Dodgers welcome deadline additions, hopeful arrival โraises the floor for our ballclubโ
TAMPA, Fla.ย โย The Dodgers didnโt go shopping at the top of the market ahead of Thursdayโs trade deadline.
But what they came away with โ right-handed relievers Brock Stewart and Paul Gervase to bolster the bullpen, and versatile outfielder Alex Call to round out the lineup โ are the kind of moves that โjust raises the floor for our ballclub,โ manager Dave Roberts said Friday.
โI feel we did get better,โ Roberts said, before echoing the front officeโs hope that the Dodgersโ biggest improvements over the final two months of the season come from the star-studded, but underperforming, core they already have in place.
โI think weโve got a pretty dang good team. I think if you look at it from the offensive side, as far as our guys, theyโll be the first to tell you theyโve got to perform better and more consistently. Thatโs something that weโre all counting on โฆ I love our club. I really do. Now itโs up to all of us to go out there and do our jobs.โ
The job for the Dodgersโ two biggest acquisitions, Stewart and Call, will be clear from the get-go.
Stewart, a former Dodgers swingman from 2016 to 2019, has reinvented himself in the second half of his career. Unlike his first stint in Los Angeles, when he threw in the low 90s and was a fringe long reliever on the roster, Stewart is now a higher-leverage relief option, with a mid-to-upper 90s fastball and swing-and-miss sweeper he has used to dominate right-handed hitters this season.
โAt the end [of his first Dodgers stint], he lost the velocity and was trying to figure out if he could hang on and who he was at that point,โ Roberts recalled. โObviously, heโs put in a ton of work to sort of find himself again. Heโs had nothing but success. Iโm excited to see this version of him. He certainly shouldnโt lack for confidence.โ
Stewart wonโt fix the Dodgersโ ninth-inning problems โ with their closer role up in the air ever since struggling offseason signing Tanner Scott went on the injured list with an elbow injury โ but could get some save situations โin the right situation,โ Roberts said โ for instance, if a run of right-handed hitters (who are batting just .104 with a .327. OPS against him this year) are up at the end of the game.
โI trust the guy, I trust the player, what heโs become,โ Roberts said. โSo for me, if the situation calls for it tonight and heโs in the ninth inning, Iโve got all the confidence.โ
Gervase, a 6-foot-10 right-hander the Dodgers acquired from the Tampa Bay Rays in exchange for catcher Hunter Feduccia as part of a three-team trade on Wednesday night, was also on the active roster Friday. He comes with just five previous career MLB appearances, but a deceptive delivery aided by his long-limbed extension on the mound.
โI donโt know a whole lot about him,โ Roberts said. โI know heโs got a big arm. Heโs got some extension, some rise, but I havenโt seen him.โ
The arrival of Stewart and Gervase did coincide with yet another loss in the bullpen. Veteran right-hander Kirby Yates, another offseason signing who has disappointed with a 4.31 ERA this season, was placed on the injured list because of lingering discomfort in his pelvic and lower-back area. He went back to Los Angeles to get further testing.
โIn the last, call it, two weeks, he hasnโt felt great,โ Roberts said. โHasnโt been injured, in his words, which is why he kept pitching and competing. But we flew him home this morning to look at the doctor and kind of get some tests to see if thereโs something thatโs kind of been aggravating him. Somethingโs just not right, exactly. So weโre trying to suss that out.โ
In the lineup, Roberts said Call โ a 30-year-old right-handed-hitting journeyman who found a niche with the Washington Nationals the last few seasons as an on-base threat capable of grinding out tough at-bats โ would mix in at all three outfield spots.
โ[He is] a tough, feisty hitter,โ Roberts said. โI certainly see him playing versus left. But I think heโs pretty much a neutral guy. Slugs a little more against left, but gets on base against right. Iโm going to try to keep him in there a couple times a week.โ
Call said he wasnโt shocked to learn he had been traded on Thursday, and was excited by the โchance to compete in the playoffs and win a World Seriesโ with a first-place Dodgers team.
โFor me, I am going to grind out at-bats, put the ball in play, take my walks, make it tough on the pitcher,โ said Call, who has hit .297 with the Nationals in 102 games over the last two seasons. โJust really make the [pitchers] work so that hopefully theyโre tired when the top of the order comes back around or whatever.โ
Roki Sasaki facing hitters
Internally, the Dodgers are hoping rookie Japanese pitcher Roki Sasaki can also serve as a de facto late-season addition after missing the last several months with a shoulder injury.
And this week, the right-hander took a key step in his recovery process.
Sasaki faced hitters for the first time since getting hurt in a simulated inning this past week in Arizona, Roberts said, and is scheduled to throw two more simulated innings on Saturday.
The team has been targeting a late-August return for Sasaki, who had a 4.72 ERA in eight starts this season before going on the IL.