.55 ERA. He was as out of control as a maraca player, issuing 18 walks in just 25 innings, with just 20 strikeouts, for a WHIP (walks plus hits per inning pitched) of 1.42. Sasaki was therefore a total disappointment.

For the reasons that Sasaki reached the majors, some came to compare him to the Pittsburgh Pirates phenomenonPaul Skenes, but in light of the facts, everything indicates that besides the fact that comparisons are odious, they often show mistakes, although in this particular case, also excesses without justification, because Olivia Dunne’s boyfriend boasts in 42.2 innings a record of 3-3 with an ERA of 2.74 in seven starts this season, plus 41 strikeouts which gives him a WHIP of 0.91.

The always ‘hateful’ comparisons

He seemed to be being praised as the next Skenes, and so far he hasn’t been. The walks have been surprising,” an American League executive told mlb.com, undoubtedly an accurate diagnosis, as was made by analyst Jim Bowden, who sent a message to the Dodgers that Sasaki needed to be transferred to the Minor Leagues if he did not perform well, so that he could learn to control his impulses.

Apparently, the Dodgers chose to learn ‘the hard way’ and now they must pay the consequences.

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