Rocky, and painful, outing for Shohei Ohtani as Dodgers lose to Colorado

Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Shohei Ohtani is checked by a trainer after taking an RBI single off his leg in the fourth inning of a baseball game against the Colorado Rockies, Wednesday, Aug. 20, 2025, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)
Shohei Ohtani is checked by a trainer after taking a line drive off his leg in the fourth inning. (David Zalubowski / Associated Press)

The Dodgers lost a game Wednesday. But it could have been worse.

They could have lost Shohei Ohtani.

The final score was 8-3 in favor of the Colorado Rockies, although the game was far more one-sided than that. And the result, combined with San Diego’s win over the Giants, cut the Dodgers’ lead in the National League West to just a game.

Yet the word the team used most often to describe the night was lucky because two hours after Ohtani took a line drive off his right leg, the reigning National League MVP said he had dodged serious injury when the ball missed his knee and struck him in the thigh.

“I think we avoided the worst-case scenario,” he said through an interpreter. “So I'm going to focus on the treatment.”

“It was in the thigh, fortunately, and not off the knee,” added manager Dave Roberts. “But it got him square.

“We'll see how it comes out. But I'm hopeful, confident.”

Ohtani was struggling through his worst pitching performance in nearly five years, one that would see him give up a season-high five runs and a career-high nine hits, when Colorado’s Orlando Arcia added injury to insult by lining a two-strike shot back up the middle.

The ball came off the bat at 93 miles per hour and struck the pitcher just above the right knee before caroming across the first-base line for an RBI single. Ohtani winced in pain and took a practice throw from the mound before being allowed to continue.

Read more:'He looks much more confident.' Hard-throwing Edgardo Henriquez settling in with Dodgers

He limped off the mound three batters later with the Dodgers trailing 5-0 and after drawing a walk as the designated hitter in the top of the fifth, Roberts pulled him from the game.

“I took him out a little bit because of the score [and] because it was getting stiff and there was some swelling there,” the manager said. “I felt as the game was going to go on, it was going to stiffen.”

With the Dodgers in the midst of a stretch that will see them play a season-high 19 games without a break, Roberts had already planned to give Ohtani a day off Thursday before the opener of a three-game series Friday in San Diego. That plan, obviously, won’t change.

“Right now it feels pretty good,” Ohtani said. “I'm going to do everything in my ability to make sure that it doesn't affect me moving forward.”

If Ohtani’s health was the Dodgers’ primary concern Wednesday, worries over his last two pitching performances — in which he gave up nine runs and 14 hits in 8 1/3 innings, nearly doubling his season ERA from 2.37 to 4.61 — probably aren’t far behind.

The game against Colorado, his first regular-season start at Coors Field, was his 10th start as a Dodger and it didn’t go well from the start, with the weak-hitting Rockies bunching three hits to score two runs in the second.

Colorado, which finished with 16 hits, made it 5-0 in the fourth, with the first five batters reaching base, the last of those coming on Arcia’s line drive.

“I put the team in a bad spot,” Ohtani said. “It was just a very regrettable outing that I wish I could have done better.

“The ball doesn't move quite as much as it does in normal sea level, but that's not an excuse.”

Read more:Dodgers Dugout: The 10 best center fielders in Dodger history

Speaking of not making excuses, Roberts promised earlier in the week that the Dodgers would not experience a letdown against the last-place Rockies even through the four-game series comes between six crucial games with the Padres. Now the Dodgers need a win Thursday to earn a split and guarantee they’ll land in San Diego this weekend with the division lead.

“You know, the results are the results. The performance is the performance,” Roberts said. “I'd like to think it's not a letdown, but yeah, I don't know.

“There's nothing I can do to change it. It certainly leaves a sour taste in your mouth. But we’ve got to win tomorrow.”

Etc ...

