Dodger Thoughts

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

Category: Postgame (Page 17 of 21)

Clayton Kershaw’ll be taking these Huggies and whatever cash ya got

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By Jon Weisman

Avenging Arizona.

Clayton Kershaw returned to the scene of the biggest crime of his 2014 season and .. walked the first batter he faced on four pitches.

In the third inning, with one out, he pitched with the bases loaded for the first time all year.

In the fourth, he allowed a double and a single (with an error) to the first two batters he faced, leading to the first unearned run he’s allowed in the regular season since September 13.

In the fifth, the leadoff hitter hit a triple, the first triple off Kershaw since the May 17 disaster start.

But in the end, Kershaw was Kershaw.

Retiring 12 of the final 13 hitters he faced and striking out seven of them, Kershaw carried the Dodgers to a 3-1 victory at Arizona.

His 2014 ERA is now 1.73, its lowest mark since his second start of the season. He struck out 10 batters, giving him three consecutive games with at least 10 strikeouts for the first time since June 20-July 2, 2011.

His record since May 17: 139 innings, 85 hits, 20 walks, 166 strikeouts, 1.29 ERA.

In his past 750 innings, the 26-year-old left-hander has a 1.99 ERA.

Kenley Jansen struck out two in a perfect ninth for his 100th career save.

The down note for the Dodgers, who took the lead for good on Matt Kemp’s two-run double in the third inning, was an ankle injury to Scott Van Slyke. Van Slyke, who continued to destroy Arizona starter Wade Miley with a third-inning homer, his fourth (to go with three doubles) in 11 at-bats against the lefty this year, rolled his right ankle while making the aforementioned error, on a ricochet of the ball off Yasiel Puig, and had to leave the game. He is day to day.

Dan Haren has a 2.70 ERA in his past four starts

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By Jon Weisman

Dan Haren’s third pitch was a microcosm of the fears of Dodger fans. His next 86 pitches summed up all their dreams.

Haren quickly bounced back after a leadoff home run by Curtis Granderson to retire 21 of his final 23 batters, allowing two hits, walking none and striking out six, in the Dodgers’ 6-2 victory over the New York Mets tonight.

With his third strong start in his past four, Haren lowered his ERA over his past 23 1/3 innings to 2.70, with 20 strikeouts and only four walks.

Haren also had a night of extremes at the plate. He bunted into a double play with two on in the third inning, ahead of Dee Gordon’s game-tying RBI, then missed a suicide squeeze in the fifth, before singling home the go-ahead run. Haren leads Dodger pitchers with five RBI in 2014.

Two innings later, the Dodgers took advantage of a key Mets error (sandwiched by Dee Gordon’s MLB-leading 11th triple of 2014 and Matt Kemp’s two-run double for three unearned runs to bust the game open. Gordon was 3 for 5 tonight. A.J. Ellis added an RBI double down the right-field line in the eighth for the Dodgers’ final run.

So, there’s your late-inning comeback

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Screen Shot 2014-08-21 at 9.42.29 PMBy Jon Weisman

I was all set to tell you why you shouldn’t jump off a cliff even if the Dodgers lost a second straight Clayton Kershaw start and a second straight game to the Padres. But Justin Turner did me the favor of explaining better and more dramatically than I ever could.

“I don’t hit a lot of home runs.”

– Turner, on MLB Network’s “Intentional Talk” this afternoon

Dodgers 2, Padres 1

Greinke’s elbow could further test Dodger depth

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All Wet

The Dodgers might well have caught a break Tuesday from the Wrigley Field grounds crew, whose struggle to effectively put down a tarp during a 10-minute rainstorm left the field unplayable, causing the Giants’ game against the Cubs to end after 4 1/2 innings in a 2-0 loss. There is talk of a protest, but at least for now, San Francisco fell to 4 1/2 games behind Los Angeles in the National League West.

By Jon Weisman

Teams don’t win or lose, organizations do.

Maybe that’s just a matter of semantics, but the point is, every aspect of your organization, top to bottom, plays a role in the fortunes of the team. And sometimes, you need the bottom to carry the top. Or, depending on your point of view, the middle.

That’s what the Dodgers face right now, given the possibility that Zack Greinke will become the fifth Dodger starting pitcher sidelined for at least the short term, following Chad Billingsley, Josh Beckett, Paul Maholm and Hyun-Jin Ryu.

And yes, I think it’s important to include Billingsley in these lists, because when the season began, he was considered likely to be in the rotation in the second half of 2014, certainly more likely than Beckett or Maholm.

Here’s the latest on Greinke from Ken Gurnick of MLB.com:

Greinke is only a “possibility” to make his scheduled start on Thursday, Dodgers manager Don Mattingly said after Tuesday night’s 8-6 win over the Padres.

