Dodgers pitcher Gavin Stone impressed in his first Cactus League start last Tuesday in his one inning, his first game in a year and a half after right shoulder surgery. But any plans for a potential spot on the opening day roster were scuttled when Stone experienced soreness in that shoulder after a bullpen session, manager Dave Roberts told reporters Monday in Scottsdale.
Sonja Chen at MLB.com has more on Monday’s news of Stone’s injury.
Bill Plunkett at the Orange County Register has more on just how serious Stone’s surgery was in October 2024:
He didn’t realize how bad things were.
“I didn’t,” he admitted earlier this spring. “Honestly, Arizona was my last outing and I felt pretty good. It would get tired in between innings but it felt good. I never really considered that it would be as bad as it was. When I got the MRI back, it was kind of a shock. But (Dr. Neal) ElAttrache does a great job. I’m very thankful for all he did.”
ElAttrache did a lot. He had to repair the labrum, rotator cuff and shoulder capsule.
This is a setback for Stone, but expecting him to have been ready for opening day doesn’t necessarily fit with how the Dodgers have handled these types of rehab plans for starting pitchers in recent years.
Walker Buehler had his second Tommy John surgery in August 2022 and made his way into starting a rehab assignment in late 2023, but he didn’t ultimately return to pitch for the Dodgers until May 6, 2024. Tony Gonsolin had Tommy John surgery in September 2023 and didn’t start for the Dodgers until April 30, 2025, with that return interrupted by a back injury during spring.
River Ryan is in a similar spot this spring, after his Tommy John surgery from September 2024 that wiped out all of his 2025 season. Ryan pitched a scoreless inning last Wednesday, with an even longer layoff between games than Stone. Roberts that day talked about Ryan like he was someone who wasn’t going to be rushed back into the rotation:
“I thought he was overthrowing,” Roberts said. “I haven’t seen that all spring. It’s probably just getting into live competition. I thought he was a little too bullish on the fastball, but he was getting behind in the first inning.”
With Blake Snell also out for opening day as he rests his shoulder this spring, the options for the Dodgers’ opening day rotation are thinning.
Yoshinbobu Yamamoto was up to three innings before leaving for the World Baseball Classic. Tyler Glasnow pitched one batter into the third inning in his Cactus League debut last Thursday and figures to start again this week. Shohei Ohtani pitched two simulated innings on the backfields on February 22 before leaving for Tokyo, and though he won’t pitch in the WBC will continue to throw on the side to continue his build-up.
Roki Sasaki is still working through some things, including the addition of a few new pitches into his repertoire. His second start comes Tuesday against the Guardians.
Emmet Sheehan figured to have an inside track to a rotation spot, but hasn’t gotten into a Cactus League game yet as he was slowed by the flu. But if he starts at some point this week, there’s still time for four starts to build up toward the regular season.
Justin Wrobleski has been stretched out to two innings now and is in a good spot, looking to build on his strong end to last season.
The other starting pitcher on the 40-man roster is Landon Knack, and among the non-roster invitees there is veteran Cole Irvin, who pitched in the KBO last year and has been stretched out to two innings so far this spring.