Utility player Kiké Hernández made a rehab appearance as the designated hitter for triple-A Oklahoma City on Wednesday, going two for three with a double and an RBI before leaving for a pinch-hitter in the seventh. Hernández has been on the injured list since July 7 with left elbow inflammation, but he could return to the Dodgers early next week. ... Relievers Kirby Yates and Tanner Scott both threw hitless innings in rehab appearances for Oklahoma City on Tuesday and could rejoin the team in San Diego this weekend. ... Before Wednesday’s game, the Dodgers recalled right-hander Paul Gervase from triple A and optioned right-hander Alexis Diaz. Gervase, 25, acquired from Tampa Bay at the trade deadline, appeared in five games with the Rays this season, striking out six batters in 6 1/3 innings. He made his Dodgers debut against the Rockies, giving up a run and two hits in two innings.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Sabres Didn't Lose In Regulation Time Against Canucks Last Year — Can Buffalo Play As Well Against Vancouver In 2025-26?

Beck Malenstyn (left); Tyler Myers (right) -- (Timothy T. Ludwig, USA TODAY Images)

The Buffalo Sabres need to play well against just about every opponent next season in order to get back into the Stanley Cup playoffs for the first time in a decade-and-a-half. And one team that could stand in their way against Buffalo is a team needing a rebound year -- the Vancouver Canucks.

in our continuing series on THN.com's Sabres site, we're looking at each of the Sabres' 31 opponents next year. And in this file, we're focused on the Canucks, whom Buffalo didn't lose to in regulation time last season. Vancouver made a notable addition in former Edmonton Oilers winger Evander Kane, but otherwise, the Canucks are mostly the same team as they were last season.

That said, we want to know your opinion on the Sabres' rivalry against Vancouver. Do you think Buffalo will play at least as well against the Canucs as they did last year? Be sure to make your opinion known in the comment section below. And feel free to register as a community member on THN.com. Your opinion matters, and we want to hear it.

Know Your Enemy, Sabres Pacific Edition: Are Rebounding Canucks Too Much For Buffalo To Handle?

Beck Malenstyn (left); Tyler Myers (right) -- (Timothy T. Ludwig, USA TODAY Images)

The Buffalo Sabres are going to face significant difficulty next season trying to end their Stanley Cup playoff drought at 14 years. To be sure, the Sabres will need every standings point they can get, and that means playing well against even the NHL's top teams.

To that end, THN.com's Sabres site has been producing a series in which we examine every one of Buffalo's 31 opponents next season. We've made our way through teams from the league's Atlantic, Metropolitan and Central divisions, and more recently, we've been focusing on the eight Pacific Division franchises.

We're nearly done looking at the Pacific teams, but in today's file, we're looking at a team looking to rebound after a disappointing 2024-25 season -- the Vancouver Canucks.

The Canucks missed the playoffs last season after being one of the league's stronger teams in 2023-24. And Vancouver has made an important addition (and a former Sabre) this summer, making them into a team the Sabres will have a tough time against next season.

With that said, let's look at Buffalo's performance against Vancouver last year, and what that may say about the Sabres' chances against them in 2025-26.

BUFFALO SABRES VS. VANCOUVER CANUCKS

NEW CANUCKS PLAYERS: Evander Kane, LW; Pierre-Olivier Joseph, D

2024-25 SERIES: Sabres 1-0-1, Canucks 1-1-0

2025-26 GAMES AGAINST EACH OTHER:  December 11 at Vancouver; January 6 at Buffalo 

CAN THE SABRES BEAT THIS TEAM?  The Canucks were facing the loss of star winger Brock Boeser in free-agency this summer, but Vancouver GM Patrik Allvin re-signed Boeser, assuring the Canucks of a strong offensive presence. 

Then, Vancouver traded with the Edmonton Oilers for Vancouver native Evander Kane, giving the Canucks more snarl and experience up front. And the re-signing of Boeser and addition of Kane make Vancouver a deeper and stronger team.

The good news for the Sabres is they didn't lose to the Canucks in regulation time last season, dropping an overtime game in their first game in late November before beating Vancouver in the second game in late January. But this coming season, Buffalo and the Canucks will be squaring off twice in less than a one-month span. 

