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When — and subsequently extended for four years, $115 million — as one of the key transactions of L.A.’s historic offseason, two major questions emerged about the 30-year-old right-hander’s future with his new team: 1) Could Glasnow prove capable of staying healthy over a full regular season, quelling longstanding concerns about his overall durability? and 2) Would Glasnow, already renowned for possessing one of baseball’s most overpowering arsenals, actually improve as a Dodger, and if so, how? It’s still early, but so far this season, Glasnow has emphatically addressed the first question in encouraging fashion.

Saturday’s hiccup in aside (he against the Giants, marking the first time this season that he failed to complete five innings in a start), Glasnow has averaged more than six innings per start and hasn’t missed a turn through the rotation in the first three months. In many ways, he has carried over the momentum from his final season in , when he set career highs in both games started (21) and innings pitched (120) despite missing nearly all of April and May. In fact, with 103 completed frames already in 2024, he could set career highs in both categories once again before we reach August.



And as the workload has mounted and impressed, so too has Glasnow’s effectiveness. Seeing his name among the league leaders in innings pitched might feel unfamiliar, but his other National League ranks — 12th in ERA (3.23), first in strikeouts (136), second in WHIP.

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