Los Angeles Times

May out for year, dealing Dodgers ‘significan­t loss’

Right-hander, injured Saturday, will undergo season-ending Tommy John surgery on UCL.

- By Jorge Castillo

The Dodgers broke spring training this year with a somewhat surprising decision: Dustin May, not David Price or Tony Gonsolin, would assume the fifth spot in the starting rotation. They banked on May taking the next step in his developmen­t, on his ability to progress from a young kid occasional­ly making hitters look foolish with his nasty pitches to a dominant major league pitcher consistent­ly shutting down lineups every five or six days.

He made strides in that direction in the season’s first month, culminatin­g in setting a career high with 10 strikeouts against the San Diego Padres in his fourth start. He had command of his curveball. Batters swung and missed. He was taking the next step.

That developmen­t came to a disturbing halt Saturday in Milwaukee when he winced and signaled to the

dugout after throwing his 28th pitch, a 94-mph fastball that went wide. It will be the last pitch he throws in 2021.

The worst-case scenario was confirmed Monday when an MRI exam revealed a torn ulnar collateral ligament. May will undergo Tommy John surgery to reconstruc­t the ligament May 11 in Los Angeles. The club didn’t disclose whether May has a complete or partial tear. Rehabilita­tion timetables are generally 12 to 16 months. Anything longer and there’s a chance he doesn’t pitch for the Dodgers again until 2023.

“When you’re developing and now you get the year cut short, that impacts developmen­t,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “What Dustin has done is he’s just matured more as a major league ballplayer. His work in between starts has been way more focused, way more consistent, there’s a routine in there, and he’s been pitching really well. To not be able to build on that is really unfortunat­e.”

May posted a 2.74 earnedrun average and 0.957 WHIP in 23 innings across five starts this season. He compiled 35 strikeouts to six walks, striking out 13.7 batters per nine innings.

“That’s a significan­t loss for us,” third baseman Justin Turner said before the Dodgers announced May’s impending surgery. “That’s a significan­t arm that we’ve relied on and we were planning on relying on. Just feel terrible for Dustin.”

May’s misfortune is the fourth significan­t injury for the Dodgers’ pitching staff in the last 10 days. Relievers Corey Knebel (lat), Brusdar Graterol (forearm) and Price (hamstring) landed on the injured list during that period. Knebel is expected to miss a few months. Price will miss a few weeks. Graterol’s

status is uncertain; Roberts said the hard-throwing right-hander will undergo an MRI exam Tuesday.

May’s injury, crushing in the long term, also put the Dodgers in a bind in the short term.

Originally, the Dodgers could have avoided using a fifth starter for two weeks because of three days off over the course of 11 days starting Thursday. But Monday’s postponeme­nt against the Chicago Cubs because of poor weather created a seven-inning split doublehead­er Tuesday and the need for a fifth starter by the end of the week unless the Dodgers stage another bullpen game or have a starter pitch on short rest.

Clayton Kershaw, Tuesday’s listed starter, will start Game 1. Trevor Bauer will start Game 2. Walker Buehler, Monday’s scheduled starter, will start Wednesday. Bauer, who has lobbied to pitch on three days’ rest, will start on regular rest.

Extra rest doesn’t always prevent injury. May is an example. He could’ve started Friday against the Brewers on regular rest, but the Dodgers went with a bullpen game to give him and the other starters an extra day. May made one of his five starts on regular rest. Two were made on five days’ rest. One was made on eight days.

Roberts said May didn’t report any issues or show any warning signs before the injury. The numbers didn’t indicate a problem. May’s average fastball velocity was the second highest in the majors among starters behind Jacob deGrom at 98.2 mph.

But his improvemen­t — most notable in his whiff rate jumping from the seventh to the 78th percentile — stemmed from his curveball. May’s use of the pitch increased from 13.4% last season to 22.8% this season. Hitters went 0 for 23 with 16 strikeouts against the curveball. They whiffed on 45.2% of the 84 times he used it.

Roberts said May initially felt pain Saturday after throwing a curveball. Moments later, he winced and walked off the field.

“I feel for him, most importantl­y,” Roberts said. “But, for our ballclub, it’s a big blow.”

 ?? Ted S. Warren Associated Press ?? THE DODGERS’ Dustin May was injured while pitching against Milwaukee on Saturday. An MRI on Monday revealed a torn ulnar collateral ligament, requiring Tommy John surgery. The season-ending surgery is scheduled for May 11.
Ted S. Warren Associated Press THE DODGERS’ Dustin May was injured while pitching against Milwaukee on Saturday. An MRI on Monday revealed a torn ulnar collateral ligament, requiring Tommy John surgery. The season-ending surgery is scheduled for May 11.
 ?? Alex Gallardo Associated Press ?? MANAGER Dave Roberts said Dustin May felt pain after throwing a curveball.
Alex Gallardo Associated Press MANAGER Dave Roberts said Dustin May felt pain after throwing a curveball.

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