Know Your Enemy, Sabres Pacific Edition: Kraken Swept Buffalo Last Year -- Will This Season Be A Different Story?Know Your Enemy, Sabres Pacific Edition: Kraken Swept Buffalo Last Year -- Will This Season Be A Different Story?The Buffalo Sabres' 2025-26 schedule has been out for some time now, and in this ongoing THN.com Sabres site series, we're breaking down Buffalo's chances against every team in the league.

Playing former Sabre Kane may give Buffalo some added inspiration to play well against the Canucks, but like the Sabres, Vancouver wants nothing more than to get back into the playoff mix next year. So the Sabres will have their hands full with the Canucks.

Another factor that could change things for Vancouver is new Canucks coach Adam Foote. The former star defenseman has been Vancouver's assistant coach, but when Rick Tocchet left for the Philadelphia Flyers this summer, Canucks management went in-house to replace him. And Foote inherits a Vancouver team that was a letdown on many fronts this year.

That includes the injury-absence of star Vancouver goalie Thatcher Demko, who was limited to only 23 appearances last season. But Demko also signed a contract extension this summer, giving the Canucks one of the strongest goalie tandems (including veteran Kevin Lankinen) in the league. The Sabres will have to be at their best to get pucks past either Demko and Lankinen, because if they can't, Vancouver's above-average offense will put all the pressure on Buffalo's goalies next year.

Know Your Enemy, Sabres Pacific Edition: Sweeping Rebuilding Sharks Should Be No Problem For BuffaloKnow Your Enemy, Sabres Pacific Edition: Sweeping Rebuilding Sharks Should Be No Problem For BuffaloThe Buffalo Sabres' 2025-26 schedule has been out for a while now. And although Sabres fans have known when and where their team will be playing at any given time, it's still worthwhile to examine each Buffalo opponent next year -- and specifically, how the Sabres should fare against team NHL team in 2025-26.

The Sabres and Canucks don't have a natural rivalry that's stood the test of time, but Buffalo needs to play at least as well as it did against Vancouver last year. Failure to do so could impact the Sabres' bottom line -- and potentially be the difference between Buffalo missing and making the post-season next season.

The Sabres will face many teams at least as good as the Canucks next year, and they can't afford to let up on any opponent. Any more disappointment will lead to major change in Buffalo -- but if the Sabres do handle their business against Vancouver and other above-average teams, Buffalo's playoff drought will come to an end.

Basketball at 2028 Los Angeles Olympics to tip off two days before opening ceremony

Basketball is going to get a head start at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.

FIBA — the international basketball governing body that oversees Olympic basketball — announced this week that the revised schedule for the event has the first games on July 12, two days before the July 14 Opening Ceremonies.

"This adjustment allows the Quarter-Finals to be played over two days and will also ensure that no game will start earlier than 12:00 PM, enhancing the overall experience for players, teams, fans and broadcasters," FIBA said in a statement announcing the change.

What was not announced is whether this change impacts the men's or women's tournaments, or both. Those tournaments are made up of a dozen men's and women's teams — who qualify for the Olympics via results at the World Cup as well as qualifying tournaments — and those tournaments will run through the gold medal games on July 29 and 30 (July 30 is the final day of the Los Angeles Olympics). All the basketball games are scheduled to be played at the Intuit Dome in Inglewood, the home of the Los Angeles Clippers.

The USA is the defending gold medalists for both the men (who have won five Olympic golds in a row) and women (the eight-time Olympic defending champions).

Giants sending Landen Roupp for MRI after scary-looking knee injury vs. Padres

Giants sending Landen Roupp for MRI after scary-looking knee injury vs. Padres originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN DIEGO — Landen Roupp bounced back quickly from an elbow scare last month. Now the Giants are hoping to get similarly good news with his next MRI. 

Roupp was carted off the field Wednesday night after injuring his left knee, and he’ll head to San Francisco on Thursday to get an MRI. The Giants initially called it a left knee sprain, but they won’t know the severity until they get the tests back.

