Dodger Thoughts

Jon Weisman's outlet for dealing psychologically with the Los Angeles Dodgers, baseball and life

Category: Postgame (Page 11 of 21)

Textbook first inning takes Dodgers to opening victory

Andre Ethier is greeted by Dave Roberts after scoring the Dodgers' second run of the season. (Jon SooHoo/Los Angeles Dodgers)

Andre Ethier is greeted by Dave Roberts after scoring the Dodgers’ second run of the season. (Jon SooHoo/Los Angeles Dodgers)

By Jon Weisman

The first inning of the Dodgers’ 6-1 Cactus League opening victory over the White Sox (summarized by Ken Gurnick of MLB.com) was a Spring Training work of art.

After Clayton Kershaw’s initial shutout inning, leadoff hitter Howie Kendrick worked a walk off Chicago starter John Danks. Facing the White Sox lefty in his first at-bat of the season, Andre Ethier singled the opposite way.

Two of the next three hitters — Yasiel Puig and Yasmani Grandal — then hit solid RBI singles. Significantly, a baserunner went from first to third on each.

“If you look at the numbers of how this team ran the bases last year, we can do better,” manager Dave Roberts said. “It’s a point of emphasis for sure. It’s more of a mindset than a style of baseball. That’s how you play the game.”

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Season ends for Dodgers in narrow Game 5 defeat

Jon SooHoo/Los Angeles Dodgers

Jon SooHoo/Los Angeles Dodgers

By Jon Weisman

It was a brutal, bloody game of King of the Mountain, a struggle, a scrambling boulder climb between two foes, toe-to-toe, claw to claw, slipping and soaring.

The clock ticked, baseball’s clock of outs counting down in its own unique measure. And when the final one drained away, one team stood.

The New York Mets will advance to play the Chicago Cubs in the National League Championship Series, having beaten back the Dodgers to win the deciding Game 5 of the National League Division Series, 3-2.

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Kershaw, Dodgers slay dragons — head home for Game 5

NEW YORK, NY - OCTOBER 13: Clayton Kershaw #22 of the Los Angeles Dodgers throws a pitch in the first inning against the New York Mets during game four of the National League Division Series at Citi Field on October 13, 2015 in New York City. (Photo by Mike Stobe/Getty Images)

Mike Stobe/Getty Images

By Jon Weisman

It was nine innings of walking heart palpitations, but we’ve come through the other side.

The Los Angeles Dodgers are coming home to play Game 5 of the National League Division Series after defeating the New York Mets, 3-1.

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Two out of three ain’t good for Dodgers

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By Jon Weisman

Curtis Granderson came up to bat against Brett Anderson in the bottom of the second inning. The Dodgers led, 3-1. Two were out.

Rarely has that last sentence meant so little and so much.

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Dodgers rally in controversial seventh to even NLDS

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By Jon Weisman

For nearly seven innings, it was another nail-biting pitchers’ duel, a rush of speed chess with the Dodgers again one move behind.

And then, the Dodgers flipped the board, suddenly and violently.

A four-run inning, lit aflame by Chase Utley’s takeout slide of Mets shortstop Ruben Tejada at second base, lifted the Dodgers to a 5-2 victory in Game 2 of the National League Division Series, evening the matchup at one win apiece.

Tejada suffered a broken right fibula on the play, which we discuss at length in a separate story.

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Heat is on Dodgers after NLDS Game 1 defeat

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By Jon Weisman

A scorching, sweating, exhausting night at Dodger Stadium tore open old wounds.

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Dodgers finish roadwork on winning note in San Francisco

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By Jon Weisman

For seven innings, the Dodgers were a great sight for fans who might be concerned about how healthy and sharp the team is heading into the playoffs.

For the final two innings, it was a test of how well the Dodgers could hold up at crunch time.

On his game and backed by superb defense, Brett Anderson pitched seven innings of shutout ball, before being charged with two runs in the eighth despite not allowing a ball out of the infield.

