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Dodgers nearing division title in gutty extra-inning win over D-backs

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The Dodgers looked to be destined for another late loss to the Arizona Diamondbacks on Wednesday, but the bullpen hung on and Tommy Edman played the hero in a 5-4 win over 11 innings.

Shohei Ohtani began the game with a triple high off the center field wall against Ryne Nelson, extending his on-base streak to 28 games. Mookie Betts plated him with a sacrifice fly that put the Dodgers in front early, but Nelson made quick work of the next two hitters he faced.

Arizona quickly responded against Blake Snell with a ringing double from Ketel Marte to begin the bottom of the first, later advancing to third on a weak bouncer back to the mound. A walk to Corbin Carroll put men on the corners with one out, and Gabriel Moreno tied the game with a sacrifice fly of his own. After a pair of stolen bases put the speedy Carroll at third base, Snell struck out Blaze Alexander to preserve the tie.

The Dodgers began to mount a rally against Nelson with two outs in the top of the third with singles from Betts and Freddie Freeman. Facing Max Muncy, Nelson tossed a fastball that caught the outside corner of the zone, but was ruled a ball much to the surprise of everyone on the field. Nelson bounced back to strike out Muncy swinging on a full count curveball to limit the threat.

After Tommy Edman connected for his second hit against Nelson in the top of the fourth, Andy Pages cashed in Edman and himself on a monster two-run home run to make it a two run Dodger lead. Pages’ 26 home runs on the year are double from his total as a rookie, with only six of them coming away from Dodger Stadium.

Andy for the go-ahead! pic.twitter.com/XRPchOnoil

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) September 25, 2025

Snell kept Arizona in check after the first inning, where the southpaw tossed six innings for a third consecutive start. The sacrifice fly from Moreno was the first run he allowed since a five run meltdown in Pittsburgh, and his five strikeouts on the night were the lowest in a start since Aug. 22 against the San Diego Padres. Snell officially closes the book on an injury-plagued first regular season with the Dodgers, finishing with a 2.35 ERA and 72 strikeouts over just 61 1/3 innings pitched.

Six strong innings from Blake.

Tonight's King of the Hill presented by @KingsHawaiian. pic.twitter.com/mBmsazbmYL

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) September 25, 2025

Roki Sasaki made his return from injury after being sidelined for four months, making his first ever relief appearance at the big league level. Sasaki’s fastball reached a maximum speed of 99.8 miles per hour in a perfect bottom of the seventh where he struck out two on just 13 pitches, eight of which went for strikes.

Welcome back, Roki! pic.twitter.com/dpPdRFCrxz

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) September 25, 2025

The Dodgers grabbed a huge insurance run with Teoscar Hernández slicing an RBI double in the top of the eighth inning to make it a three run game. Hernández advanced to third on the play with Geraldo Perdomo bobbling the relay throw.

Alex Vesia came in for a second straight game to begin the bottom of the eighth, and the same issues the bullpen experienced on Tuesday persisted. Marte slapped a one out single before Vesia lost a 10 pitch battle against Perdomo on a free pass. Carroll brought home Marte on a line drive double that cut the lead in half, and Edgardo Henríquez was brought in to face Moreno with the tying run in scoring position. Moreno chopped a swinging bunt that Ben Rortvedt could not handle, allowing Perdomo to score and place the tying run 90 feet away from scoring. Torey Luvollo called on pinch-hitter Adrian Del Castillo to make it a brand new ball game as he did the night before. Del Castillo lined a deep fly ball that Edman managed to grab, but plenty deep enough for Carroll to score and tie the game and once again ruining a Dodger starter’s chances of securing the win after a quality start.

Clayton Kershaw made his first relief appearance in either the regular or postseason since his infamous implosions against the Washington Nationals in Game 5 of the 2019 NLDS. Kershaw got the first two hitters he saw to ground out, and an incredible diving catch from Edman robbed Marte of extra bases and sent the game to extra innings.

