On Wednesday, we learned that Los Angeles Dodgers left-hander Hyun-jin Ryu — the team's No. 3 starter the past two seasons behind Clayton Kershaw and Zack Greinke — would be facing surgery on his ailing left shoulder and would likely miss the remainder of the 2015 . The news didn't come as a total shock to the general public. Ryu had been dealing with shoulder issues dating back to spring training with little to no consistent improvement. However, as we learned from Ryu himself on Friday, it came as no surprise at all to the Dodgers, because former general manager Ned Colletti actually signed Ryu in late 2012 already knowing he had a torn labrum. That revelation sent shockwaves through Dodger Stadium that carried over into the social media realm throughout the Dodgers' 2-1 victory over the Padres. As many have noted, Colletti's willingness to sign Ryu for six years and $36 million, plus the $26 million posting fee, despite knowing the nature of his injury mirrors his decision to sign Jason Schmidt to a three-year deal worth $47 million guaranteed following the 2006 season. Of course, the Ryu signing has already proven more productive. In two seasons, the now...