After missing the Los Angeles Dodgers’ two games in Japan against the Chicago Cubs last week, Mookie Betts’ status for Thursday’s home opener at Dodger Stadium was uncertain as he deals with a stomach illness. But it sounds like the Dodgers got positive news Monday.
According to ESPN’s Alden González, manager Dave Roberts said he is “really encouraged” after Betts went through a full workout at Dodger Stadium, and expects Betts will play in the home opener on Thursday against the Detroit Tigers.
The exact diagnosis of what’s affecting Betts, 32, remains unknown, and the Dodgers star has lost nearly 20 pounds since he began feeling ill days before the team left for Tokyo. It was looking like he would appear at shortstop Sunday against the Los Angeles Angels, but he began vomiting again hours before the game.
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“I just want to play,” Betts told reporters on Sunday. “I’m tired of sitting, tired of just throwing up, tired of doing all this. I just really want to play. … My body’s just kind of eating itself. It’s hard to not fuel it. And so every time — literally, every time — I fuel my body, I throw up. … I don’t know what to do.”
What’s baffling Betts is that he’s able to live a normal life while he deals with his illness, even working out without feeling any effects. But keeping food down is the issue, and that has led to his current weight loss and made him “scared to eat.” While smoothies and IV treatments are fine, solid food is giving him issues.
“This is so touchy, man,” Betts said. “You think you feel good, and then you don’t really know. … Every time I eat something, it just comes right out.”
Tests have all come back normal, and Betts is currently on new medication to hopefully alleviate the problem.
Betts said wants to be at 100 percent when he returns to the field to give himself the best chance for a good start to the 2025 season and not hinder his team.
“You’re already playing uphill,” Betts said. “I weigh 157 pounds, and that’s way underweight. … I’m not saying I don’t want to do it. Sure, if that’s what it takes, but does it logically make sense? And that’s the question we really need to answer.”
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