Nevertheless, Kenley Jansen came on in the ninth to preserve a 3-2 Dodger win in their 2015 finale against the rival San Francisco Giants.

The victory gave the Dodgers an 89-70 record, the same as the New York Mets, with three games remaining. If the Dodgers finish a game ahead of the Mets, Los Angeles will have home-field advantage in their National League Division Series. (If not, life will go on.)

This weekend, the Dodgers host the Padres, while the Washington Nationals travel to a rainy New York, which is readying for Hurricane Joaquin. A rainout is a definite possibility for the Mets this weekend, which conceivably could force them to play a doubleheader or on Monday if home field at stake.

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Back in San Francisco, today’s game was a full-on Dodger highlight reel, with Corey Seager, Howie Kendrick and Chase Utley all made difficult, ranging plays for outs.

Most stunning, perhaps, was Utley. In only his third career start at third base, the 36-year-old twice charged in to barehand balls and throw to Adrian Gonzalez, who was reaching and lunging like a human backscratcher.

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Though he made an eighth-inning throwing error, Kendrick also singled and doubled in his best all-around game since returning from the disabled list. His third-inning single was the last of the 2,957 career hits off retiring Giants pitcher Tim Hudson, who then left the field to a heartwarming ovation. Kendrick drove in Anderson, who scored the first run of his career.

More importantly for Anderson, he reached a career high in starts (31) and innings (180 1/3) for a season.

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Andre Ethier tripled for the second time in this series and the seventh time in 2015, tying a career high set back in 2006 when he was a rookie.

Laying down the Kershaw, Dodgers win NL West!

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By Jon Weisman

The Titanic skipped the iceberg. The boys beat the breaks.

All the numbers are magic tonight. For the first time in their history, the Dodgers are going to the postseason for the third consecutive year.

Soaring on home runs by Kiké Hernandez, Justin Ruggiano and A.J. Ellis off 2014 World Series hero Madison Bumgarner, sailing on the Unsinkable Clayton Kershaw, the Dodgers stood up and shook up San Francisco, 8-0, to win the 2015 National League West title.

For Kershaw, it was his first career one-hitter (Kevin Frandsen’s clean single in the second inning preventing next-level history) and the second consecutive year he pitched the Dodgers to the NL West title — an eight-run victory both times. For Ellis, it was the second time in three years he homered in a division-clinching game.

Next challenge: To end the 26-year drought without a World Series title, the Dodgers’ longest since they won their first World Series in 1955. They will face the New York Mets in the National League Division Series, beginning October 9.

With the Dodgers having lost eight times in their last 10 games, stuck for 100 hours in a row on a magic number of two to clinch the division, Kershaw rose to the occasion for, as if it were even possible, one of the most brilliant games of his brilliant career. He retired the final 19 batters, struck out 13 in all (two shy of his career high), while needing only 104 pitches for the 12th shutout of his career.

Kershaw has 294 strikeouts in 2015, putting him within striking distance of 300 for the year, though he will probably have an abbreviated start in the Dodgers’ regular-season finale Sunday. Either way, Kershaw has the most whiffs for an MLB pitcher since Curt Schilling and Randy Johnson topped the 300 mark in 2002.

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In his first start since returning from the disabled list, Hernandez provided the initial spark — or sparks. He led off the game with a single off Bumgarner, went to third on an omenic Kelby Tomlinson error, then scored on Justin Turner’s sacrifice fly — all before hitting the first Dodger homer to begin the third.

Though Kershaw was dealing, allowing his only single and walk in the third inning, it was a plenty tight game into the fifth, when whatever leverage Bumgarner was hanging onto seemed to give way when it took him 13 pitches to retire Kershaw — the longest at-bat by a big-league pitcher this year. The Dodgers didn’t score, but Bumgarner finished the fifth inning already at 100 pitches.