“It’s such an unfortunate moment,” shortstop Willy Adames said. “For him, obviously, but for the team, too. He has been doing really good for us all year long and he just came back and now this happened. Obviously it’s really sad.”

At the very least, Roupp will land on the IL for the second time in as many months. Given how bad Wednesday’s injury looked initially, and the fact that the Giants dropped to five games under .500 with an 8-1 loss to the San Diego Padres, the odds are relatively high that Roupp will just be shut down regardless of what the MRI says. He already has thrown about twice as many innings as he did last season. 

Roupp was not available to reporters Wednesday, but manager Bob Melvin said the right-hander was optimistic. That has been his view all year when asked about the innings piling up or his elbow barking at him. 

“I saw him right after,” Melvin said. “You know how he is — he said I’m going to be fine. That’s just the way he is with everything.”

The injury happened when Ramon Laureano hit a liner back to the mound that hit Roupp on the right thigh. As he tried to reposition himself to grab the ball, his left knee gave out. Adames said Roupp was in quite a bit of pain as he tried to get back up. The Giants brought a cart out, although that was in part because the visiting dugout has three sets of stairs on the way back to the trainer’s room. 

Roupp has a 3.80 ERA through the first 22 starts of his sophomore MLB season. A year after he won a bullpen job in camp, he pitched so well in Scottsdale that the Giants put him in their rotation over Hayden Birdsong and Kyle Harrison. Roupp has done nothing in recent months but show that the spring decision was the right one. 

Harrison got traded and Birdsong ended up back in Triple-A, but Roupp had a solid start to the year and then took off in June. He responded to a rocky night at Dodger Stadium by allowing just four earned runs over his next six appearances, which lowered his ERA to 3.11 at the time. 

The dominant run was not ended by opposing hitters, but rather by his own elbow. Roupp felt some discomfort in July and was shut down for three weeks. He was charged with 10 earned in two starts after he returned, which put a damper on his overall numbers, but the Giants still are very optimistic about his future and hopeful that this isn’t too big a setback. 

The season has been an unfortunate reminder for the Giants that you never can have too much pitching depth. They felt they comfortably went seven-deep at the start of the year, with three Carsons waiting in Triple-A. 

From that initial depth chart, Jordan Hicks and Harrison have been traded and Roupp is now sidelined. Birdsong is trying to find his command in Triple-A, and Carson Ragsdale struggled so much there that he was DFA’d. Blade Tidwell, acquired at the deadline to bolster the group, will have an MRI on his shoulder on Thursday. 

The Giants currently have Kai-Wei Teng as their fourth starter and an open spot behind him. Carson Whisenhunt and Trevor McDonald would be leading options in Triple-A if the Giants do not want to bring back Birdsong, who walked five in his Triple-A start on Wednesday. For Thursday’s game and the weekend in Milwaukee, they’ll likely need some bullpen depth. 

“We’ve seen some [of those] guys, so we’re kind of filtering through it right now and what we think we need here coming up too,” Melvin said. “Obviously the bullpen was taxed a little bit [tonight] too. We’re thinking about what the need is here in the short term and the long term.” 

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LA Kings Reportedly Considered Trading Brandt Clarke This Offseason

The Los Angeles Kings have made several interesting moves this offseason, including trading Jordan Spence to the Ottawa Senators and signing Cody Ceci as a Vladislav Gavrikov replacement. However, it sounds like another move was being considered.

In recent days, it was revealed that the Kings considered trading Brandt Clarke, but management chose not to do that, at least not yet.

Clarke, who is 22 years old, has 41 points through 103 games in his career. Last season, when he had 33 points, was his first full season in the NHL, and while he looked solid, it seems as though he may still be someone the team is considering moving for different assets.

At this point, it seems as though the Kings are willing to give him a strong look out of camp next season, but his name continues to be floated as a potential trade piece.

