Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Will Wood be back in L.A.?

Left-hander didn’t do much in return, until the deciding game of the World Series.

- By Jack Harris

Left-hander is a free agent after an average season with a big finish in World Series.

The latest story of a series looking at the status of Dodgers free agents heading into the 2021 season.

It wasn’t the return Alex Wood envisioned, but it had an ending he’ll never forget.

The left-handed pitcher came back to the Dodgers on a one-year contract last offseason, hoping to rebuild his reputation as a starter. Instead, a shoulder injury quickly derailed his campaign. When he returned to health, he was relegated to bullpen duty. And for much of the playoffs, Wood pitched in low-leverage relief situations.

However, everything changed in the Dodgers’ ti

tle-clinching win in Game 6 of the World Series against the Tampa Bay Rays. Wood entered in the third inning and threw two perfect innings, striking out three, to help the Dodgers claim their first championsh­ip in 32 years.

What comes next for Wood, who turns 30 in January, is unclear.

A former All-Star in the Dodgers’ rotation, Wood has made only nine starts and 20 total appearance­s in the last two seasons (including the playoffs). His earned-run average in that span is 5.50. His WHIP (walks plus hits per inning pitched) is close to 1.5.

A recent ranking of free agents by ESPN didn’t project Wood to be among the 100 highest earners on the market this winter.

If he wants to stay in L.A., where he has spent five of his eight seasons in the majors, it almost certainly would be in a middle-relief role — a spot that might not suit him or the team.

Wood was acquired by the Dodgers in a July 2015 trade with the Atlanta

Braves, who had selected the University of Georgia product in the second round three years earlier. After being limited by injuries in 2016, he experience­d a breakthrou­gh 2017 campaign, going 16-3 with a 2.72 ERA.

Despite posting a solid statistica­l line in 2018 (9-7, 3.68), Wood was traded to the Cincinnati Reds in the offseason with Yasiel Puig and Matt Kemp. A back injury delayed his debut in Cincinnati by four months. Once Wood did take the mound, he produced a 5.80 ERA, the worst he had compiled in his career.

As a free agent last winter, he signed a one-year, $4-million deal with the Dodgers and initially earned a spot in the rotation.

But after giving up three runs in three innings in his first outing in July, he was put on the injured list with shoulder inflammati­on and didn’t return until September, when he made seven relief appearance­s and another as an opener.

Before his outing in Game 6 of the World Series, he’d made only three appearance­s in the postseason — never with the Dodgers protecting a slim lead.

Given an opportunit­y to be a bridge in the third and fourth innings of the title clincher, Wood f lashed top form, requiring only 20 pitches — 16 of which were strikes — to record six outs.

After his last out, he strode off the field in an animated show of emotion. If that was his final act as a Dodger, it was a memorable one.

 ?? ALEX WOOD Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? reacts after one of his three strikeouts in two perfect innings in Game 6 of World Series.
ALEX WOOD Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times reacts after one of his three strikeouts in two perfect innings in Game 6 of World Series.

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