Kersh out of the 'pen and Tommy with the diving catch! pic.twitter.com/DsmPxQGcHX

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) September 25, 2025

A base hit from Mookie Betts looked to score the ghost runner Hyeseong Kim, but a slight hesitation from Kim off the second base bag allowed Carroll to gun him down.

The Dodgers appeared to trend towards another walk-off defeat as Jack Dreyer loaded the bases with only one out. After getting pinch hitter Jake McCarthy to pop out, Blake Treinen took over to face the James McCann, and Treinen kept the game alive by inducing a fly out.

As dazzling as Edman was in center field defensively, his third hit of the game scored Freeman in the top of the 11th against Brandyn Garcia to give the Dodgers the lead again. Justin Wrobleski secured his second save of the season as the Dodgers keep their hunt for another division title alive.

Go ahead, Tommy! pic.twitter.com/gfi56YXfNh

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) September 25, 2025

The Dodgers’ magic number is now down to just 1 after the Milwaukee Brewers defeated the San Diego Padres. The Philadelphia Phillies did clinch a first round bye with a dominant win over the Miami Marlins, meaning the Dodgers will indeed play in the Wild Card series. Arizona is now hanging by a thread, as they and the Cincinnati Reds are only one game behind the New York Mets for the final Wild Card spot.

Game particulars​

  • Home runs— Andy Pages (26)
  • WP— Blake Treinen (2-7): 1/3 IP, 0 hits, 0 runs, 0 walks, 0 strikeouts
  • LP— Brandyn Garcia (0-2): 2 IP, 2 hits, 1 run (0 earned), 0 walks, 3 strikeouts
  • SV— Justin Wrobleski (2): 1 IP, 0 hits, 0 runs, 0 walks, 2 strikeouts

Up next​


The Dodgers wrap things up in Arizona on Thursday (12:40 p.m. PT, SportsNet LA) before heading out to Seattle to take on the Mariners for their final regular season series. Yoshinobu Yamamoto makes his final start of the regular season against Zac Gallen.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-scores-standings/104543/dodgers-diamondbacks-game-recap
 
Dodgers aren’t a super team, but they won a division title just the same

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The Dodgers clinched the National League West on Thursday afternoon with a win over the Arizona Diamondbacks in Phoenix, winning their fourth straight division title and 12th in 13 years. The Dodgers winning the NL West was expected, but the path was much more turbulent than many projected.

The Dodgers this year will finish with their worst record since 2018 (91-72), but their victory on Thursday gave them 90 wins for the 12th full season in a row, a stretch that was only interrupted by a 43-17 (.717) 2020 season. The only other team in major league history to win 90 games 12 full years in a row was the New York Yankees, from 1947-58.

Caveat here: ninety wins in a 162-game schedule is roughly the same as 86 wins in the old 154-game schedule. The Yankees had 13 straight years of 86 or more wins from 1946-58, but that was dwarfed by New York’s 18-year streak from 1926-43.

By winning the division, the Dodgers have locked up the No. 3 seed in the National League playoffs, and will begin their postseason on Tuesday, September 30 at Dodger Stadium hosting the best-of-three wild card series.

When factoring in what is certain to be a record-setting competitive balance tax payment — breaking last year’s mark, also by the Dodgers — this year the Dodgers will pay well over $540 million in competitive balance tax payroll and taxes for 2025. With that payroll comes massive expectations, and backlash.

A nine-day span at the end of January saw consternation over the Dodgers, on two fronts. Their free agent signings of Tanner Scott — his four-year, $72 million deal is the fifth-largest contract in total value ever signed by a reliever — and Kirby Yates for one-year, $13 million were seen as excess for a bullpen that was already deep and stacked.

I’ll pause for laughter.

But another key point in those nine days in January was when Roki Sasaki signed with the Dodgers, too. Sasaki was so hellbent on coming to MLB now rather than wait two years for a surefire nine-figure contract, that he was forced to sign as an international amateur, and will be subject to three years of near-minimum salaries before three more years of arbitration before even qualifying for true free agency. A 23-year-old, mostly-ready-made major league starting pitcher making a relative pittance is the most coveted type of player in the sport, and literally every team wanted to and could have signed him. The Dodgers couldn’t simply flex their financial muscles to sign Sasaki, yet he chose to sign with them anyway, for a $6.5 million signing bonus.

