feature-image

Imago

feature-image

Imago

Michael Kopech is back, and after what he has been through, his Friday outing felt like more than just another relief appearance. In the Los Angeles Dodgers’ narrow 5-5 win over the Nationals, Kopech entered the sixth inning, and he showed why LA still believes in him.

Watch What’s Trending Now!

The $5.2 million Dodgers star retired three of the four batters he had faced. He struck out two and needed just 13 pitches to get the job done—nine of them for the strikes. It was a thrilling performance, but it came at the end of a frustrating stretch that Kopech is now only opening up about.

ADVERTISEMENT

Kopech mentioned that right from the beginning of the off-season, he figured something was not feeling right, and hence, the team decided to get him checked out. And lo and behold, his intuition was right.

When I started throwing bullpens in the offseason. My velocity wasn’t quite there, and I felt some tightness. I was just kind of waiting on it to go away. Um, and I was having conversations with the team—with Connor and Mark—and kind of just telling them like, “Hey, it’s not feeling great.” But I was optimistic that it’d feel better. And they were like, “Let’s just take a break, get it checked out, and see what we got, said Kopech on the ‘Baseball Isn’t Boring’ show. And what followed next was a delayed start to his throwing program.

ADVERTISEMENT

article-image

Kopech spent most of the spring training on the sidelines and watched everyone get ahead. And he has gone through a lot, battling through right forearm inflammation during the 2024 postseason and then landing on the IL this season with a shoulder impingement.

ADVERTISEMENT

Plus, the right-hander didn’t appear in a single Cactus League game either. He even came clean about how rehabbing is a whole other ballgame, and how one is part of the Los Angeles Dodgers team but not really. That sense of isolation, though, was not new for him, but it didn’t make things better.

ADVERTISEMENT

Kopech also just recently talked about the pain he pushed through during the postseason last year. For him, it was just adrenaline that helped him go on. But now healthy and back, Kopech is finally trying to turn the page, and maybe Friday was just the start after repeated setbacks. And while for the Dodgers, it’s great news with another strong arm returning, the pitching staff is still a major concern.

Los Angeles Dodgers’ rotation is still in flux despite Kopech’s return

Now, Michael Kopech may be back, but if we are being honest, the Los Angeles Dodgers pitching staff looks nothing short of a patchwork quilt. Big names like Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Tyler Glasnow, and Walker Buehler are all spending time in the IL this season. So it is clear the Los Angeles Dodgers need more than patience. And sure, for now, they are comfortable at the top of the NL West, but if you know October baseball, you know it doesn’t wait for arms to get healthy.

ADVERTISEMENT

This is also where the trade deadline gets interesting. Yahoo Sports insider Jake Mintz recently dropped the idea of how the Dodgers may target Erick Fedde from the St. Louis Cardinals. He is not a blockbuster name, but sometimes the deadline moves have to be less loud and more smart, and Fedde has been just that. In Fedde’s first full season with his team, he owns a 3.54 ERA over 15 starts, with a 116 ERA+, so that puts him well above average for the league. Plus, at 32, he is not a future ace, but he is that kind of mid-rotation stability the Los Angeles Dodgers might need now. Plus, he is healthy, and it’s a rare thing in LA right now, isn’t it?

ADVERTISEMENT

And while the Los Angeles Dodgers don’t want to give up a top-tier prospect, if St. Louis wants to deal, Fedde could be a low-cost, high-upside option for the pitching staff. Don’t you think? Chime in below!

ADVERTISEMENT

Share this with a friend:

Link Copied!

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

Written by

author-image

Sagarika Das

1,848 Articles

Sagarika Das is a Senior MLB Writer at EssentiallySports, bringing four years of professional experience and a strong journalism background to her role at the Baseball GameDay Desk. She has covered major events like the World Series, Off-Season, and Trade Deadline, earning a place in EssentiallySports’ Journalistic Excellence Program, an in-house initiative that trains writers under industry experts to sharpen their reporting and storytelling skills. Sagarika also mentors junior reporters through structured peer reviews, helping to elevate the entire team’s quality and consistency. Known for delivering stories that inform and resonate, she focuses on rising stars, high-stakes postseason drama, and the narratives that connect fans more deeply with the game. Outside the newsroom, she enjoys reading, traveling, and creating social media vlogs, always seeking the next story to tell.

Know more

Edited by

editor-image

Mitali Dey

ADVERTISEMENT