Celtic frustrated by tenacious Kairat in Champions League playoff first leg

Celtic still have plenty of work to do to reach the Champions League after drawing a blank in the first leg of their playoff against Kairat at Parkhead.

In Brendan Rodgers’ 800th match as a manager, there was no traditional early onslaught by the hosts as the accomplished Kazakhstani side more than matched their hosts. However, with Yang Hyun-jun on for Adam Idah and Daizen Maeda moving to centre-forward at the start of the second half, Celtic stepped up the pace and piled on the pressure in the later stages but could not find a way through despite 10 added minutes.

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What we learned as Landen Roupp injured, Giants' bats go cold in loss to Padres

What we learned as Landen Roupp injured, Giants' bats go cold in loss to Padres originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN DIEGO — After a day off to deal with oblique tightness, Willy Adames was back at shortstop on Wednesday night. The Giants also expect to get Matt Chapman back from the IL this weekend. 

For the most part, this second-half skid has not been about poor health, but they potentially took a big hit in that department in Wednesday’s 8-1 loss to the San Diego Padres. 

Young right-hander Landen Roupp was carted off in the third inning after injuring his left knee while fielding a liner that hit his right leg. The Giants did not have an update during the game, but the injury appeared to be serious.

Roupp has been a huge success story in a season that is short on positives. He has a 3.80 ERA and had established himself as a strong No. 3 starter before elbow discomfort put him on the IL in late July. 

The Giants trailed when Roupp was helped onto a cart and it never got any better. They have scored just two runs in 26 innings since homering three times in the first inning Monday night.

Brutal Break

Ramon Laureano’s liner back to the mound left the bat at 95 mph, but if you’re going to take a comebacker, the back of your leg is just about the best spot. Roupp probably would have been okay if that’s all that happened, but as he tried to get to the ball and make a play, his left knee appeared to give out. He went down awkwardly and a few minutes later was carted off his field.

It was the latest bit of bad luck for a young right-hander who dealt with injuries in the minors but has established himself in the big leagues over the last two seasons. Roupp was throwing better than anyone in the rotation when his elbow started barking last month, but an MRI came back clean. 

The Giants were cautious with the rehab but felt good about Roupp’s health when he returned to the rotation last Friday. They hoped to get his innings count up a bit more and then let up on the gas so he could be ready to take on 33 starts in 2026.

Ugly in General

At the time of the injury, the Giants already trailed 3-0. Gavin Sheets and Manny Machado hit early homers, and once Roupp departed, Sheets hit another bomb to make it a six-run game. Right after Roupp was carted off, there was an error on second baseman Christian Koss and a balk by reliever Joey Lucchesi. 

The most disappointing play, though, might have come in the second inning. After back-to-back two-out singles by Jung Hoo Lee and Koss, lefty JP Sears walked Tyler Fitzgerald. The Padres held a mound meeting and then Patrick Bailey popped up a first-pitch slider, ending the threat. 

Hometown Homer

San Diego native Casey Schmitt finally got the Giants on the board in the fourth with a solo shot to left. Schmitt jumped on an outside fastball from Sears and yanked it into the seats.

The homer was Schmitt’s eighth of the year and gave him 15 RBI since July 4, the second-most on the team to Willy Adames (24). It was his first career homer at Petco Park, which is 20 minutes from his high school and 15 minutes from San Diego State, where he played college ball. 

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Jett Williams tops group of six Mets prospects on ESPN's updated Top 100 list

While the Mets parted ways with a handful of valuable prospects before last month's trade deadline, their farm system is still packed with high-end talent that could soon produce at the major league level.

ESPN released its in-season Top 100 prospects list on Wednesday, and six Mets youngsters made the cut. The group of farmhands is headlined by shortstop Jett Williams (No. 18), with right-handers Nolan McLean (No. 19) and Jonah Tong (No. 21), outfielders Carson Benge (No. 27) and A.J. Ewing (No. 74), and right-hander Brandon Sproat (No. 83) ranked behind.

