News Dodgers Team Notes

Dodgers take their elite starting pitching on the road to San Francisco

imagn-23267025.jpg


Whoever said a six-man rotation in baseball was a nice concept, but unfeasible, clearly never met the current version of the Los Angeles Dodgers. Across Los Angeles’ last six games, the Dodgers sent six different starters who have thoroughly dominated everyone in their way, and Yoshinobu Yamamoto’s objective is to keep that run going. To illustrate the quality of recent pitching for Los Angeles, their starters have compiled 2.0 fWAR since Friday. They’ve allowed five runs in 38 innings of work, allowing the fewest runs in the second-most innings, trailing only Cleveland in volume.

Obviously, there are unavoidable consequences of a long 162-game season that often get in the way of a six-man rotation, but for right now, it is working beautifully for the Dodgers. Not only does the production of all names involved justify it, but also the specific circumstances around each one. For different explanations, the Dodgers have a particular reason for closely monitoring each of their starters, and for Yamamoto, it’s the volume increase from last season, in which he missed a significant amount of time due to injury.

One could also argue that with a six-man rotation, Dave Roberts has a bit more leeway in pushing each starter’s pitch count, and that was evident in Yamamoto’s last start. Going for that no-hitter in Baltimore, Yamamoto reached 112 pitches, his highest single-game mark in the big leagues, and for the second straight game, he struck out 10 batters.

All of this recent success from the Dodger rotation came against a pair of last-place clubs, which doesn’t necessarily detract from the achievement. Yamamoto will now face a Giants team inching closer and closer to a playoff spot, currently only 1.5 games back of the New York Mets for the final Wild Card slot. Considering the Dodgers’ current scenario, if the Giants were to be able to run down the Mets, these teams could meet again in the Wild Card round.

Friday game info​

  • Teams: Dodgers at Giants
  • Ballpark: Oracle Park, San Francisco
  • Start time: 7:10 p.m.
  • TV: SportsNet LA
  • Radio: AM 570 (English), KTNQ 1020 AM (Spanish)

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-scores-standings/103553/dodgers-giants-yoshinobu-yamamoto
 
Six-run fifth inning helps Dodgers defeat Giants in a 13-7 slugfest

imagn-27079229.jpg


After scoring just one run on Friday, the Dodgers bats erupted in a Saturday night slugfest that resulted in a 13-7 victory.

The Dodgers got to right-hander Logan Webb quickly, as Shohei Ohtani led off the game with an infield single against the shift. Freddie Freeman knocked in Ohtani with a base hit down the left field line, but he was gunned down at second trying to stretch a single into a double.

The Giants proceeded to give Clayton Kershaw fits in the bottom half of the first, as Heliot Ramos led off with a single before Rafael Devers won a nine pitch battle with a walk. Willy Adames and Matt Chapman brought home both Ramos and Devers with a pair of singles before Kershaw recorded his first out with a strikeout of Wilmer Flores. Jerar Encarnación plated Adames on a fielder’s choice, with Luis Matos promptly following with an RBI single to make it a four-run first inning against Kershaw. Kershaw needed 36 pitches and a full go-around through the Giants lineup to bring an end to the first inning.

The Dodgers immediately responded by loading the bases on three consecutive singles to begin the top of the second inning. Webb was able to get Miguel Rojas to pop out to second base before getting Ben Rortvedt to ground into a double play, once again exacerbating the Dodgers incapabilities of hitting with the bases loaded.

After Kershaw got two quick outs, the Giants also loaded the bases with a single and a pair of walks, but Kershaw left the bases loaded by getting Casey Schmitt to ground out to.

Ohtani trimmed the Dodger deficit in half with a titanic shot to dead center field that hit the batter’s eye. It was his 49th home run of the season, tying Shawn Green for the second-most home runs in a single season by a Dodger, and travelled 454 feet, surpassing Alex Call by a foot for the longest home run hit by a Dodger this year.

That Shohei bat flip. 🔥 pic.twitter.com/xXTbDinb7Y

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) September 14, 2025

Teoscar Hernández brought the deficit to a single run with an RBI double, but Webb struck out Michael Conforto to leave the tying run on base. Clayton Kershaw managed to get through a perfect nine pitch inning, but his day was done after just three innings, his shortest start since May 23 where he went just two innings against the New York Mets.

Edgardo Henríquez took over for Kershaw in the bottom of the fourth inning, and struck out the side in his lone inning of work.

The Dodgers once again loaded the bases against Webb with nobody out, forcing Giants manager Bob Melvin to relieve his ace with right-hander José Buttó. Hernández greeted Buttó with a go-ahead two-run double that landed just out of the reach of a diving Matos. Conforto followed with a sacrifice fly to push the Dodger lead to two, but the floodgates burst open with a two-run double from Ben Rortvedt. Mookie Betts plated the Dodgers sixth run of the inning with an RBI single that forced Buttó out of the game.

