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Twenty-nine hours before his official return to the Dodger Stadium mound, Emmet Sheehan took a moment to get himself reacquainted with his home ballpark.
In an empty Dodger Stadium on Tuesday afternoon, Sheehan walked onto the field at Chavez Ravine, climbed up a slope he hadn’t toed since the 2023 season, and practiced his pitching motion a few times before returning to the clubhouse.
For Sheehan, such dry tosses are part of his normal pre-start routine. In any ballpark where he pitches, he likes to get a feel for the mound and its surroundings before the game.
The only difference this time: how long it had been since he’d taken the bump in a big-league stadium.
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After an auspicious rookie season in 2023, in which his 4.92 earned-run average belied the potential he flashed with his low-arm-slot and high-velocity delivery, Sheehan missed all of last season and the first three months of this campaign after undergoing Tommy John surgery.
On Wednesday, he finally completed the long road back, spinning four impressive innings in a 4-3 walk-off win over the San Diego Padres that ended on Will Smith’s pinch-hit home run in the ninth.
“It was awesome,” Sheehan said, after giving up just one run while striking out six batters. “Once I was out there, it was kind of just back in compete mode once you see a hitter in the box. But definitely before and then after, [I was] feeling the emotions of just the past year, for sure.”

A former sixth-round draft pick who blossomed into one of the organization’s top pitching prospects during an impressive minor-league career, Sheehan became one of the Dodgers’ many recent homegrown pitchers to endure a major surgery after injuring his elbow in spring training last year.
As he worked his way back, though, his relatively seamless recovery process had fueled excitement throughout the organization.
His stuff still looked sharp, from a mid-90s mph fastball to a tantalizing changeup-slider combination. His command had been surprisingly consistent during a minor-league rehab stint, collecting 16 strikeouts against only one walk in three outings with triple-A Oklahoma City.
And against the Padres on Wednesday, the 25-year-old right-hander looked like he had hardly missed a beat.
He threw 65 pitches, 43 for strikes. He didn’t issue a walk, while yielding only three hits. And the lone score against him came when second baseman Tommy Edman failed to corral a hard-hit one-hopper with two outs in the top of the second.
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“Emmett was fantastic,” manager Dave Roberts said. “Going into it tonight, [I wanted him to] trust his stuff, be on the attack with his mix. And he did just that. He flooded the zone, kept them on their heels.”
Sheehan wasn’t the winning pitcher. That honor went to another former prospect, left-hander Justin Wrobleski, who followed Sheehan with five stellar innings of long relief in which he flashed his own promising signs (including a fastball that touched 99 mph at one point) after an up-and-down start to his big-league career.
For most of his outing, Wrobleski was protecting a 3-1 lead the Dodgers took in the bottom of the fifth, when Max Muncy hit a leadoff triple, Hyeseong Kim followed an Andy Pages sacrifice fly with a double, and slumping rookie catcher Dalton Rushing plated the game’s go-ahead runs on a two-run single.
“You look at the growth of two young pitchers, and what they did today against a very formidable ball club,” Roberts said. “And also Dalton, being the catcher back there with the fingers, I thought it was a big night for him, as well.”
With the Dodgers’ relievers worn out from back-to-back bullpen games the previous two nights, Wrobleski went back to the mound in the ninth and gave up two runs after a Muncy throwing error put him in a jam.
But Smith made sure it didn’t matter, coming off the bench in the bottom of the inning to whack a walk-off home run just over the right-field wall.

The Dodgers (46-29) have now clinched a series victory in this four-game set against the Padres (39-34), with the chance for a sweep Thursday. Overall, they are 17-11 in what has been a daunting 28-game stretch over the last month, extending their lead in the National League West to 4½ games.
“It’s definitely been a long few weeks, playing some really good ball clubs, dealing with injuries and everything,” Smith said. “But yeah, we’re just sticking together as a team, grinding through it one day at a time. … Try to play good baseball and see what happens.”
Despite the late dramatics, it was Sheehan’s return that had the biggest implications on the rest of the Dodgers’ season, giving their shorthanded rotation a badly needed, and highly intriguing, new option.
While discussing Sheehan before the game, Roberts said the Dodgers always “liked his makeup, his toughness, his ability to repeat his delivery, the swing-and-miss stuff, the preparation.”
But the way he navigated his Tommy John recovery — returning to action 13 months after undergoing the procedure last May — had added another element of optimism among team officials.

Roberts noted how Sheehan had increased his physical strength during his rehab, with the once lanky 6-foot-5 pitcher (who joked that he was so nervous during his rookie season, he lost weight from hardly eating) now possessing noticeably more mass.
Roberts also explained how Sheehan has “had a chance to watch a lot of baseball, learn and then now apply it.”
“I think that’s going to make him a better major league pitcher,” Roberts said.
One start back, signs of such growth were already present — from the way Sheehan attacked the strike zone, put away hitters and commanded a mound he had longed to pitch off the past two years.
“He’s not afraid, he’s not gonna run from it and he’s gonna trust his stuff,” Roberts said. “To be prepared for tonight and not feel [out] his way back to the big leagues, in a big ball game, a lot of credit goes to him.”

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