The 35-year-old veteran began playing shortstop regularly for the Dodgers when Betts went down with his injury in June, and as a hitter, he has had arguably the strongest season of his career. In 103 games, Rojas hit .283 with a .748 OPS.

And on a team like the Dodgers, who have the best team OPS in baseball, Rojas has done his part to help the superstars around him. This season, he is hitting .286 with runners on base and .295 with runners in scoring position — especially valuable for someone who typically bats in the middle-to-lower third of the order.

As far as his injury goes, don’t expect it to go away entirely before Saturday. He will need surgery in the offseason to repair the adductor, but in the meantime is managing the pain with cortisone injections.

“It’s something that he’s had all year as far as symptomatically dealing with,” Roberts explained, per Ron Gutterman of Dodger Blue. “He’s determined to make sure he’s ready for the postseason.”