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Dodgers Reinstate Kiké Hernández, Designate Santiago Espinal
Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images

The Dodgers announced that they have reinstated utilityman Kiké Hernández from the 60-day injured list. To make room for Hernández, the Dodgers designated infielder/outfielder Santiago Espinal for assignment.

A couple of weeks after Hernández won his third World Series as a member of the Dodgers, he underwent elbow surgery in mid-November. That put Hernández in a less-than-ideal spot in free agency, but the Dodgers wound up bringing him back on a one-year, $4.5MM deal in February. They retained a revered clubhouse presence and someone who can line up all over the field, though Hernández has seen his offensive impact fall off in recent seasons.

From 2014-21, which he divided between Houston, Miami, LA and Boston, Hernández hit .242/.318/.430 in 2,593 plate appearances. That was 1 percent better than the league average, according to wRC+. From 2022-25, split between Boston and LA, Hernández limped to a .232/.297/.382 line in 2,144 trips to the plate. His 84 wRC+ in that stretch was 16 percent below average. The 34-year-old will aim for a rebound this season after one of his worst offensive seasons in 2025. While playing through his elbow injury for a large portion of the year, Hernández hit .203/.255/.366 (70 wRC+) in 93 games and 256 plate appearances. Defensively, he saw 20-plus games worth of action at first, second, third and in the outfield.

In his season debut Monday against the Rockies, Hernández will fill in at the hot corner for Max Muncy and bat ninth. Muncy has been down since the the Brewers’ Aaron Ashby struck him in the right wrist with a 95.5 mph sinker on Friday. X-rays came back negative, but Muncy will get a third straight off day to recover.

Espinal, who saw big league time with the Blue Jays and Reds from 2020-25, settled for a minors deal with the Dodgers last offseason. They selected Espinal’s contract in late March, setting him up to earn a $2.5MM salary. The light-hitting 31-year-old struggled to a .220/.238/.366 line (67 wRC+) with one home run in 44 plate appearances. Espinal appeared in 26 games and played first, second and third before the Dodgers designated him, though he started in just nine contests.

Espinal is now heading into DFA limbo, which can last up to a week’s time. There is a 48-hour waiver process, meaning the Dodgers could take five days to swing a trade. Finding a taker should be tough when you combine Espinal’s salary with his subpar production. If a trade does not come together, Espinal has enough service time (over five years) to reject an outright assignment and keep the rest of his guaranteed salary.

This article first appeared on MLB Trade Rumors and was syndicated with permission.

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