With two out in the sixth, Bumgarner hung a curveball that Ruggiano blasted for a 3-0 Dodger lead. Ellis went back-to-back to make it 4-0. In the eighth, the Dodgers broke it open with four runs, the big blow a team-leading sixth triple of the year by Andre Ethier.

Starting with the last out of the third inning, Kershaw retired 16 batters in a row, striking out 10 of them, to reach the ninth on 96 pitches.

Trevor Brown whiffed on three pitches. Angel Pagan flied to left on two pitches. Kelby Tomlinson took tow balls, then hit a slow chopper to shortstop, where Corey Seager flung to Adrian Gonzalez to ignite the celebration.

Next stop, playoffs.

Dodgers lose, at sea for another day

Fan finger
By Jon Weisman

Tonight, I’ll sail into the waves. Blood is in the water in McCovey Cove. Madison Bumgarner is the shark.

The life-raft for the Dodgers is Clayton Kershaw, with provisions of five more games after that.

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Heisey Uncertainty Principle rocks Kershaw’s world

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By Jon Weisman

Weekday afternoon games seem to have a way of bringing out the weirdness at Dodger Stadium. Oh, it’s probably no different proportionally than weeknight games or weekend games, but maybe all that sun exposure adds an extra level of head-spinning.

The last time the Dodgers hosted a 12:10 p.m. game, 55 weeks ago, they tied it in the ninth and 12th innings before losing in the 14th. So if ever an 80-pitch Clayton Kershaw outing and a Chris Heisey grand slam were going to be par for the course, why not today?

On a blazing second day of fall that seemed even hotter than the 89-degree first-pitch temperature, with the Dodgers trailing, 3-0, Don Mattingly pinch-hit for Kershaw in the bottom of the fifth, preferring to save some of his ace’s bullets for next week at San Francisco and beyond. Kershaw, the competitor, jawed at Mattingly in the dugout, and Mattingly, the manager, stood and counterpointed.

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KershawThen, both watched the Dodgers send 10 men to the plate and score six runs, the final four on Heisey’s first home run as a Dodger, a 344-foot shot that curled just beyond the left-field foul pole. It wasn’t Heisey’s first big hit as a Dodger, but it was his biggest.

“I had a tough year, up and down, haven’t played like I wanted, but it’s nice to help the team get a win, especially when we need wins to clinch a playoff berth,” Heisey said. “I know Clayton didn’t want to come out of the game. He pitched well, gave up a few runs, but I felt he was in pretty good control. He was a little frustrated coming out, but it was great to get him the win, like I said, and get the team the win.”

Coming shortly after Howie Kendrick’s two-run single, it was the crowning blow of a 6-3 Dodger victory that reduced the magic number for clinching the National League West to four.

Justin Ruggiano came over to a seemingly stunned Kershaw and gave him a big bear hug, as if to say, “Yes, it’s okay.”

“For Clayton Kershaw, he has been on an elevator of emotions,” Vin Scully said. “He appeared angry, I’m only guessing from long distance, angry, frustrated, disappointed. Then he looked depressed. And now, he has to be somewhat elated.”

Despite the low pitch count, it had been a busy day for Kershaw. He gave up three runs for the first time since allowing four August 7 at Pittsburgh, and for the first time at Dodger Stadium since June 17 against Texas. In leaving after five innings, his MLB-record streak of 31 consecutive quality starts at home came to an end.

At the same time, he still struck out nine, giving himself 281 for the season, the highest total for a Major Leaguer since Randy Johnson struck out 290 in 2004. With two scheduled starts remaining — including one in San Francisco on September 29 — Kershaw still has a chance to become the first 300-strikeout pitcher since Johnson and Curt Schilling each topped the mark in 2002.

“He doesn’t ever want to come out,” a smiling Mattingly said after the game, adding that he expected Kershaw would have only pitched one more inning if he had been left in the game to hit.

