Prospect Tibbs III Dealing with Minor Forearm Injury
Last updated: June 2, 2026 2:12 PM UTC
This article was generated by artificial intelligence and is automatically updated as news breaks. All credit belongs to the original reporters and their publications.
CONFIRMEDDodgers prospect James Tibbs III is dealing with a minor forearm injury, per staff reporting at DodgerBlue. The news adds yet another name to what has become a frustratingly long injury list across the organization this season, spanning both the Major League and Minor League rosters.
Tibbs was one of the Dodgers’ more exciting draft picks in recent years. Selected in the second round of the 2024 MLB Draft out of Florida State, the left-handed hitting outfielder quickly turned heads with his bat speed, plate discipline, and ability to drive the ball to all fields. He posted strong numbers in his initial professional stint and carried that momentum into 2025 and 2026 minor league action, establishing himself as one of the more polished college bats moving through the system. A forearm injury — even one described as minor — is the kind of thing you monitor closely with a hitter whose swing mechanics and bat speed are central to his prospect profile. The Dodgers will almost certainly take a cautious approach here, and rightfully so.
The timing is rough because the Dodgers’ injury situation has been relentless. At the big league level, Teoscar Hernández, Kiké Hernández, Blake Snell, Tyler Glasnow, and Edwin Díaz are all currently sidelined. In the minors, top prospect Kendall George recently suffered a left knee injury — tripped by a dog that should not have been there in the first place — which was an unfortunate and somewhat bizarre setback for one of the organization’s most prized young talents. Now Tibbs joins that list, though the “minor” label offers at least some reassurance that this isn’t expected to be a long-term absence.
For the Dodgers’ player development pipeline, it’s been a rough stretch. Tibbs is the type of prospect who profiles as a future big league contributor — not a lottery ticket, but a high-floor, polished hitter who could move relatively quickly through the system. Losing development time to injury, even briefly, is never ideal for a young player trying to build consistency and earn promotions. The Dodgers’ depth throughout the organization has allowed them to absorb individual losses without any single absence being catastrophic, but the cumulative toll of all these injuries starts to matter when you’re trying to develop and evaluate talent on a timeline.
I’ll keep an eye on this one. “Minor” forearm issues can linger with hitters if they’re not managed properly, and the Dodgers have generally been smart about not rushing guys back in the minors. Expect Tibbs to get whatever time he needs. The bigger picture here is just how many bodies we’re losing across the organization right now — it feels like every few days there’s a new name on the report. Hopefully the “minor” designation holds up and Tibbs is back swinging soon.
Source(s): Staff (DodgerBlue) | First reported: June 2, 2026 2:12 PM UTC
God Bless and Go Dodgers