Los Angeles Times

TRYING HYPNOSIS FOR HIS HURDLES

Dodgers’ Syndergaar­d is working with a mental skills coach in a bid to get back on track on the mound

- By Jack Harris

SAN DIEGO — The sessions begin in the quiet of the “nap room” inside the Dodgers’ home clubhouse, where Noah Syndergaar­d will pull on an eye mask, relax his body and then try to clear his head.

Several times in recent weeks, the pitcher has followed this new routine, slipping into a mind-numbing trance as mental skills coach Brent Walker hypnotizes him while seated by his side.

There’s no pendulum clock swaying back and forth and it’s no parlor trick.

Instead, Syndergaar­d simply dozes off as Walker talks softly to his subconscio­us, trying to dissolve the mental blocks that continue to hold back the once-dominant right-hander.

“I’ll try just about any resource I have,” Syndergaar­d said. “Just to snap out of it.”

While hypnosis is far from the only effort Syndergaar­d is making to rectify his woeful opening month with the Dodgers, it reveals much about the challenges facing the 30-year-old former phenom.

Syndergaar­d feels like his body is strong, looking every bit of his 6-foot-6, 242-pound frame.

Dodgers coaches maintain his mechanics, while not perfect, are still mostly sound, deciding against any major overhauls in the middle of the season.

From a physical standpoint, all the pieces should be in place for the 2016 AllStar to flourish this season, to use his second year back from Tommy John surgery to stage a mid-career resurgence.

“I have a lot of confidence,” Syndergaar­d said after signing a $13-million contract this past offseason, “they can get me back to where I want to be.”

Alas, Syndergaar­d struggled more than ever during April, when his 6.32 earnedrun average ranked 10th worst among major league pitchers with 30 innings.

He was skipped in the rotation during the Dodgers’ trip to San Diego this past weekend.

He and the team believe the biggest problem is rooted in his psyche.

“It’s just trying to get to a point where he’s comfortabl­e letting it go,” pitching coach Mark Prior said.

“At times, he flashes some stuff, and then other times he kind of pulls back a little bit. He’s somebody that’s really focused on his delivery, and something we’re trying to get him to do is pull out of that and get his focus more towards the plate.”

Most simply, Prior says, “It’s just about trying to get out there and give everything you’ve got on every single pitch.”

Syndergaar­d desperatel­y wants the same thing — eager to dominate again with triple-digit velocity and a barrage of overpoweri­ng strikeouts like he once did with the New York Mets.

The problem is that he feels as if he is “still throwing at 80 to 90%,” resulting in a fastball that barely averages 92 mph (down a couple of ticks from his already decreased velocity last season), a career-low 15% strikeout rate, and an opening month that ranged from mediocre to disastrous.

“I try to throw it as hard as I used to,” Syndergaar­d said, sitting in front of his locker this past weekend as he tried to reconcile a confoundin­g disconnect.

“It just doesn’t come out the same.”

Syndergaar­d believes the source of the issue lies in his subconscio­us, where the mental scars he endured during his rehabilita­tion from surgery haven’t fully healed.

He described the severity of the initial injury as “traumatizi­ng” when his elbow blew out during spring training in 2020. He was just as shaken by a setback a year later, when one doctor told him his ulnar collateral ligament might have torn again.

While that didn’t prove to be the case — Syndergaar­d returned at the end of the 2021 season and managed a combined 3.94 ERA with the Angels and Philadelph­ia Phillies last year despite his diminished arsenal — the pitcher has surmised that, in hindsight, it all might have caused him to subliminal­ly hold back.

“I know it’s in there. I try to be explosive, 110%,” he said. “But my movement just isn’t efficient.”

Thus, when Walker, the PhD now in his third season working with Dodgers players, suggested the hypnosis program recently, Syndergaar­d was open to the idea.

“I’ve done a lot of meditation and mindfulnes­s practices,” Syndergaar­d said. “This is similar feels. It’s just like trying to get your body in a super deep state. …

“Matching the physical side with how my mind is working.”

The process could be especially helpful for Syndergaar­d.

While overthinki­ng and “being internal has always been my Achilles’ heel,” the pitcher said, he managed to ease his mind before surgery by developing mental cues on the mound — similar to the back step Dodgers teammate Max Muncy has incorporat­ed into his swing.

For Syndergaar­d, the best example came in 2019, when he pitched a shutout — and produced his team’s only run with a homer — in a dazzling, 10-strikeout gem against the Cincinnati Reds.

“I felt like I was ‘screwing’ my back leg,” he recalled, crediting the one succinct thought with syncing up the rest of his delivery. “It felt automatic.”

Ever since his Tommy John surgery, however, finding a new mental key, or developing another freeing trigger, hasn’t been simple.

“Even my long toss feels out of whack,” Syndergaar­d said. “Like I’m trying to relearn and unlearn something.”

Prior noted that such a phenomenon is hardly “abnormal” for pitchers in the wake of a major injury — even if the hypnosis method Syndergaar­d is experiment­ing with might be unusual.

“You have the mindset and memory of what it used to feel like,” Prior said. “Whether that was real or not, that’s at least what your body [felt]. It was the correlatio­n of what you did. And I think you’re always searching for that after these injuries. … You gotta kind of rewire some things. Things aren’t gonna be wired the same.”

That’s why the Dodgers pushed Syndergaar­d’s next appearance back, giving the pitcher eight days off between his April 30 start against the St. Louis Cardinals (in which he gave up eight hits and three runs and induced just two swinging strikes over 51⁄3 innings) and his upcoming start against the Milwaukee Brewers on Tuesday.

“Talking to Noah, it just made the most sense,” manager Dave Roberts said, adding that the pitcher still has “a lot of leash” to figure things out in the rotation.

“It’s not always linear how players perform,” Roberts added. “But he has really given himself to us as far as being open to getting better.

“So for me, it’s day to day, but I’m expecting him to pitch well for the rest of the season.”

To that end, Syndergaar­d remains optimistic.

He continues to feel more frustratio­n than fear — declaring that, even amid the depths of his dismal start to the season, he “could be one pitch away” from discoverin­g a breakthrou­gh to transform his game.

“I feel like I’m super close,” he said. “I’ve been working really hard for the last four months now. And the work ethic and the desire and the will is always gonna be the same. That’s the easy stuff.”

The harder part, however, will be clearing the mental hurdles still in his way, a mystery that self-reflection, internal soul-searching and even subconscio­us hypnosis have yet to resolve.

“The symptom is showing as a mechanical issue,” Syndergaar­d said. “But I think it’s more coming from up top.”

 ?? Ashley Landis Associated Press ?? THE DODGERS’ Noah Syndergaar­d, who once was dominant with the Mets, is 1-3 with a 6.32 ERA in six starts this year. He is set to start Tuesday at Milwaukee.
Ashley Landis Associated Press THE DODGERS’ Noah Syndergaar­d, who once was dominant with the Mets, is 1-3 with a 6.32 ERA in six starts this year. He is set to start Tuesday at Milwaukee.

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