Williams, the top prospect on SNY's post-deadline rankings list, was among four players who were promoted to Triple-A Syracuse last week. In seven games at the highest minor league level, the 21-year-old is hitting .286 with three extra-base hits. He also logged 25-plus doubles, 25-plus stolen bases, and an .867 OPS in 96 games with Double-A Binghamton.

McLean impressed in his big league debut at Citi Field last weekend, striking out eight across 5.1 scoreless innings against the Mariners. The call-up was also warranted, as the 24-year-old showed off his effective five-pitch mix by registering a laudable 2.78 ERA with 97 strikeouts over 87.1 innings (16 games) with Triple-A. He shouldn't see the minors again in 2025.

Tong, ranked second on SNY's updated list, has emerged as one of baseball's most coveted pitching prospects. The 22-year-old shoved in Double-A, posting a lights-out 1.59 ERA with 162 punchouts in 20 starts. He was also nothing short of dominant in his first Triple-A outing last weekend, as he struck out nine over 5.2 scoreless frames.

There's a sizable gap between Benge and Ewing on ESPN's list, but both outfielders rank inside SNY's new Top 10. Benge, the club's first-round pick in 2024, began the season with High-A Brooklyn (60 games) and recently reached Triple-A (four games) after playing 32 games at Double-A. Across all three levels, Benge has slashed .306/.413/.504 with 42 extra-base hits.

Sproat ranks last among ESPN's group of six, but the 24-year-old right-hander is nearing a big-league opportunity. The Mets considered calling him up last week -- McLean won that battle instead -- and he's overcome first-half inconsistencies in Triple-A with a sharp 2.05 ERA across his last five starts. In his most recent outing, he fanned eight over six innings of one-run ball.

ESPN also mentioned third baseman Jacob Reimer as one of 10 prospects ranked just outside the Top 100 who also weren't featured in the preseason Top 200 list.

Former Devils Prospect Heading Overseas

Former New Jersey Devils forward Tyce Thompson is taking his talent overseas. 

Barys Astana of the KHL have announced that they have signed Thompson to a one-year contract.

Thompson hit the market as a Group 6 unrestricted free agent (UFA) this summer after not being re-signed by the New York Islanders. This is after the 6-foot-1 winger posted eight goals, 13 assists, and 21 points in 65 AHL games with the Bridgeport Islanders in 2024-25. He did not make an appearance in an NHL game this past season with New York. 

Thompson was selected by the Devils with the 96th overall pick of the 2019 NHL Entry Draft. In 11 games over three seasons with the Devils from 2020-21 to 2022-23, he recorded one assist, seven hits, and a minus-4 rating. His time with the Devils organization ended during the 2023-24 season when he was traded to the Islanders in exchange for Arnaud Durandeau. 

2 Devils Who Could Be Nice Surprises 2 Devils Who Could Be Nice Surprises The New Jersey Devils will be looking to take another step in the right direction in 2025-26 after getting back into the playoffs this past spring. They certainly have a good-looking roster on paper, as they have big-time stars in Jack Hughes, Nico Hischier, and Jesper Bratt leading the charge.

Top-20 Penguins' Prospects 2025: First-Round Pick Has Middle-Six Upside

Heading into the 2025-26 season, the Pittsburgh Penguins have shifted the focus to youth and development.

With more talent in the system than Pittsburgh has had in years - and 13 picks in the 2025 NHL Draft - top prospects lists are becoming more competitive and more difficult to discern. Since the prospect pool is deepening, The Hockey News - Pittsburgh Penguins takes a look at the top-20 prospects in the organization. 

Next on our list is No. 14, and this is where we cover one of the Penguins' three first-round picks this year in forward Bill Zonnon.

#14: F Bill Zonnon

Jun 27, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Bill Zonnon is selected as the 22nd overall pick to the Pittsburgh Penguins in the first round of the 2025 NHL Draft at Peacock Theater. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Zonnon was selected 22nd overall by the Penguins in this year's draft, and he had a great year for the Rouyn-Noranda Huskies of the QMJHL. He registered 28 goals and 83 points in 64 regular season games as well as eight goals and 16 points in 13 playoff games. 