Greinke has been dealing with a tender elbow for the past three weeks, bypassing regular bullpen sessions to throw on flat ground, which puts less of a strain on the arm.

Mattingly would not elaborate on Greinke’s condition or who might replace him, although the Dodgers have few options besides rookie Carlos Frias, who pitched four innings in relief of Dan Haren on Sunday. …

If Greinke misses a start, that would mean each of the Dodgers’ six primary starting pitchers this season has missed at least one turn in the rotation, although Haren’s was outwardly labeled a rest stop.

And so the Dodgers have needed to step up in other places. They’ve made trades to bring in Kevin Correia (who was rocked for three runs before retiring a batter Tuesday, then held San Diego to one run over his next 19 batters) and Roberto Hernandez. They called up Stephen Fife and Red Patterson early in the season and now perhaps will use Frias as a starter as well.

About the only thing that hasn’t happened yet is a sustained turn in the rotation from a minor-leaguer, in part because someone like 2011 first-round pick Zach Lee, who turns 23 next month, hasn’t come on the fast track. Not that he’s been slow. Lee had made midseason leaps to the next level in 2011 (high school to Single-A Great Lakes) and 2012 (High-A Rancho Cucamonga to Double-A Chattanooga) before spending full seasons at Chattanooga in 2013 and, up to now, Triple-A Albuquerque in 2014.

Lee has struggled somewhat predictably in his first Pacific Coast League season (a league Clayton Kershaw bypassed on his way up). It would be nice to see the Dodgers get a youthful infusion in their rotation, but the timing might not be right for Lee. Maybe it will be the 24-year-old Frias, who retired the final 12 batters he faced in long relief Sunday after allowing a solo home run.

Happiest of all would be if Greinke wakes up healthy this morning or the next. But if someone takes Greinke’s turn Thursday, that pitcher will be the Dodgers’ No. 11 or No. 12 starter this season. You’re not expecting someone like that to dominate; you’re hoping he keeps you in the game enough for your offense to step up, as it did Tuesday, behind Carl Crawford’s three singles, walk and home run and the pairs of doubles from both Matt Kemp and Justin Turner. One player acquired by trade, one player acquired through the draft, one player a savvy pickup by the front office from the discard pile. Because, like we said, you win or lose with your entire organization.

Complete-game loss is first of Kershaw’s career

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By Jon Weisman

Clayton Kershaw walked none and struck out 11 in a five-hit, 97-pitch complete game, but somehow, for the first time in one of his starts since May 28, he and the Dodgers lost.

A two-run home run by Ryan Braun just over the right-field wall in the fourth, followed by a solo shot by first-pitch-swinging Carlos Gomez in the sixth, poked the holes in Kershaw’s seemingly immortal summertime run, lifting Milwaukee to a 3-2 victory Saturday.

For Kershaw, it his sixth complete game of 2014 (most by a Dodger since Ismael Valdez in 1995). But it was the first complete-game loss of his career and the 11th by a Dodger pitcher this century — and just the second by a Dodger at home, joined only by Derek Lowe on June 9, 2007.

The only time Kershaw has thrown fewer pitches in a nine-inning complete game was his memorable Opening Day 2013 shutout of the Giants, which he finished in 94.

The Dodger offense rarely troubled Yovani Gallardo, who scattered six hits and a walk over eight innings. Los Angeles scored its only run off the Milwaukee starter when Justin Turner singled home Carl Crawford, but Turner was tagged out trying to go to second on the play.

After Kershaw walked off the mound in the middle of the ninth to a standing ovation, Matt Kemp thrilled the crowd by slamming a 3-2 pitch far over the short wall in left field for a leadoff homer. But that was all the Dodgers got.

Kershaw’s ERA rose from 1.78 to 1.86, but he now has 174 strikeouts compared to 19 walks in 2014 — a 9.2 K/BB ratio. Los Angeles had averaged 4.9 runs per game in support of Kershaw this season before tonight.

Tonight’s game was the first time that Kershaw had been charged with a loss after a Dodger loss in the previous game since June 21, 2013, the night before the Dodgers’ 42-8 run began.

The game lasted 2:28; the only nine-inning game that the Dodgers have played more quickly this season was a 6-0 victory at Arizona on April 11.

Sympathy pain? Uribe leaves loss with hamstring flare

By Jon Weisman

For the second time in three nights, the Dodgers might have lost more than a lead and a game. After Hyun-Jin Ryu was hurt in Wednesday’s 3-2 loss at Atlanta, Ryu’s pal Juan Uribe had to leave tonight’s 6-3 defeat against Milwaukee with tightness in his right hamstring — in the same area that caused him to miss 34 games earlier this year, as Ken Gurnick of MLB.com notes. For now, Uribe is listed as day to day.

