Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Dodgers could `potentiall­y' look for starting pitching at trade deadline

- By Bill Plu■kett bplunkett@scng.com

ST. PETERSBURG, FLA. » The injuries that have eroded the Dodgers' starting rotation could change their priorities as the inseason trade deadline approaches, Dodgers president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman acknowledg­ed.

“Potentiall­y,” he said. “Right now it's early. I think using the first 3, 3 ½ months to assess your roster and what the needs are helps crystalliz­e how you approach things in July. So things we thought in February or March turn out to be things you don't need to focus on. But another area pops up. It's a little bit like a game of whacka-mole.”

Early-season injuries to Dustin May, Julio Urias, Michael Grove and Ryan Pepiot made starting pitching pop up as an area of need. The Dodgers addressed that by calling up prospects Gavin Stone and Bobby Miller, turning to them earlier than Friedman admits they had planned.

“I would have been surprised if you had said (before the season), `Hey, in the middle of May, you're going to have to call on both.' I would have been really surprised,” Friedman said. “But obviously Grover was injured, building back up, wasn't built up yet. Pep is still going through what he's going through. Then DMay and Julio – when you go through four guys you end up getting to that layer.

“It's a great opportunit­y for those guys. We think the world of them talent-wise. Was it the ideal time developmen­tally to bring them up? Probably not. That's happened a lot of other times where you have to do something a little sooner. Sometimes you're wrong about that and they take the opportunit­y and run with it. We're open to that as well.”

The Dodgers will know more about May's potential return when they are closer to the trade deadline. Friedman acknowledg­ed that “initially” surgery was a possibilit­y for May.

“I think now we're in a good spot where that doesn't seem like something we'll need to do,” Friedman said.

Instead, May received a platelet-rich plasma injection and will not throw for a minimum of four weeks. After that, he will be re-evaluated.

Kershaw returns

Clayton Kershaw rejoined the Dodgers in Tampa and was activated from the bereavemen­t list on Friday following the death of his mother. Right-hander Tayler Scott was returned to Triple-A Oklahoma City without making an appearance with the Dodgers this week.

Kershaw is scheduled to start today but threw off the bullpen mound briefly Friday afternoon.

“Yeah, that was the one thing I didn't do at home,” he said. “I haven't thrown bullpens before (and then started). It's not a big deal.”

Over his past two starts, Kershaw has given up six runs on 12 hits and four walks in just 7 2/3 innings, failing to pitch more than four innings in back-to-back starts for the first time since his rookie season in 2008.

After his most recent start in St. Louis, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said Kershaw had been dealing with “body fatigue.” He repeated that Friday.

“I talked to Clayton a little bit today. He certainly feels much better than he did the last couple starts,” Roberts said. “There was some kind of overall body fatigue. The ball wasn't coming out well. He's in a considerab­ly better spot going into tomorrow's start.”

Roberts said Kershaw was “adamant” about making his start today and didn't want it pushed back.

“I think maybe an 11:30 (a.m.) start on Sunday might've had a little something to do with the math,” Roberts joked.

Kershaw denied there was any physical issue behind his back-to-back poor starts.

“Just didn't pitch good,” he said.

“I feel great. Excited to pitch tomorrow. Good to be back . ... Right where I need to be.”

Pitching depth

The Dodgers claimed right-hander Zack Burdi off waivers from the Rays on Friday. Burdi was a college roommate of Dodgers catcher Will Smith at Louisville and both were taken in the first round of the 2016 draft. Burdi went six spots ahead of Smith, 26th overall to the Chicago White Sox.

Burdi, 28, has a total of 21 1/3 innings in the big leagues with the White Sox, Baltimore Orioles and Tampa Bay. He was designated for assignment by the Rays earlier this week.

“Really good fastballsl­ider combo,” Friedman said. “Obviously our pitching depth has been depleted some so it helps reset that depth for us. It's a talented arm that we feel has a chance at some point this year to help us.”

 ?? DAVID CRANE — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Clayton Kershaw, back from bereavemen­t leave after the death of his mother, threw off the bullpen mound on Friday and is scheduled to start today against the Rays.
DAVID CRANE — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Clayton Kershaw, back from bereavemen­t leave after the death of his mother, threw off the bullpen mound on Friday and is scheduled to start today against the Rays.

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