Back ahead of schedule, Snell's 2026 debut a mixed bag

May 10th, 2026

LOS ANGELES -- While the Dodgers had been looking forward to welcoming two-time Cy Young Award winner back to their rotation, the left-hander showed some rust when he returned to the Dodger Stadium mound.

Snell's highly anticipated season debut came earlier than expected -- and on his bobblehead night, no less -- as he opted to forego making a final rehab start in favor of rejoining a Dodgers rotation that had just lost Tyler Glasnow to the injured list. Facing a Braves team that came into the weekend series with the best record in baseball proved to be a tough first test that Snell welcomed.

"I said yes before they even asked," Snell said. "I wanted this start. Facing a team like Atlanta, really good, it's going to let you know where you're at pretty quickly."

His final line was not pretty, as Snell gave up five runs (four earned) on six hits and two walks while striking out five in an eventual 7-2 loss on Saturday night. The Dodgers had been hoping to get him in the neighborhood of five innings and 75 pitches, but the Braves' lineup grinded him down and forced him to throw 77 pitches across three innings.

Beyond the box score, there were quite a few things to like about Snell's first start of 2026:

  • Snell gave up only two hard-hit balls in play (exit velocity of 95 mph or higher). The Braves' average exit velocity vs. him was 80.5 mph.
  • Even while allowing a lot of contact, Snell missed bats. He generated 16 whiffs, joining the Phillies' Jesús Luzardo as the second pitcher this season to generate that much swing-and-miss in an outing of three innings or fewer.
  • Snell averaged 95.9 mph with his fastball, up from 95.1 mph last year and more in line with how hard he was throwing in previous years.

"Certainly this time of year," manager Dave Roberts said, "the most important thing is guys' stuff is good, they're healthy. And in Blake's case, just kind of getting back into a Major League game and knowing that the stuff is still good, the stuff still plays."

Snell began this year on the injured list with left shoulder fatigue after missing four months of his first season as a Dodger due to inflammation in the same shoulder. Despite not feeling quite right all season, he went 5-4 with a 2.35 ERA in 11 regular-season starts, then posted a 3.18 ERA across six postseason appearances (five starts).

In the first inning on Saturday, Snell was on the receiving end of some bad batted-ball luck. Mauricio Dubón led off the game with a single that deflected off Hyeseong Kim's glove. Drake Baldwin followed by drawing a walk, and Ozzie Albies reached on a soft grounder that traveled a mere two feet. Neither hit had an expected batting average greater than .300.

Snell was able to limit the damage to one run on an Austin Riley fielder's choice, but he didn't fare as well in another bases-loaded situation in the second inning. He was a strike away from escaping the jam, but Albies went down and got an 0-2 changeup well below the zone to drive home a pair of runs with a single. A passed ball by catcher Will Smith moved both runners on base into scoring position for Matt Olson, who knocked in another two runs on a single that came off the bat at 103.4 mph, the hardest-hit ball in play off Snell all evening.

A cleaner third inning ended Snell's season debut. He was poised for his first 1-2-3 frame until Eli White reached on a throwing error from Kim, but Snell took care of business by freezing nine-hole hitter Jorge Mateo on a curveball for a called third strike.

"Today they got a lot of soft hits. Good for them, they got the hits," Teoscar Hernández said. "But it's better because we got Snell back."

The results may have been frustrating for Snell, but being able to see how his stuff played against big league hitters was valuable for him. He came away from his season debut with a lot of information to process, and he's hoping that will allow him to pitch up to his standards his next time out.

"I feel really good. I feel like I'm going to recover good. So I'm excited about that," Snell said. "But yeah, I got a lot of work to do to get ready for the next start. Put the bullpen in a position not to cover six innings."