In the past two weeks, Ryu, Hanley Ramirez, Josh Beckett, Paul Maholm, Chris Perez and Paco Rodriguez have gone on the disabled list.

Rotation rolls on, Dodgers roll home after 6-4 win completes 6-3 trip

Back endBy Jon Weisman

With Roberto Hernandez scattering three hits and four walks over his six innings in the Dodgers’ 6-4 victory at Atlanta today — admittedly needing 118 pitches, second-most for a Dodger this year behind only Josh Beckett in his no-hitter — the Dodgers’ No. 4, 5 and 6 starters continued their roadtrip dominance, lowering their ERA to 2.01 with 7.5 strikeouts per nine innings.

Seemingly toying with the Braves offensively, the Dodgers took a 5-1 lead into the eighth inning. Dee Gordon (3 for 4 with a walk, two bunt singles and two steals) scored the first of his four runs while coffee was still being sipped in Los Angeles, and Drew Butera added a big blow with a two-run homer in the second inning. Los Angeles had 58 baserunners in the four-game series in Atlanta, including at least 10 hits in each game.

Yasiel Puig was picked off again and thrown out at home but had three hits, a hit by pitch and the defensive play of the game.

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The Dodgers had to hang on after Brian Wilson gave up hits to the first three batters in the bottom of the eighth, all of whom scored. Kenley Jansen allowed one inherited runner to score before striking out Evan Gattis to end the eighth inning. Adrian Gonzalez drove in his second run of the game in the ninth for some welcome insurance. Jansen then completed the save in the ninth, despite allowing a single and a double, finishing with four strikeouts.

Los Angeles finished off a 6-3 trip against the Angels, Brewers and Atlanta, and the pitching staff had a 2.65 ERA. The Dodgers are 16-10 (.615) since the All-Star Break, 15-8 (.652) against teams with winning records.

Ryu suffers muscle strain in narrow Dodger loss

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By Jon Weisman

The Dodgers came oh so close to rallying in the ninth to victory, loading the bases against Atlanta closer Craig Kimbrel, before Matt Kemp’s sharp grounder went to the wrong spot for a game-ending 4-6-3 double play and a 3-2 loss to the Braves.

Los Angeles is hoping that was the only loss of the night, after Hyun-Jin Ryu left his start with two out in the sixth with a right gluteus muscle strain. He is day to day, according to Joe Morgan of MLB.com, and with Kevin Correia in the bullpen and a long-awaited off day Monday, could theoretically miss a start.

Jamey Wright retired the final seven batters of the game, preserving the rest of the Dodger bullpen for Thursday’s game, which has a 9:10 a.m. Pacific first pitch.

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Bottom’s up for the Dodgers

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By Jon Weisman

They call it the back of the Dodger starting rotation, Retread City, but look what it’s done lately.

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That’s some good stuff there. Dan Haren turned in his second straight solid performance in tonight’s 4-2 victory over Atlanta, the Dodgers’ seventh straight over the Braves dating back to Game 3 of the 2013 National League Championship Series.

Haren and the Dodgers got some great defensive help from Darwin Barney in his first start with the team. Barney also singled in a run and scored another. Carl Crawford, in his first leadoff start of the season against a left-hander, had three hits and is now 8 for his last 12 at the plate.

Newest Dodger turns Atlanta into Correia Town

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Screen Shot 2014-08-11 at 8.38.23 PMBy Jon Weisman

Even though one start is only one start, it’s hard not to feel good about this afternoon’s post. Atlanta could hardly touch Kevin Correia in tonight’s 6-2 Dodger victory, one that moved them five games up on San Francisco in the National League West.

That’s one victory in the books for the Dodgers from their new No. 6 starter, setting up some nice dominoes for the rest of the Dodgers’ week.

See the spray chart at right? Only two balls hit by the Braves went beyond medium left field, and one of those was Evan Gattis’ inconsequential double off Carlos Frias in the ninth.

Correia faced 23 batters, striking out five and getting 10 groundouts. He allowed a walk, three singles and a double. There were two lineouts, one on a sweet, skyscraping catch by Miguel Rojas. Atlanta reached ball three in the count only three times the entire night.

Maybe sometimes it’s better to be lucky than good, but tonight, Correia was plenty good.

Oh, and Correia went 2 for 2 at the plate, scoring the Dodgers’ first run after they trailed 1-0 through five innings. Dodger pitchers have reached base seven of their past 14 trips to the plate.

Despite seeing two of their first three baserunners get picked off, the Dodgers plenty whelmed Atlanta, reaching base 15 times (that’s 33 in their past two games) against Atlanta’s top pitcher, Julio Teheran, and looking sharper than their opponents defensively. Special mention to Carl Crawford, who is 5 for 8 in his past two games.

Kershaw shows all the tools in latest victory

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By Jon Weisman

Today’s game didn’t exactly slow the downhill-rolling boulder that is Clayton Kershaw’s National League Most Valuable Player candidacy.