There's no doubt that Zonnon, 18, can produce, but where his value really shines is in his all-around game. The 6-foot-2, 187-pound center has a power forward-like toolset and a ton of versatility to boot, playing in all situations and capable of filling many different roles in a lineup.

He can skate and has great edgework, he is a high-IQ playmaker, he's an elite forechecker, he's deceptive, and he works relentlessly to stay on the puck and keep plays alive. He has a physical edge to his game as well, and he has a shot with some pop.

One of the most intriguing things about Zonnon is that he's a high-floor player. If he can maximize his offensive skillset and continue to grow and round out his overall game, he has the potential to be an effective top-six player who can rotate between center and the wing. Even if he doesn't, he's more than likely going to be a higher-profile bottom-six player who can play some tough minutes and produce enough to be an important piece on a third line.

There isn't much Zonnon can't do, and Penguins fans - as well as the organization - should be excited by his upside. And, honestly, he probably should be higher in this ranking, but as is the case with some others in this range, the Penguins simply have a lot more talent in their system than they have in recent years, making some of these decisions tough.

It's very possible that at this time next year, he will be sniffing the top-five. For now, we Zonnon him at 14, and there is a ton of room for him to continue to develop into a future impact NHL forward.

The list so far:

- No. 15: F Melvin Fernstrom
- No. 16: D Emil Pieniniemi
- No. 17: F Avery Hayes
- No. 18: F Cruz Lucius
- No. 19: D Finn Harding
- No. 20: D Peyton Kettles

Top-20 Penguins' Prospects 2025: Young Swedish Forward Has IntrigueTop-20 Penguins' Prospects 2025: Young Swedish Forward Has IntrigueHeading into the 2025-26 season, the Pittsburgh Penguins have shifted the focus to youth and development.

Bookmark THN - Pittsburgh Penguins on your Google News tab  to follow the latest Penguins news, roster moves, player features, and more!    

'He looks much more confident.' Hard-throwing Edgardo Henriquez settling in with Dodgers

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - OCTOBER 17: Edgardo Henriquez #60 of the Los Angeles Dodgers delivers pitch during the eighth inning in game four of the National League Championship Series against the New York Mets at Citi Field on Thursday, Oct. 17, 2024 in New York. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
Edgardo Henriquez, delivering a pitch during Game 4 of the NLCS against the New York Mets at Citi Field, has held opponents to a .120 batting average in seven appearances this season. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

Edgardo Henriquez has a gift. He can throw a baseball faster than all but a few humans in history.

Yet he prefers to think of it as something he and God created together, not something that was just given to him.

“We’ve worked for that,” said Henriquez, who frequently uses the plural pronoun when talking about himself. “All the work, the effort, the physics. And God's reward, most of all.”

Wherever the lightning in his right arm came from, he’s making good use of it. Of the 83 pitches he’s thrown this season entering Wednesday's game, 28 have topped 101 miles per hour. The fastest hit 103.3 mph on the radar gun last Saturday, making it the hardest-thrown pitch by a Dodger since Statcast began tracking speed in 2015 and likely the fastest pitch in franchise history.

Henriquez, 23, shrugs and smiles at the numbers.

Read more:'Different ballclub tonight.' Alex Call has best game as a Dodger in rout of Rockies

“Now we have to stay consistent,” he said in Spanish. “Even growing up in Venezuela, I always threw hard.”

What he didn’t do in Venezuela was pitch because when he signed as a 16-year-old in 2018, Henriquez was a catcher. The Dodgers moved him to the other side of the plate a year later, when they got him to their Dominican academy.

The process was not a smooth one. The right-hander allowed 22 runs in 30 innings in his first season. Then, after sitting out the summer of 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic, he came to the U.S. a year later and went 2-3 with a 4.93 ERA in 13 games split between the Arizona Complex League and Single A Rancho Cucamonga.