Put up six on 'em! pic.twitter.com/0rgFBdg4tS

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) September 14, 2025

The Giants made things interesting against Kirby Yates in the bottom of the fifth, as they scored three two-out runs to make it a two run game. Justin Wrobleski was called upon to end the inning, and he managed to strike out Heliot Ramos to end the inning before proceeding to set down the next six hitters in order.

For the second straight game, Max Muncy had to be removed from the game, as he took a fastball to the head from Matt Gage. He was able to finish the top of the sixth inning but was replaced by Kiké Hernández defensively in the bottom of the sixth.

The Dodgers added four more runs after their explosive fifth inning, bringing their total to 13 on the night, the most amount of runs they have scored in the second half. Both Michael Kopech and even Tanner Scott had scoreless innings, as the Dodgers allowed zero hits after the fifth inning.

With the Giants losing, they now fall a half game back of the New York Mets for the final Wild Card spot in the National League. The Dodgers’ division lead remains at two and a half games with the San Diego Padres defeating the Colorado Rockies.

Game particulars​

  • Home runs— Shohei Ohtani (49)
  • WP— Edgardo Henríquez (1-1): 1 IP, 0 hits, 0 runs, 0 walks, 3 strikeouts
  • LP— Logan Webb (14-10): 4+ IP, 10 hits, 6 earned runs, 2 walks, 5 strikeouts

Up next​


The Dodgers wrap things up against the Giants on Sunday (1:05 p.m. PT, SportsNet LA) before heading back home to open a three game series against the Philadelphia Phillies. Tyler Glasnow gets the start for the Dodgers and faces lefty Robbie Ray.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-scores-standings/103656/dodgers-giants-game-recap
 
Dodgers playoffs look likely to start in wild card round

imagn-27063579.jpg


The Dodgers took care of business by winning five of six games last week, giving them six wins in their last seven contests. But there are only two more weeks left in the regular season and an uphill climb ahead for them to earn a bye into the Division Series.

NL West standings​


Dodgers 84-65 (.564) – – –
Padres 82-68 (.547) 2 1/2 GB

While the Dodgers took a three-game series in San Francisco, the Padres won three of four at home against the Rockies. Los Angeles holds the tiebreaker and has a magic number of 10 to win the division; any combination of Dodgers wins and Padres losses that total 10 gives LA the National League West. Put another way, the Dodgers have 13 games left and the Padres have 12 games remaining, and they don’t play each other again.

Los Angeles needs 10 of 25 outcomes to go their way to win the division, while San Diego needs 16 of 25 outcomes to fall their way.

National League playoff seeding​


The Milwaukee Brewers were the first team to clinch a postseason berth, doing so on Saturday when the Mets lost to the Rangers.

  1. Brewers 91-59 (.607)
  2. Phillies 89-61 (.593)
  3. Dodgers 84-65 (.564)
  4. Cubs 85-64 (.570)
  5. Padres 82-68 (.547)
  6. Mets 77-73 (.513)
  7. Giants 75-74 (.503)
  8. Reds 74-75 (.497)

Milwaukee holds a two-game lead over Philadelphia for the No. 1 seed, and own the tiebreaker over the Phillies by winning four of their six head-to-head matchups. The Phillies are still in good shape to earn a bye into the NLDS, holding a 4 1/2-game lead over the Dodgers.

Luckily for fans of good baseball, the Dodgers host the Phillies for three games at Dodger Stadium beginning Monday night. Even if the Dodgers sweep the Phillies, they’d still be 1 1/2 games back for the No. 2 seed, but in that scenario would also hold the tiebreaker over Philadelphia. Bottom line is, the Dodgers likely need a series win over the Phillies at bare minimum to still cling to hope for the No. 2 seed.

Current scenario: Dodgers win division as No. 3 seed, host the sixth-seed Mets in the best-of-3 wild card round. The Giants and Reds are still clinging to hope at a Mets collapse for that final playoff spot. New York lost eight straight before eking out a win on Sunday over the Rangers.

Up next: Dodgers vs. Phillies, Brewers vs. Angels, Cubs at Pirates, Padres at Mets, Giants at D-backs, Reds at Cardinals

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-.../dodgers-postseason-standings-phillies-padres
 
Phillies outlast the Dodgers in a game with postseason-like energy

imagn-27092562.jpg


With too many back-and-forths to count, the Phillies managed to connect the last punch, winning it in extras, 6-5. In doing so, Philadelphia secured the NL East title and put a big dent in Los Angeles’ rather small chance of potentially running down that number two seed and the incredibly valuable bye it secures.

It’s not often that the Dodgers welcome any opponent who can roll out a hitter matching Shohei Ohtani’s power threat, but the Philadelphia Phillies are capable of just that with Kyle Schwarber in 2025. So big is the danger from facing Schwarber and also fellow lefty-hitter Bryce Harper at the top of the Phillies order that Dave Roberts worked up a specific plan for tonight’s game. In shades of postseason baseball, Roberts had Anthony Banda open the game for the specific purpose of facing those lefties before Emmet Sheehan made his regular scheduled appearance, but as a follower.

Ultimately, said plan only proved that very little would have been able to slow down the lefty mashers from Philly. Both Harper and Schwarber went deep in the game off southpaws, Schwarber in the first and Harper in the eighth.