The signings of Sasaki, Scott, and Yates were more fuel on the “Dodgers are ruining baseball” fire, which makes it darkly funny that those three pitchers have been mostly terrible in 2025, combining for a 4.88 ERA and 27 home runs allowed in 132 2/3 innings.

The Dodgers were by no means a super team, with the rotation, bullpen, and lineup at times missing key pieces due to injury, and several regulars underperforming. Even stars Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman went through arguably the worst stretches of their careers for several weeks. Those two combined to drive in five runs in the clincher on Thursday.

The bullpen carried the pitching staff for a while as several starters were out, and now the bullpen is going through its worst stretch in years while the rotation is so deep that Emmet Sheehan and Clayton Kershaw — the latter will finish second on the team in starts and innings, amazingly — aren’t expected to start in the postseason.

Despite many problems throughout the year, the Dodgers have spent most of the season in first place. They were in second or third place for three weeks in April, but never more than 2 1/2 games out of first, and after that were one game back of the Padres on three different days in August.

It’s fitting that Yoshinobu Yamamoto was on the mound for Thursday’s division clincher, as he’s been the rock of the pitching staff all season. The right-hander has a 2.49 ERA in 173 2/3 innings, the first Dodgers pitcher with enough innings to qualify since 2022. Yamamoto is one of only three Dodgers pitchers to stay on the active roster all season, along with left-handed relievers Anthony Banda and Jack Dreyer.

For a pitcher who receives some of the worst run support of any qualified starter in baseball, Yamamoto got his best backing yet with eight runs on Thursday, the most the Dodgers have scored with him in the game all year. Not that Yamamoto needed much support, pitching six scoreless innings in his final regular season start of the year.

The win on Thursday also gave the Dodgers’ the season series over the Diamondbacks at 7-6. They also went 9-4 against both the Padres and Giants, and 11-2 against the Rockies. Going 36-16 (.692) against divisional opponents is a great way to ensure winning it.

This is a special time in Dodgers history, with more NL West titles in the last 13 years (12) than in the previous 44 years combined (11). These things shouldn’t be taken for granted, no matter what happens next.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-angeles-dodgers-news-notes/104463/dodgers-division-title-2025
 
Dodgers can use Mariners series as reset

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The Dodgers finally clinched the NL West on Thursday and celebrated in the Arizona away team clubhouse. Next stop Seattle, for the final series of the regular season.

Clinching the National League West title on Thursday allows the Dodgers the ability to relax slightly before the playoffs and do a reset of sorts. Since the Dodgers did not have one of the top two records in the NL, they will start the playoffs hosting the number six seed in the Wild Card round on Tuesday.

The Dodgers can use this series as a ‘bye’, insofar as being able to rest starters as much as possible and allowing those arms in the bullpen that need work to do so in low pressure situations.

Emmet Sheehan, Tyler Glasnow, and Clayton Kershaw are lined up to finish up the season. Neither Sheehan nor Kershaw look to figure into the starting rotation for the playoffs, so they could conceivably eat some more innings they might not have before. Ben Rordvedt can get some rest with Daulton Rushing getting more work in coming back from his IL stint.

Seattle has also clinched their division, using a sweep against the Houston Astros last weekend to secure their win. They have the same record as the Dodgers, 90-69. The Mariners however will have one of the top two seeds in the American League and will have to navigate how to manage their team until next weekend when their part of the playoffs start.

The biggest news surrounding the Mariners of course is the season that catcher Cal Raleigh is having. Affectionately known as ‘The Big Dumper’, Raleigh is having himself an MVP season. Raleigh has 60 home runs, two away from the AL record of 62 that was set by reigning MVP Aaron Judge. The Mariners plan seems to be moving Raleigh to designated hitter for the final few games to give him some rest but allow him to chase that record.