The former prep football center was the equivalent of an NFL Punt, Pass & Kick winner today, leading the Dodgers to a 5-1 victory at Milwaukee that helped push them to a season-high 4 1/2-game lead in the NL West.

Kershaw walked leadoff batter Carlos Gomez today, the first walk the big lefty had allowed in the first inning all season. But as omens go, it wasn’t much.

Lowering his 2014 ERA to 1.78, Kershaw allowed one run on eight baserunners in eight innings with six strikeouts — and was his own best friend today. Not only did he reach base thrice (hit by a pitch, walk and RBI single), he also picked off Carlos Gomez in the fourth and made, as you can revisit in the video above, one of the great diving plays you’ll ever see a pitcher make, thwarting a Milwaukee squeeze bunt attempt.

Laundry detergent companies, the endorsement ball’s in your court.

Kershaw won his 11th straight decision, the longest winning streak for a Dodger pitcher since Orel Hershiser in 1985. Since the start of June, Kershaw has a 1.16 ERA with 117 strikeouts against only 12 walks and 62 hits in 101 innings, averaging 7.8 innings per start.

The Dodgers whittled away at the Brewers with single runs in the third, fifth and seven innings before busting loose for two in the eighth, thanks in no small part to A.J. Ellis’ first home run of 2014 and Miguel Rojas’ career-high third hit of the game.

Adrian Gonzalez had two doubles, a sacrifice fly and two RBI, and is 9 for 14 with three doubles, two homers and three walks in his past four games. The Dodgers reached base 18 times in all today.

Dodgers find the Haren necessities

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By Jon Weisman

How effective was Dan Haren tonight? In matching his longest outing of the season in innings, he had his second-shortest start of the season in pitches.

Read More

Hungry Man Special: Ellis, Ethier bring Dodgers victory in ninth

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By Jon Weisman

A.J. Ellis and Andre Ethier were a combined 8 for 66 (with eight walks) since the All-Star Break, but they provided the final key at-bats in the Dodgers’ 5-4 walkoff victory Tuesday over the Angels.

After Ellis’ perfectly executed hit-and-run single moved Juan Uribe to third with one out in the bottom of the ninth and the score tied, Ethier hit a chopper to third that Angels third baseman David Freese barehanded but was unable to throw home accurately enough to nab Uribe at the plate, giving the Dodgers their third walkoff victory of the homestand after only two in their previous 49 home games.

Both at-bats culminated on 3-2 pitches.

Uribe was hardly a bit player in this game. His three-run homer in the second inning brought the Dodgers back from an early 2-0 deficit.

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Clayton Kershaw struggled early, allowing eight hits to the first 12 batters he faced and matching his career high for a game with four doubles allowed before he retired a batter in the third inning. But Kershaw flipped the switch, and retired 14 of the final 16 batters he faced, exiting with a 4-3 lead.

Kershaw has 16 quality starts in 18 appearances in 2014 and has allowed more than three runs only once — the seven-run debacle in Arizona in mid-May. He has not allowed more than 10 baserunners in his past 22 starts, dating back to 2013.

Matt Kemp’s hustle brought home the Dodgers fourth run — he reached first and third on an error with a stolen base in between, and scored on a Scott Van Slyke sacrifice fly. But Albert Pujols’ eighth-inning homer — the first allowed by Brian Wilson in the past 106 at-bats against him — tied the game.

Trot off: Ramirez’s blast boosts Dodgers to 12th-inning triumph

The Dodgers, who had two walkoff hits before this week, have doubled their pleasure. Hanley Ramirez’s three-run homer in the bottom of the 12th inning — matching Los Angeles’ longest game of 2014 — gave the Dodgers a 5-2 win Saturday over Chicago at a rainy Dodger Stadium.

Ramirez provided the Dodgers their first runs since Matt Kemp hit his fourth homer of the week in the second inning. More at MLB.com.

— Jon Weisman

Fresh out of the box: Clayton chewables

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SpraySo, what’s new with Clayton Kershaw?

  • He pitched his second complete game in a row — a 2-1 victory (the Dodgers’ sixth in a row) over Atlanta that was a shutout for the first 26 outs.
  • In tonight’s game, he struck out nine, walked none and allowed no fly outs to the outfield. None. (See the spray chart at right to see just how deep the Braves didn’t take Kershaw.)
  • He has 150 strikeouts and 15 walks this season, for a 10.0 K/BB ratio.
  • He has a 1.71 ERA in 2014.
  • He has allowed 12 earned runs in his past 99 innings. Taking out my trusty abacus … that’s a 1.09 ERA.
  • In his past 506 innings, dating back to June 2012, Kershaw’s ERA is 1.99.

– Jon Weisman

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