The Dodgers are planning to promote right-handed pitching prospect River Ryan to the majors following the All Star break, according to The Athletic’s Fabian Ardaya. It’s not currently known which specific day Ryan is expected to take the ball, and Ardaya also notes that it’s unclear how long the Dodgers expect to keep the right-hander in the big league rotation. Ryan is not yet on the 40-man roster, meaning a corresponding move will be necessary before Ryan can be promoted.
Ryan, 26 next month, was an 11th-round pick by the Padres in the 2021 draft who was acquired by the Dodgers prior to his pro debut in the deal that sent Matt Beaty to San Diego. Ryan raised his prospect profile last season by impressing with a 3.33 ERA and a 23.7% strikeout rate in 97 1/3 innings of work at the Double-A level last year. The start to the righty’s 2024 season was delayed by a shoulder issue, but he returned to the mound in early June and has looked good ever since. He’s been nothing short of dominant in five starts at the Triple-A level this year as he’s posted a 2.76 ERA in 16 1/3 innings of work while punching out 28.8% of batters faced.
That’s a smaller body of work for a prospect to get at the highest level of the minors than is typically expected, but it’s not necessarily a surprise that the Dodgers feel the need to turn to Ryan given the big league club’s rotation woes. Walker Buehler, Tyler Glasnow, and Yoshinobu Yamamoto are all currently on the IL, joined Tony Gonsolin, Dustin May, Emmet Sheehan, and Clayton Kershaw. No one in that latter group has been healthy enough to pitch in the majors this year, and that list doesn’t include right-handed youngster Nick Frasso, who has missed the entire 2024 season due to surgery but is on the minor league injured list. The club’s many upper-level pitching injuries have been further exacerbated by the struggles of youngster Bobby Miller, who has an 8.07 ERA in seven big league starts and was recently optioned to the minor leagues.
That’s left the Dodgers in a somewhat desperate situation regarding the rotation. James Paxton is the only starter currently in the club’s rotation who was an established big leaguer prior to this season, and he’s currently joined by rookies Gavin Stone, Landon Knack, and Justin Wrobleski. While both Stone and Knack have excelled this year, with Stone in particularly quickly establishing himself as among the club’s best options even when the rotation is healthy, Wrobleski has struggled in his brief time in the rotation and the Dodgers lack a fifth starter even with him in the fold. That’s caused the club to start right-hander Brent Honeywell Jr. today despite claiming him off waivers from the Pirates just a day ago.
While he’s now seemingly being forced into action by the large number of injuries in the majors, Ryan is nonetheless one of the top pitching prospects in the club’s system. Baseball America currently rates him as the tenth-best prospect in the Dodgers farm, while MLB Pipeline rates him fourth behind only catcher Dalton Rushing, outfielder Josue De Paula, and Frasso. The Athletic’s Keith Law is perhaps highest on Ryan and ranked him 33rd on his preseason top 100 prospects list. Ryan features an upper-90s fastball as part of a four-pitch mix, and services generally seem to be in agreement that the righty has the ceiling of a #2 or #3 starter, though his lack of professional innings seem to give some outlets pause.
whosehighpitch
He looks like he is also ready to challenge Damien Priest for the world championship at Summer Slam
underdog
Just a minor if important correction that Ryan was actually drafted by the Padres, as an outfielder, then traded to the dodgers for Matt Beaty. Then LA converted him full time to pitching. Which seems like a good move and trade. Cheers.
underdog
(Thanks for the correction!)
Very Barry
White Sox can solve some of the Dodgers pitching woes right now. Dodgers still not ready to do what it takes to get Erick Fedde let alone Garrett Crochet or Michael Kopech.
We still got plenty of arms. Jon Cannon and Chris Flexen come to mind as starters. We got John Brebbia in the bullpen. We can fix Bobby Miller. We want to bring this kid back home to Chicago. He’s from the burbs.
dodgers32
Because Erick Fedde isn’t worth what the White Sox will demand, which would be a gross overpay.
Very Barry
Ohtani is getting $70 million. How bad do ya’ll want to get a ring again? Rotation and bullpen get strong upgrade. Brebbia is lights out right now, so is Fedde. Fedde is controlled through next year at $7.5 per. If he was wearing a Dodger jersey, Fedde would be going to the All-Star Game.
Dodgers receive: Erick Fedde, John Brebbia, Chris Flexen, Andrew Benintendi
White Sox receive: Bobby Miller, Jackson Ferris, Dustin May
Butter Biscuits
Lol
CBeisbol
VB
“Ohtani is getting $70 million”
When is he getting $70 million?
The correct answer is NEVER
He’s getting $2 million this year and he’s getting $68 million in 2033. That has a PV (Present Value) of about $46 million. But he’s definitely not getting $70 million.
sad tormented neglected mariners fan
This guy is the new Matt bush, raised as a position player then switches to pitching
captainsalty
Without the legal issues as far as I know
rwboss
correction: he was drafted by the Padres and was traded to the Dodgers for Matt Beaty
SweetBabyRayKingsThickThighs
All aboard Riverboat Ryan!
Acoss1331
Where the River goes!
I wanna be as big as a mountain!
Buzzz Killington
Maybe he’ll send some good pitching down stream.
AroundTheHorn
A river ryan threw it!
Seaver rules
I hope my Mets don’t flop after the break because if they do the Dodgers, Padres and Astros will be calling about Sevy, Quintana and Manea.
Non Roster Invitee
7 starts, 20 innings. That’s dominant, as an opener.
Touch 'em all Joe
Major league name
Jerry Hairston Jr's Toupee
Yohan Ramirez to get the dfa after the break….
stymeedone
So…Honeywell gets designated again?