The Mariners reunited with Eugenio Suarez at the trade deadline, after he was traded from the Mariners to the Diamondbacks in 2023. Suarez sits at 49 homers on the season, and if he hits one more this weekend Seattle will have only the second set of teammates to both have 50 or more home runs in the same season.

Enjoy the last relatively stress-free series of the season, Dodger fans. On Tuesday, it gets real.

Friday game info

  • Teams: Dodgers at Mariners
  • Ballpark: T-Mobile Park, Seattle
  • Start time: 6:40 p.m.
  • TV: SportsNet LA
  • Radio: AM 570 (English), KTNQ 1020 AM (Spanish)

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-scores-standings/24480896/dodgers-use-mariners-series-reset
 
Dodgers 2025 injured list tracker

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Every Dodgers player who ends up on the injured list during the 2025 season, we will track here. That includes the concussion IL, which is a minimum of seven days, or the standard IL, which is 10 days at minimum for position players and 15 days for pitchers, as well as the 60-day injured list.

We’ll also track players on paternity leave, the bereavement list, or the family medical emergency list. Basically any time a Dodgers player misses time that requires a roster move, we’ll note it here.

During the 2024 season, 28 different Dodgers missed time. In 2023, there were 34 such players.

Every injured list placement this season will also be chronicled on our 40-man roster page, which like this post will be updated throughout the 2025 season.

Gavin Stone was the first Dodger to land on the injured list in 2025, placed on the 60-day IL on February 11 to make roster room for the signing of Kiké Hernández. Stone is expected to miss the entire season after shoulder surgery in October.

Two days later, River Ryan was placed on the 60-day injured list to make room for Clayton Kershaw. Ryan had Tommy John surgery in August 2024 and is expected to be out for all of 2025 as well.

In finalizing their opening day roster on March 18, the Dodgers placed nine more pitchers on the injured list, including seven on the 15-day IL plus Brusdar Graterol and Michael Grove on the 60-day IL.

Note: if you are on a mobile device, these tables will show up best in landscape mode.

PlayerPosInjuryDate onEligible to returnComments
Will SmithCRight hand contusionSep 13now
Michael KopechRHPRight knee inflammationSep 19Oct 1 (before NLDS)
Kirby YatesRHPRight hamstring strainSep 24Oct 6 (after NLDS starts)retro to Sep 21
Kyle Hurt*RHPTommy John surgeryMar 17nowstarted rehab Sep 2
Brusdar Graterol*RHPRight shoulder surgeryMar 17now

