If “The Rookie” Hits 15 Seasons, Dash Could Be Nolan’s Perfect Successor ma01

The Rookie has always been a story of an outsider proving everyone wrong.

That was Nolan’s whole deal during The Rookie Season 1, walking into a room full of people half his age, taking every doubt thrown at him, and proving through sheer stubbornness and decency that he belonged.

At 45 years old, with absolutely no law enforcement background and fresh off a life-changing moment that sent him straight to the LAPD academy, everyone thought he was a midlife crisis wearing a badge.

(Disney/Mike Taing)

Eight seasons later, the show has been quietly laying the groundwork for a story that could make all of that feel like prologue.

Dash has now appeared across multiple episodes of The Rookie Seasons 7 and 8, gravitating toward Nolan as kids tend to with the one adult in the room who actually listens.

He saved Nolan’s life in the desert using a drone and somehow keeps turning up at crime scenes. When he finds a dead body at school, Nolan is the first person he calls.

And on The Rookie Season 8 Episode 14, Nolan looked Dash’s deadbeat father in the eye and told him to either become someone worth knowing or leave the kid alone for good, then turned to Dash and made sure he knew he wasn’t going anywhere.

The show has been building something. Whether it knows exactly where it’s going is a separate question.

But if The Rookie runs long enough, I can actually see Dash walking into that academy as a rookie, with Nolan as his training officer, completing a full circle that I believe many fans would get on board with.

(ABC/Screenshot)

The Kid Who Saved Nolan Has Been Earning His Badge Since Before He Could Drive

Dash first arrived on The Rookie Season 7 Episode 18 as a teenager with a drone camera and genuinely excellent instincts.

He helped Nyla Harper locate Nolan and distract Oscar Hutchinson long enough for things not to go completely sideways.

He wasn’t a cop or training to be one, but he had the calmness under pressure that most adults lack. Oscar didn’t get Nolan that day partly because of a teenager with a remote control.

That was the foundation. What Season 8 has been doing is building everything on top of it.

(Disney/Mike Taing)

By The Rookie Season 8 Episode 10, Dash was on a ride-along with Nolan and ended up running from drug-addled patients through an abandoned building, and the remarkable thing was how unfazed he was by all of it.

He even jumped into a pool to deal with a threat when the situation called for it, which was absolutely a move Nolan would have made at his age.

“Tiger Bear” pushed the idea further. Dash called Nolan about a dead teacher, helped navigate a murder investigation from the high school end of it, and then found himself in danger because of his father’s debt.

He did not leave or panic. He dealt with it better than most adults would, and Nolan knew exactly what he was doing.

The scene where Nolan told Gus to listen to Dash or leave him alone entirely was a quiet one, but it landed because the show had done enough groundwork to make it feel earned.

Nolan sees something in Dash that reminds him of his own younger days, and the show has been careful to earn that recognition rather than just announce it.

The Rookie Has Told This Story Before, But It Would Hit Differently the Second Time

Here’s a version of this that could run in a future season: Dash graduates. His home life has been unstable enough that college isn’t a clean next step.

(ABC/Screenshot)

But he’s smart, he’s proven he can keep his head in a crisis, and he’s spent years orbiting the LAPD through Nolan.

He walks into the academy and everyone looks at him sideways: the quiet, tech-obsessed kid who doesn’t fit the mold of what a cop is supposed to look like. Sound familiar?

Nolan walked into that same room at 45, and nobody thought he was going to make it either.

The difference is that Dash would do it with Nolan as his training officer, which is where the real emotional weight of the idea lives.

Nolan spent the first season trying to prove himself to people who doubted him.

A version of him watching Dash go through something similar, his carrying the doubt and finding his footing in a world that wasn’t built for his particular profile, would give Nathan Fillion some of the richest material the show has offered in years.

(ABC/Screenshot)

The Rookie is at its best when Nolan’s journey means something beyond just the weekly case, and Dash as a rookie arc would give that meaning a whole new direction to travel in.

The show already told us that Nolan plans to be there for this kid going forward. The only question is how far forward we’re willing to imagine it going.

And for a show that has been running eight seasons and counting, imagining a little further doesn’t seem unreasonable at all.

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