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Dodgers promising rookie pitcher River Ryan will miss the rest of the season

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts consoles starting pitcher River Ryan as he's pulled from the game due to a right arm injury
Dodgers manager Dave Roberts consoles starting pitcher River Ryan as he's pulled from Saturday's game. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

Dodgers rookie pitcher River Ryan will miss the rest of the season with a strained ulnar collateral ligament in his elbow, Dave Roberts announced Sunday, a day after Ryan exited his start in the Dodgers’ 4-1 win over the Pirates.

Ryan’s injury was diagnosed after an MRI exam and other medical scans on Sunday. While the Dodgers haven’t yet determined his treatment plan — nor whether the 25-year-old might need a surgical procedure — the injury was significant enough to sideline him for at least the next two months.

“Fortunately, we’ve got a lot of depth and a lot of good ball players, so we’ll just try to backfill,” Roberts said Saturday night. “But I just feel bad for River.”

Read more: Again? Promising pitcher River Ryan suffers injury during Dodgers win over Pirates

In four MLB starts this season, Ryan had a 1.33 ERA and 18 strikeouts in 20 ⅓ innings. Despite his inexperience, the right-hander had been “making a case” to be part of the Dodgers’ pitching plans down the stretch, Roberts said, impressing with his high-velocity fastball and swing-and-miss slider/curveball combination.

Ryan’s injury the latest to strike the Dodgers’ short-handed pitching staff. It continued a particularly alarming pattern of injuries among young Dodgers pitchers.

Already this season, the Dodgers were without homegrown arms, including Dustin May, Tony Gonsolin, Emmet Sheehan and Kyle Hurt. Walker Buehler (who will return from the injured list next week, effectively replacing Ryan in the rotation) and Bobby Miller (who remains in triple A trying to refine his arsenal) have also missed time on the injured list.

“I think that we clearly don’t have the answers to taking care of pitchers and keeping them healthy,” Roberts said of the baseball industry at-large, which has reckoned with a perceived epidemic of pitching injuries in recent years. “I think the industry is doing the best they can to manage workload, manage pitch count, but clearly we don’t have it nailed … The bottom line is injuries are way up.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.