“I’ve seen him like that before. … It never bothers me. Those guys who are competitive, want to stay in the game, that never bothers me at all. That’s just part of it. I’ve got to make that decision, he can not like it, we’ll be able to talk about it later, and it’s not going to be a big deal.

Mattingly noted that he was contemplating pinch-hitting for Kershaw in the bottom of the fourth, when if Scott Schebler had reached base, there would have been a bases-loaded, two-out situation. (Kershaw, according to Mattingly, made the point that he got a hit his last time up.)

In 240 career starts, today was the first time Kershaw went out trailing after five innings and got credited with the win. Kershaw himself declined to talk about the conflict, saying, “I’m not going to talk about that at all. If you guys want to talk about the game, I’m more than happy to talk about that.”

Given those parameters, here’s what he said:

“My curveball was terrible. I need to go back to the drawing board on that. Just a lot of two-strike hits — you can’t have that happen. They hit a couple balls hard, a few balls found holes, but you know what, they had a great gameplan.”

“I felt pretty crummy after that, and for those guys to step up like that, and Heis’ big swing of the bat right there. He’s such a gamer — I love Heis — for him to do that, in the kind of the year he’s had, it’s been unbelievable. I’m thankful, honestly. And obviously our bullpen, having to pick up four innings, did an amazing job. Definite team win, I was just happy to be a part of it.”

For Kershaw, who is third in the National League in pitches thrown this season with 3,218, today marked the fewest he had thrown in a game since a rain-shortened five-inning complete game June 8, 2014 at Colorado, when he threw 73. By innings, it was Kershaw’s shortest outing since September 19, 2014 at Wrigley Field, when he also allowed three runs in five innings.

The following start, Kershaw pitched eight innings in the division-clincher against the Giants.

How does Corey Seager do it?

#SeagerSmooth

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By Jon Weisman

Since coming to the big leagues, Corey Seager has been amazing grace.

He’s 21 years old with a .508 on-base percentage and .647 slugging percentage. He can play shortstop at 6-foot-4 (and maybe more). He has walked more than he has struck out. He has extra-base hits in more than half his games. He is hitting lefties with authority.

How. Is. This. Happening?

If you ask Seager, he isn’t quite sure himself, though we pressed him for answers after tonight’s 6-2 Dodger victory, in which he hit his second home run and the Dodgers’ record 47th by a rookie.

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Seager’s blast lifts Dodgers to rookie homer record

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By Jon Weisman

Corey Seager’s fourth-inning home run tonight was the 47th by a Dodger rookie this year, setting a franchise record.

Dodger rookies who have homered this year include Joc Pederson (25), Alex Guerrero (11), Kiké Hernandez (6), Scott Schebler (3) and Seager (2).

The previous record was shared by the 1960 Dodgers — Frank Howard (23), Tommy Davis (11), Norm Sherry (8), Willie Davis (2), Bob Aspromonte (1), Doug Camilli (1) — and the 1958 Dodgers — John Roseboro (14), Dick Gray (9), Joe Pignatano (9), Don Demeter (5), Norm Larker (4), Ron Fairly (2), Frank Howard (1), Bob Lillis (1), Stan Williams (1).

Seager’s homer gave the Dodgers a 4-1 lead, one they extended to 6-1 in the seventh. That was mighty fine for Zack Greinke, who retired 11 batters in a row after allowing a fourth-inning homer to Pirates second baseman Neil Walker. Greinke himself sacrificed, singled and doubled (and scored) in three plate appearances tonight, raising his batting average to .234.

Update: Greinke left the game after allowing a single and walk to start the eighth. With one out, Starling Marte singled home a run off Chris Hatcher, raising Greinke’s ERA from 1.60 to 1.65. But Hatcher got a huge out by getting Andrew McCutchen to foul out, and when Aramis Ramirez grounded out, the Dodgers retained a 6-2 lead.

Update 2: Kenley Jansen closed out the victory with a four-batter save, lowering the Dodgers’ magic number to clinch the National League West to nine. In San Francisco, Madison Bumgarner gave up two runs (one earned) in eight innings and left trailing, 2-0. The Giants had one inning left to rally.

