In a shocking revelation within the Los Angeles Dodgers, veteran Miguel Rojas opened up for the first time about the darkest period of his career—a mental crisis he admits nearly brought him down completely. But what silenced the locker room wasn’t just the pain… but the name that saved him: Kiké Hernández.
The story isn’t about numbers. It’s not about championships. This is a story about survival—in silence.
According to content published on Dodgers Nation, Rojas revealed that mid-season, he fell into an extremely negative mental state—a “dark place” that he himself couldn’t control. There were no obvious injuries, no specific reasons on the statistics, but the pressure, expectations, and negative thoughts were silently wearing him down day by day.
“Nobody saw it,” Rojas hinted. “You go out there, you smile, you play… but inside, it’s completely different.”
That’s the dark side fans rarely see in MLB—where athletes are expected to always be strong, always consistent, always winning.
But then, amidst it all, someone stepped in.
Not a coach. Not a psychologist.
But Kiké Hernández.
Rojas acknowledges that it was Hernández who pulled him out of that spiral—not with grand lectures, but with presence, understanding, and a special energy that only those who have experienced it can give.
This isn’t entirely surprising to those who know Hernández well. The Dodgers’ utility star has long been open about his ADHD—something he calls “both a superpower and a fatal flaw.” It was precisely this “controlled chaos” that helped him connect with his teammates in a unique way—especially during moments of emotional vulnerability.
In a locker room full of superstars like the Dodgers—where big names and invisible pressure are ever-present—Hernández’s role wasn’t about WAR or OPS. He was the “glue,” the one holding things together.
And for Rojas, that was more than just baseball.
“There are times when you need someone who understands you without needing an explanation,” an insider revealed. “Kiké is that kind of person.”
The truth is, the Dodgers didn’t just build a team to win. They built an ecosystem—where people support each other in moments the audience never sees.
Rojas, at 37 and entering his final season before transitioning to a front-office role, now looks back on his journey with a completely different perspective. He’s not just a veteran, not just a World Series champion—he’s living proof that even the strongest can fall.

But they can also get back up.
And sometimes, what makes the difference… isn’t talent.
It’s having the right teammate at the right time.
The story of Rojas and Hernández is spreading not only within the Dodgers community but throughout MLB—a powerful reminder that mental health isn’t a weakness, but part of the battle every athlete faces.
And if one thing is clear after all—
Dodgers may have superstars.
But it’s people like Kiké Hernández… who are the reason they never collapse.
And perhaps, that’s the biggest “secret” behind an empire.