“It’s hard to bet against this guy, but Sept. 1 is not what I was hearing,” Roberts said before Tuesday night’s game against the Minnesota Twins. “I’m happy he feels that way. That’s a good thing. That’s embedded in Walker, the confidence, so it’s not surprising.”
The typical recovery time for ligament-replacement surgery is 14 to 18 months. Buehler, who underwent the procedure in 2015, after he was drafted in the first round by the Dodgers out of Vanderbilt, had his second surgery last August, so a Sept. 1 return would peg his recovery at one year.
“I want to get to a certain pitch count so me being here is not a hindrance,” said Buehler, who recently began throwing off a bullpen mound. “It’s a long deal, and we’re two-thirds of the way there, but I feel really good. Some of the trainers kind of want me to dial it back a little bit, but that’s just not how I operate.”
Buehler, 28, has been one of the team’s top starters for much of a six-year big league career in which he is 46-16 with a 3.02 earned-run average in 115 regular-season games and 3-3 with a 2.94 ERA in 15 playoff games.
The hard-throwing right-hander gave up just one earned run in 11 innings of two National League Championship Series starts against the Atlanta Braves in 2020 and one earned run in six innings of a World Series start against Tampa Bay to help the Dodgers win their first championship since 1988.
Buehler wouldn’t rule out a return as a reliever if he is unable to build up enough endurance by September to pitch five innings or more, but he is focused on returning as a starter.
“I don’t think anything has happened that would tell me that’s not an achievable goal,” Buehler said. “Obviously, we have a lot of talented players and a really good team, and I’m going to try and contribute any way I can. But for me, being a starting pitcher is my goal and the way I feel I can create or provide the most value.”
Noted surgeon Dr. Neal ElAttrache performed both of Buehler’s procedures, but Buehler said his second operation was different from the first.
“The weird thing about my surgery was it wasn’t necessarily another tear,” Buehler said. “I had a piece of bone from an old injury that broke off and went into my ligament. They had to cut that out, but nothing tore again. It was a fully Tommy John reconstruction, but I don’t think it technically was as detrimental to the long-term health of my elbow.”
Having gone through the grueling rehab process once has made his second rehabilitation easier.
“There’s ups and downs, but having gone through it before, I think those aren’t as scary,” Buehler said. “The, ‘Oh my God, did I just blow it again?’ thing is not really a fear that I have anymore. I think it helps overall.”
Also encouraging is the fact that two veterans who had two Tommy John surgeries — Jameson Taillon and Nathan Eovaldi — signed contracts worth a combined $98 million last winter. Eovaldi is 5-2 with a 2.70 ERA in eight starts for Texas.
“Eovaldi is throwing as good as anybody in baseball right now … so it can be done,” Buehler said. “Hopefully — I’ve put on about 12 pounds and done some things, trying to figure out my mechanics a little bit more — I can at least have the run I had [after] the first one. I feel good about it.”
Short hops
Noah Syndergaard did not reopen a deep cut on the index finger of his pitching hand during Monday night’s four-inning, 59-pitch start, and Roberts said the right-hander, who closed the cut with a topical skin glue, will make his next scheduled start. … Dylan Covey, a 31-year-old right-hander who was 1-0 with a 4.22 ERA in seven games for triple-A Oklahoma City, joined the team as a taxi-squad pitcher Tuesday. The Dodgers, who needed eight innings from their bullpen in Monday night’s 9-8, 12-inning win, will decide after the game whether to activate him.