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Dustin May’s life was almost interrupted last year.
While recovering from a second operation by Tommy John during the summer, the Los Angeles Dodgers launcher ate a salad. A lettuce sheet remained stuck in his throat and torn his esophagus, requiring emergency surgery.
May did not want to go to the hospital, but women know everything.
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Dustin May of the Los Angeles Dodgers enters the stadium on the day of the opening for a match against the cardinals of St. Louis at the Dodger Stadium on March 28, 2024, in Los Angeles. (Sean M. Haffy / Getty Images)
“If I would not have been operated that evening, I wouldn’t have woken up, probably. It was definitely life or death. All thanks to my wife,” he told PK Press Club Digital in a recent interview. “I was trying to convince her that I didn’t need to go, and she said it was not an option.”
May was called in 2019, and his arm has always been one of the most nasty of major leagues. However, since 2021, he has only made 25 departures due to two Tommy John surgeries and his lettuce incident.
When he is on the ground, he was great. His time in this period is 3.24. He also made the five departures this year, up approximately 4.00 MPM.
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“I feel good. It’s just a blessing to be able to put the uniform and be back on the field now. Whether the results are good or bad, I’m going to be in a good mood at home, just because the game was removed for so long and being able to jump right away and not jump a rhythm was great,” said May.
Arm injuries occur, especially for launchers. But the rest of your season, and almost your life, being shortened because of the consumption of a salad? It was a difficult pill to swallow for May, who admitted that he could not help thinking: “Can something go in my sense?”
“It definitely crossed my mind,” he said.
With the help of his wife, he also used the power of prayer.

Los Angeles Dodgers launcher Dustin May launches during a training in the spring at camelback Ranch. (Joe Camporeale / Imagn Images)
“There have been a lot of prayers and a lot of discussions with my wife and a lot of sitting conversations trying to wrap our heads and trying to put our best foot forward so as not to put the face of” why “. There have been a lot of positive discussions, a lot of affirmations with me and it. It is our greatest thing.”
May has always relied on his faith, “but my spiritual journey has definitively grew up like the last nine months since my surgery.”
“It was certainly very close, because I was almost removed, so I really wanted to have the opportunity to thank him for being able to always be there and to live my dream and to use the capacities and the gifts which he blessed to me.”
“So, thank you to [my wife] and the good lord above. “”
Now that he’s back, May is trying to be as stressless as possible on the bump. This was not the case when he came back from his first Tommy John surgery because he was a high -level hope.
“I want, earlier in my career, certainly after my first [Tommy John surgery] When I came back, I really felt like there was pressure on me to be the person I was before, “he said.” But, I mean, after all that, he fell, after my second [Tommy John] And after my esophagus surgery, there are now a lot of articles in my life, not just being my world so wrapped and concentrated on baseball. It is certainly always a central point, absolutely. But if things go south or if things go well, I will always try to keep a level of level.

The Los Angeles Dodgers launcher, Dustin, could celebrate in a match against the Padres in San Diego on May 12, 2023, at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles. (Brian Rothmuller / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
“I am just happy and blessed to be able to put the uniform back and be there with my guys because it was something that I had missed and that I had the impression that I had not been part for so long.
“I felt like a fan because I was so far from that. Now, I feel like I am contributing. It’s a cooler feeling.”