O'Hoppe exits 1st game off IL with left wrist irritation; team says it's precautionary

Grayson Rodriguez activated ahead of season debut Sunday

6:10 AM UTC

ANAHEIM -- It started off as a good day on the injury front for the Angels with catcher Logan O'Hoppe getting reinstated from the 10-day injured list and returning to the lineup for Friday’s opener in the Freeway Series against the Dodgers. Right-hander Grayson Rodriguez is slated to come off the injured list to make his club debut in a start on Sunday.

But O’Hoppe, who had been on the injured list since April 26 with a small fracture in his left wrist, left Friday’s 6-0 loss in the top of the sixth inning after experiencing a setback that was diagnosed as left wrist irritation by the club. O’Hoppe reinjured himself on a wild pitch from right-hander Jack Kochanowicz in the fourth inning and initially remained in the game, only to be replaced by Sebastián Rivero in the top of the sixth after grounding out in the fifth. O’Hoppe, though, said he was removed for precautionary reasons and believes he can play through the injury.

“I mean, it’s uncomfortable but I’ve said that while going through this,” O’Hoppe said. “We’ll keep treating it and it’ll be all right.”

O’Hoppe, who went 0-for-2 at the plate, was activated after he completed a rehab assignment in the Arizona Complex League and Triple-A Salt Lake. Fellow catcher Omar Martinez was optioned to Salt Lake to make room for O’Hoppe, but Martinez could be headed right back up if O’Hoppe needs another stint on the IL.

“I feel great,” O’Hoppe said before the game. “I don't know if I'd tell [head trainer Mike] Frostad this, but whatever the timeline the doctors say, I cut it in half [laughs] and hope for the best, and do what I need to do.”

O’Hoppe, 26, slashed .205/.323/.256 with a homer, a double and eight RBIs in 26 games before sustaining the injury on a foul tip while catching in Kansas City. He went 0-for-4 in the ACL but went 2-for-3 in two games at Triple-A.

He said before the game he still feels some discomfort during certain movements like catching pitches up and to his left, but that it’s manageable and isn’t an issue when swinging. He also said he felt like things were finally starting to click before sustaining the injury.

“It's just uncomfortable,” O’Hoppe said. “It's uncomfortable walking around, it's uncomfortable doing anything, but we'll treat it and keep going.”

Manager Kurt Suzuki said before the game he was pleased to have O’Hoppe back in the lineup, especially because the Angels still don’t know how long veteran backstop Travis d’Arnaud will be out with his plantar fasciitis suffered while running to first base on May 6. But now O’Hoppe aggravating his injury could complicate things in the short term.

“We'll check him out today, see how he is and see how he feels tomorrow morning,” Suzuki said after the game. “It was precautionary and to get him out of there instead of making him play through something and have something bad happen.”

Rodriguez, meanwhile, opened the season on the IL with right shoulder inflammation but fared well in his rehab start with Single-A Rancho Cucamonga on Sunday, striking out 11 in 4 2/3 innings after he previously pitched at the club’s Spring Training complex in Arizona.

The 26-year-old was acquired in the trade that sent Taylor Ward to the Orioles and has a career 4.11 ERA with 259 strikeouts in 238 2/3 innings. He missed last season due to injury and had bone spurs removed from his elbow in August. So his start on Sunday will be his first in the big leagues since July 31, 2024.

“I just thank God that I'm here,” Rodriguez said. “It was a tough road, for sure. My wife, my family, they helped me through it. Rehab, there’s a lot of dark days with that. And for a little bit just kind of wondering why certain things kept happening, and just finally, obviously, getting to this organization and working with this medical staff, we got our thumb on it and got after what needed to be better, and here we are.”

While Rodriguez’s season debut is looming, flamethrowing reliever Ben Joyce suffered a minor setback in his recovery from right shoulder surgery. Joyce, who underwent the surgery 12 months ago, underwent an MRI exam after he didn’t feel like his shoulder was recovering properly after four rehab appearances with Single-A Rancho Cucamonga.

But the MRI exam came back clean and he said he’s just dealing with soreness but will slow down his rehab program.

“It’s a process,” Joyce said. “We got a little flare-up. Got some testing done but it looks all good in there. Just going to slow it down a little bit right now. It’s just part of the process after a shoulder surgery. Just kind of has ups and downs. But we were pretty positive about the results. Nothing structurally wrong, it's just working through a little soreness right now.”