Shohei Ohtani to receive treatment on left knee, will miss All-Star Game
· Yahoo Sports
The Dodgers scratched Shohei Ohtani from his scheduled start on Friday against the Arizona Diamondbacks due to irritation in his left knee, an ailment that has plagued him off and on for the last month. Ohtani will still be the designated hitter this weekend, but won’t travel to Philadelphia to take part in All-Star Game festivities.
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Ohtani left a game in which he was the designated hitter on June 10 in Pittsburgh, but made his pitching start the next day on June 11. He has a 4.38 ERA in his four starts since, but has lasted at least six innings each time out with a 3.32 xERA, 26.2-percent strikeout rate, and 7.5-percent walk rate. That’s compared to a 0.74 ERA, 2.45 xERA, 28.8-percent strikeout rate and 7.7-percent walk rate in his first 10 starts.
At the plate Ohtani has homered twice this week but so far through seven July games has just six hits in 27 at-bats, hitting .222/.323/.444.
In a press release the Dodgers said Ohtani will undergo “interventions” in his left knee beginning after Sunday’s game. Manager Dave Roberts told reporters Friday at Dodger Stadium Ohtani would get fluid drained from his left knee. Ohtani will also receive a pain-killing injection in his knee, per Bill Plunkett of the Orange County Register and others.
“He’s been managing this quite well, the knee,” Roberts told reporters Friday, as shown on SportsNet LA. “If there’s a chance that we could be proactive and get it drained, and do whatever we need to do to try to manage it, along with the rest for the All-Star break, we were gonna do that.”
Dave Roberts said the treatment Shohei Ohtani will receive won’t impact his pitching plan in the second half. He will get his knee drained on Sunday.
— Dodger Insider (@DodgerInsider) July 10, 2026
“He will be ready in the second half.”
How the Dodgers manage Ohtani’s rest and playing time while he navigates being a full-time two-way player for the first time since 2023 is one of the keys to the season. He hasn’t been the designated hitter in four of his 10 pitching starts, and has also had full days off — no hitting or pitching — in five other games (May 14 vs. Giants, June 4 at Diamondbacks, June 12 at White Sox, June 19 vs. Orioles for the birth of his second child, and July 4 vs. Padres).
Even with the occasional built-in rest, Ohtani has batted 395 times this season and faced 340 batters as a pitcher. He’s been directly involved in 735 total plate appearances this season, 28.7 percent more than the next-most, Miami Marlins ace Sandy Alcantara. Through 94 Dodgers games this season, that’s roughly 7.82 plate appearances per game on average that Ohtani is a part of. For context, last season Ohtani was stretched out to four innings pitching by August 6. Beginning with that game, he faced 125 batters as a pitcher and batted 210 times over the Dodgers’ final 48 games, averaging 6.98 plate appearances per game.
Ohtani has started each of the last five All-Star Games, and was voted this year to start again at designated hitter after earning the most fan votes in the National League. Cardinals catcher and designated hitter Ivan Herrera was named on Friday to replace Ohtani on the NL All-Star roster. Roberts as manager of the National League gets to set the starting lineup, but it’s a no-brainer that Phillies DH Kyle Schwarber, who received the most All-Star votes at the position by players (554 votes for Schwarber, 536 for Ohtani), will likely start at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia on Tuesday.