Update 3: San Francisco lost, reducing the Dodgers’ magic number to eight with 16 games to play.

Wood’n it be nice for Dodgers

By Jon Weisman

Alex Wood absolutely sparkled for the Dodgers tonight, using only 78 pitches to complete eight shutout innings and allowing only one baserunner — a two-out, second-inning single by Kyle Parker. Wood struck out five, never needing more than 13 pitches in an inning, and retired the final 19 batters he faced.

In his past three starts, Wood has sandwiched 15 shutout innings around 1 2/3 innings in which he allowed six earned runs.

Wood is the fourth Dodger pitcher to throw eight innings of one-hit ball this year, following Mike Bolsinger (May 23), Clayton Kershaw (June 6) and Zack Greinke (July 9). That ties a 50-year-old franchise record, essentially — the 1965 Dodgers also had four pitchers who threw eight innings and didn’t allow more than one hit, if you include Sandy Koufax’s perfect game.

Kenley Jansen, the only Dodger reliever not used in Monday’s 16-inning game, entered the game at exactly the two-hour mark. Eight minutes and one more hit later, it was over, and the Dodgers had reduced their magic number to clinch the National League West to 10 with a 2-0 victory over the Rockies. A.J. Ellis’ homer and Corey Seager’s single drove in the Dodger runs.

Dodgers played out in 16 innings

By Jon Weisman

It was the longest Dodger game played in 8 1/2 years, with the most players they’ve ever played, and nearly the most raindrops they’ve ever played through, and it didn’t play out well for Los Angeles.

Mat Latos, the 28th Dodger of the game, allowed a one-out, 16th-inning home run to Nolan Arenado, and after trailing 3-1 in the seventh and 4-3 in the 11th, the Dodgers finally fell to the Rockies, 5-4.

Colorado tied the MLB record for players used in a game with 30, set by Oakland on September 19, 1972, and the combined 58 players by the two teams is a new record. Latos gave up the homer one batter after he broke a team record by becoming the Dodgers’ 11th pitcher of the game.

The Dodgers hadn’t played more than 14 innings since losing in 15 innings to St. Louis on July 29, 2009, and hadn’t played 16 innings since they beat San Diego in a 17-inning game, April 29, 2007.

The Dodgers’ magic number to clinch the National League West decreased to 11, thanks to Cincinnati’s wild, 10-inning, 9-8 victory at San Francisco.

The mindblowing Corey Seager sets Los Angeles Dodger on-base record

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By Jon Weisman

Corey Seager walked, singled twice, hit his fifth double and his first Major League home run in tonight’s 9-5 Dodger victory, extending his streak of consecutive plate appearances on base to nine — a Los Angeles Dodger rookie record.

According to the Elias Sports Bureau, Seager has surpassed Pedro Guerrero (1980) and Jerry Sands (2011), who each reached base in eight consecutive trips as rookies.

Seager’s homer in the fifth was one of four in the game by the Dodgers, who burst out to a 7-0 lead by the third inning and maintained their 7 1/2-game lead over the Giants in the National League West. The 21-year-old, who drove in runs in his first three at-bats tonight, has an astonishing .568 on-base percentage and .733 slugging percentage in his first 37 MLB plate appearances.

Joc Pederson went 3 for 5 with his 25th homer of the season, tying him with Del Bissonette (1928) and Joe Ferguson (1973) for second in Dodger history for homers by a rookie behind Mike Piazza, who had 33 in 1993. (I’m not convinced Ferguson was a rookie in 1973, but according to Baseball-Reference.com he was.)

It wasn’t a free night of bliss for the Dodgers, who saw Carl Crawford become the latest to leave a game with hamstring issues. He is listed as day to day. Crawford hit a leadoff homer for the Dodgers — their third in their last four games, and fourth straight game with a homer from their leadoff batter.

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