From All-Star dominance⦠to complete silence.
Tony Gonsolin is still waiting ā and the baseball world is starting to ask why.

The Los Angeles Dodgers are rolling.
A 5ā2 start.
A powerful lineup.
Another statement win, crushing the Nationals 13-6.
Everything looks exactly as expected.
Except for one name thatās missing from the spotlight.
Tony Gonsolin.

Once an All-Star.
Once one of the most reliable arms in baseball.
Now?
Still unsigned.
Still waiting.
Still⦠a free agent.

And the longer it lasts, the more shocking it becomes.
Because this isnāt just any pitcher.
This is a player who, not long ago, was dominating the league.
In 2022, Gonsolin delivered one of the most remarkable seasons in recent Dodgers history ā a stunning 16-1 record with a 2.14 ERA, earning him All-Star honors and establishing himself as a key piece of a championship-caliber rotation.
He wasnāt just good.

He was elite.
So how does a pitcher like that end up here?
Available⦠with no team.
The answer lies in what happened next.
Injuries.

Setbacks.
Time lost.
Since that breakout season, Gonsolin has struggled to stay on the mound. Forearm issues and Tommy John surgery derailed his momentum, limiting him to just 139 innings over the past few years.
And in 2025, the numbers told a different story.
A 5.00 ERA.
Just seven appearances.

A far cry from the dominance fans once knew.
Still, the talent hasnāt disappeared.
Over his career, Gonsolin holds a strong 3.34 ERA across 86 games, with a 37-13 record that proves what heās capable of when healthy.
And thatās what makes this situation so intriguing.
Because teams arenāt questioning his ceiling.
Theyāre questioning his risk.
At 31 years old, Gonsolin sits in a difficult position ā experienced enough to contribute, but coming off injuries that make front offices hesitate. In todayās MLB landscape, availability matters just as much as ability.
And right nowā¦
That uncertainty is costing him.
Some insiders believe he could land a minor league deal ā a low-risk, high-reward move for a team willing to take a chance. Others think heās waiting for the right situation, the right fit, the right opportunity to prove heās still that pitcher.
Because make no mistake:
Gonsolin isnāt done.
Heās just⦠in limbo.
Meanwhile, the Dodgers ā the team he spent his entire MLB career with ā have moved on. Their rotation remains stacked, their system deep, their expectations unchanged.
And as they continue winningā¦
Gonsolinās absence becomes even more noticeable.
Not because they need him.
But because of what he once meant.
A homegrown success story.
A breakout star.
A pitcher who delivered when it mattered most.
Now, heās watching from the outside.
Waiting for a call.
Waiting for a chance.
Waiting to remind the league who he used to be ā and who he still believes he can be.
Because in baseball, careers donāt always end with a final pitch.
Sometimesā¦
They pause.
And Tony Gonsolin is still in that pause.
The only question left is:
Who will press play again?
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