LOS ANGELES — For a few uncertain months this winter, it felt like the door had quietly closed. Non-tendered in November. Recovering from Tommy John surgery. Floating in free agency while the Dodgers recalibrated their roster. But on Wednesday, the script flipped. Evan Phillips is back. The veteran right-hander has re-signed with Los Angeles on a one-year, $6.5 million contract, locking in a sixth season in Dodger blue — even as he rehabs from a surgery that will likely sideline him until after the 2026 All-Star break.
It is not just a reunion. It is a statement.
Though Phillips won’t throw a competitive pitch for months, the Dodgers made it clear they were not ready to sever ties with one of the most reliable arms of their recent era. “Evan has been a big part of our past success,” president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman said during earlier offseason discussions. “We will continue the conversation about bringing him back.” On Wednesday, that conversation turned into ink on paper.
The move comes after a brief and somewhat surprising detour. On November 21, the Dodgers non-tendered Phillips rather than push him through another round of salary arbitration. After earning $6.1 million in 2025, projections had him landing the exact same number in arbitration for 2026. Instead, Los Angeles chose flexibility — and risk — allowing him to hit free agency while he continued recovering from elbow surgery performed June 4.
For a reliever coming off Tommy John, free agency can be brutal. Teams hesitate. Timelines blur. Value becomes theoretical. Phillips, 31, had thrown just 5 2/3 scoreless innings in 2025 before being shut down — six strikeouts, two walks, flashes of the command that once made him nearly untouchable. He had already begun last season on the injured list with a rotator cuff strain tied to the grind of the 2024 postseason. Seven games. That was it. Then surgery. Then silence.
Until now.
By re-signing Phillips at $6.5 million — slightly above arbitration projections — the Dodgers are betting not on immediate impact, but on identity. Since being claimed off waivers from the Rays in 2021, Phillips has quietly been one of baseball’s elite relievers. In 201 games with Los Angeles, he posted a 2.22 ERA and 2.87 expected ERA, striking out 221 and walking just 52 over 195 innings. He recorded 45 saves, often bridging chaos into calm in October-caliber games. For stretches, he wasn’t just reliable — he was dominant.
Those numbers don’t evaporate because of surgery. They linger. They tempt.

And so Friedman and the Dodgers front office made a calculated move. Rather than lose Phillips to a long-term rehab deal elsewhere, they kept him in-house, where the training staff knows him, the clubhouse trusts him, and the expectation remains that when he does return — likely late summer — he could be a difference-maker for a bullpen built to withstand October pressure.
But every addition comes with collateral damage.
To clear space on the 40-man roster, catcher Ben Rortvedt was designated for assignment — again. Just days after being re-claimed off waivers from the Reds, Rortvedt finds himself in roster limbo. The move was widely anticipated. Out of minor-league options and sitting behind All-Star Will Smith and top prospect Dalton Rushing on the depth chart, Rortvedt was always a numbers casualty waiting to happen.

Still, the optics are striking. In November, the Dodgers attempted a similar maneuver and lost Rortvedt on waivers to Cincinnati. Now, they’re rolling the dice once more. If he clears waivers this time, Los Angeles can stash him as organizational depth without occupying a 40-man spot. If not, another team may swoop in again.
This is the razor’s edge of roster construction for a contender. Every slot matters. Every dollar matters. Every projection of future health matters.
The Dodgers’ bullpen, already layered with power arms and left-handed versatility, won’t rely on Phillips immediately. They don’t have to. But what Wednesday’s signing signals is something larger than depth — it signals loyalty to performance, belief in recovery, and a long-game strategy that extends beyond Opening Day.
There’s also a psychological layer. Phillips has been part of postseason pushes, pressure innings, and clubhouse momentum swings. Keeping him tethered to the organization maintains continuity in a room constantly adjusting to new pieces and evolving roles. Even while rehabbing, his presence matters.
And make no mistake — $6.5 million for a reliever who won’t pitch until August is not sentimental spending. It’s calculated confidence.
In an offseason filled with high-profile negotiations and headline-grabbing extensions, this deal may not dominate national talk shows. But inside Dodger Stadium, it resonates. The front office didn’t let uncertainty dictate the future. They leaned into familiarity. They doubled down on a pitcher who, when healthy, has been among the most efficient late-inning weapons in the National League.

Phillips’ road back will be long. Tommy John recoveries are measured in months, not weeks. There will be bullpen sessions, simulated games, minor league rehab assignments. There will be checkpoints and caution. But now, there is also clarity.
Evan Phillips is not drifting through free agency. He is not starting over elsewhere. He is still a Dodger.
And when late summer arrives — when pennant races tighten and bullpen matchups become chess matches under October lights — don’t be surprised if the right-hander jogs in from the bullpen once again, as calm as ever, ready to reclaim the innings that once defined him.
The detour is over. The reunion is official. And in Los Angeles, they’re betting the best chapters are still ahead.