The Dodgers projected him as a starter but after Henriquez missed the 2023 season to Tommy John surgery, he came back throwing gas and the team moved him to the bullpen. The results were spectacular, with Henriquez climbing four levels, from Low A Rancho Cucamonga to the majors, in six months to make his big-league debut in the final week of the regular season.

And he announced his presence with authority, topping 101 mph twice to earn the save in his third game.

Henriquez grew up in Cumaná, a historic beach city of about half a million people wedged between the Manzanares River and Venezuela’s Caribbean coast, 250 miles east of Caracas. The oldest continuously inhabited Spanish settlement in South America, it has been the birthplace of poets and presidents. But baseball players? Not so much.

Pitcher Armando Galarraga, who was robbed of a perfect game by an umpire’s call in 2010, is probably the best known of Cumaná’s big leagues while Maracay, on the other end of the country, has produced more than two dozen players, among them All-Stars Bobby Abreu, Miguel Cabrera and Elvis Andrus.

“Maracay, yes. They say that is the birthplace of baseball in Venezuela,” Henriquez said. “But the truth is it’s Cumaná.”

Henriquez took to the game at an early age, playing on local fields and sandlots. And because he was among the biggest of the neighborhood kids, he was put behind the plate. The Dodgers liked his size — he looks much bigger than the 6-foot-4 and 200 pounds he’s credited with on the roster — and arm so they offered him $80,000 to sign as an international free agent with the intention of making him a pitcher.

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Before the elbow-reconstruction surgery, Henriquez touched 101 mph with his fastball. But he came back throwing even harder, averaging 99 mph and reaching 104 in the minors last summer. That earned him a September promotion and a spot on the roster for the Dodgers’ first two postseason series.

He was also in line for a spot on the opening day roster this season before a metatarsal injury in his left foot landed him in a walking boot, sidelining him for most of spring training.

Neither the Dodgers nor Henriquez will talk about how the injury happened.

“I'd rather keep that to myself,” the pitcher said this week.

Yet that setback proved just another obstacle for Henriquez to overcome, and after striking out 36 batters in 23 2/3 innings for Triple A Oklahoma City, he was summoned back to the Dodgers a month ago.

In some ways, he was a different pitcher.

“He looks much more confident,” manager Dave Roberts said. “I think he was confident last year, but there was like a fake confidence, understandably. He knows his stuff plays here, so it's good to see.”

His record-setting pitch came in his sixth of seven scoreless appearances when he struck out pinch-hitter Ryan O’Hearn on a four-seam fastball in the seventh inning of a win over the San Diego Padres.

His parents, Edgar and Erika, were visiting from Venezuela and in the stands at Dodger Stadium for the pitch to O’Hearn, one that has generated a lot of attention on social media. As a result, Roberts said pitching coach Mark Prior and bullpen coach Josh Bard are making sure Henriquez understands there’s more to pitching that just lighting up the radar gun.

As good as the four-seamer is, however, it may not be Henriquez’s best pitch. His cutter, which sits in the mid-90s, can be all but unhittable and he also has a devastating slider. He’ll need every bit of that repertoire to succeed in the majors, said Chris Forbes, the senior director of player development for the Colorado Rockies, because the number of hard-throwers is growing.

“If there isn’t deception, there isn’t ride, [hitters] can catch up if you don't have something else that they can think about,” he said.

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So far the hitters aren’t catching up: In seven innings this summer entering Wednesday, Henriquez has allowed just three hits and walked one while striking out four. Opponents are hitting .120 against him.

It’s been a rapid rise for Henriquez, who has gone from teenage catcher to big league reliever, surviving a global pandemic, Tommy John surgery and a fractured bone in his foot to pitch for a World Series champion.

But there’s still one goal left, albeit one he talks about only grudgingly.

On a team without set bullpen roles, Henriquez wants to be a closer, using his blazing fastball not just to demoralize hitters but to shut down games as well.

“Whatever God has in store for me. We'll work wherever and keep going,” he said. “But yes, I'd like to be a closer.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.