PlayerPosInjuryDate onDate offGames outComments
Tommy EdmanIF/OFRight ankle inflammationMay 3May 1817no rehab games
Tommy EdmanIF/OFRight ankle sprainAug 4Sep 10335 rehab games
Nick FrassoRHPNeeded room for HeaneySep 27n/a2procedural move
Freddie Freeman1BRight ankle sprainApr 3Apr 119no rehab games
Luis GarcíaRHPRight adductor strainJun 1Jun 26251 rehab game
Tyler Glasnow*SPRight shoulder inflammationApr 28Jul 9653 rehab starts
Tony GonsolinSPBack tightnessMar 17Apr 30304 rehab starts
Tony Gonsolin*SPInternal brace surgeryJun 7n/a98also flexor tendon repair
Michael Grove*RHPRight shoulder surgeryMar 17n/a162expected out for season
Edgardo Henriquez*RHPLeft foot fractureMar 17Jun 298412 rehab games
Kiké HernándezIF/OFLeft elbow inflammationJul 7Aug 25405 rehab games
Teoscar HernándezOFLeft groin strainMay 6May 19121 rehab game
Clayton Kershaw*SPLeft toe surgeryMar 17May 17455 rehab starts
Hyeseong KimIF/OFLeft shoulder bursitisJul 29Sep 1309 rehab games
Michael Kopech*RHPRight shoulder impingementMar 17Jun 7649 rehab games
Michael Kopech*RHPTorn right meniscusJul 1Sep 1527 rehab games
Michael KopechRHPRight knee inflammationSep 19n/a9regular season over
Max Muncy3BLeft knee bone bruiseJul 3Aug 4255 rehab games
Max Muncy3BOblique strainAug 15Sep 8223 rehab games
Shohei OhtaniDHPaternity leaveApr 18Apr 202birth of daughter
Evan PhillipsRHPRight rotator cuff strainMar 17Apr 19216 rehab games
Evan Phillips*RHPTommy John surgeryMay 7n/a126surgery on June 4
Dalton RushingCRight shin contusionSep 6Sep 1694 rehab games
River Ryan*SPTommy John surgeryFeb 13n/a162expected out for season
Roki Sasaki*RHPRight shoulder impingementMay 13Sep 241167 rehab games
Tanner ScottLHPLeft elbow inflammationJul 22Aug 22271 rehab game
Emmet Sheehan*SPTommy John surgeryMar 17Jun 18744 rehab starts
Blake Snell*SPLeft shoulder inflammationApr 6Aug 21024 rehab starts
Blake SnellSPPaternity listAug 23Aug 263birth of daughter
Brock StewartRHPRight shoulder surgeryAug 12n/a433 rehab games
Gavin Stone*SPShoulder surgeryFeb 11n/a162expected out for season
Blake Treinen*RHPRight forearm tightnessApr 19Jul 27847 rehab games
Alex VesiaLHPRight oblique strainAug 26Sep 9152 rehab games
Kirby YatesRHPRight hamstring strainMay 18Jun 718no rehab games
Kirby YatesRHPLower pack painAug 1Aug 23221 rehab game

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-angeles-dodgers-injuries/87827/dodgers-injured-list-tracker-2025
 
Dodgers notes: Wild card, Shohei Ohtani, Alex Vesia, Andrew Heaney

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We head into Sunday’s final day of the 2025 regular season knowing the Dodgers are the No. 3 seed in the National League playoffs, but we don’t yet know what team they will play on Tuesday at Dodger Stadium.

The Reds and Mets enter Sunday tied at 83-78, and Cincinnati has the tiebreaker between the two teams. If the Reds beat the Brewers or if the Mets lose to the Marlins, Cincinnati is the No. 6 seed. The Mets need both a win and a Reds loss to make the playoffs.

Expect full wild card schedules, including start times and television broadcast info, to be announced by MLB on Sunday. The league has made such announcements on the final day of the regular season in each of the last three seasons under the current playoff format.



Mike Petriello of MLB,com delved into various ways Shohei Ohtani could be used as a two-way player this offseason, even including one or two scenarios Petriello himself called “unhinged.” Regardless of likelihood, I think my favorite scenario posited by Petriello was using Ohtani as starting pitcher, then remains in the game as a designated hitter, and he closes the game on the mound.

Alex Vesia struck out all three batters he faced in the eighth inning on Saturday, giving the left-hander a bullpen-best 80 strikeouts this season. Vesia is the only Dodgers pitcher in the last four seasons to strike out 80 batters in relief; he also struck out 87 batters in 2024.

Vesia was preceded by Blake Treinen and followed by Edgardo Henriquez on the mound on Saturday. Henriquez earned the save, giving the Dodgers 11 different pitchers with a save this season. Treinen, Vesia, and Henriquez combined to strike out the final nine Mariners batters of the game, the first time Dodgers pitchers pulled that off since Aaron Harang did so himself on April 13, 2012 against the Padres at Dodger Stadium.

Andrew Heaney pitched two innings and allowed three runs on a home run by Jorge Polanco. Called up earlier on Saturday, Heaney was the 62nd player used by the Dodgers this season, passing 2021 for most in one year in franchise history. Heaney was also the 40th pitcher used by the Dodgers in 2025, matching last year’s club record.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/los-ange...d-card-shohei-ohtani-alex-vesia-andrew-heaney
 
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