What made this pitching decision from Dave Roberts particularly odd is that almost nothing from Sheehan’s recent performance led you to be overly cautious about his matchups against dangerous hitters. Harper and Schwarber are daunting, but they’re a problem against anyone, and Sheehan had been dealing as of late. Furthermore, not starting a game only twice this season, Sheehan could hardly be referred to as someone who is all that used to this approach.

Unfazed by Banda’s presence on the mound, Schwarber took the left-hander deep in the top of the first. It was Schwarber’s third home run in as many games, and it put him at 53 on the year, one below major-league leader Cal Raleigh. Although the Dodgers’ pitching strategy didn’t work out, it also didn’t not work out. Much like Schwarber, Sheehan was unfazed by the disruption in his routine. The Dodgers’ current youngest starting pitcher came on in the middle of the first and absolutely dominated the Phillies, not allowing a hit until his final pitch of the game, when Otto Kemp got him for a ground-rule double to open the seventh. By that time, Los Angeles held a 3-1 lead courtesy of a Max Muncy homer and a pair of Mookie Betts’ sac flies. That hit, though, opened the floodgates as Jack Dreyer struggled against the bottom of the Phillies’ order, allowing three runs to come across, capped by a Weston Wilson two-run bomb, giving Philadelphia a 4-3 advantage.

WAYYY OUT WES pic.twitter.com/rb6iK9oupj

— Philadelphia Phillies (@Phillies) September 16, 2025

One of the big issues in dealing with the likes of Schwarber and Harper is that even if you make the right decisions, with the best pitchers throwing the correct pitches, you’re still susceptible to getting burned. That’s how talented they are, and shortly after Mookie Betts tied the game with a solo shot in the seventh, it was Harper’s turn to show out against a talented Dodger left-handed reliever.

Alex Vesia came on with the plan of attacking Harper with high heaters. He executed that quite well, and still, Harper went out of the zone to crush one of those four-seamers over the right-field wall, once again putting the Phills back in front.

BRYCE IN HIS VEINS pic.twitter.com/AYKrI7n3DQ

— Philadelphia Phillies (@Phillies) September 16, 2025

Much like Banda’s 1-2 slider in the first hadn’t been a bad pitch by any means and had Schwarber reaching out for it, this was yet another case of good pitch, better swing. Room for improvement is ever-present, but there was little to complain about from the job Banda and Vesia did against these two outstanding hitters. If anything, Los Angeles should lament the seventh-inning blowup against a part of the Phillies order it should handle swiftly, regardless of who is on the mound.

By the time the ninth inning rolled around, the Dodgers needed to score against Jhoan Duran with their bottom of the order up. Andy Pages managed what no one else had since Duran got traded to Philadelphia, which is to homer against the flame-throwing closer. An outstanding hitter at home, Pages added to the folklore of his skills at Dodger Stadium with yet another signature moment.

ANDY KNEW. pic.twitter.com/fBRh3M0nJB

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) September 16, 2025

Shohei Ohtani got nothing in the zone a couple of batters later, walked, stole second, and set up the game-winning opportunity for Betts, who, unlike in many of his previous at-bats in this game, this time couldn’t come through. Missed opportunities ended up marking the final innings for Los Angeles. In the tenth, Blake Treinen did a fine enough job to hold the Phillies to one run, and when the Dodgers loaded the bases with just one out, the park was very lively, but a Miguel Rojas pop-fly and an easy groundout from Muncy meant defeat for Los Angeles.

Monday particulars​


Home runs: Max Muncy (18), Mookie Betts (19), Andy Pages (25), Kyle Schwarber (53), Weston Wilson (5), Bryce Harper (27)

WP — Jhoan Duran (7-6): 1 IP, 1 hit, 1 run, 1 walk, 1 strikeout

LP — Blake Treinen (1-5); 1 IP, 1 run (unearned), 1 walk

SV – David Robertson (1): 1 IP, 2 walks

Up next​


Same start time for the Dodgers and Phillies on Tuesday, with Shohei Ohtani and Cristopher Sánchez squaring off on the mound and both teams trying to navigate tired bullpens after an eventful Monday game.

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-...llies-recap-loss-pages-betts-harper-schwarber
 
Dodgers and Phillies head for round two

gettyimages-2235663948.jpg


It’s been a while since I didn’t feel completely frustrated after a loss, but that’s where I’m at today. While the Dodgers failed in their comeback attempt Monday night, there still were a whole bunch of positives.

They hit

The Dodgers had 18 hits in Sunday’s game against San Francisco. They halved that on Monday night, but who they hit its more important. Ranger Suarez came into the game having been lights out lately. They tagged him for three runs, including a homer from Max Muncy. Suarez left the game down 3-1. Andy Pages also tagged Johan Duran for a home run in the ninth inning. Duran this season has only allowed two homers – that one to Pages, and one in July to Shohei Ohtani.

Sheehan looked great

Last season, the Dodgers had to rely on at least one bullpen game a series on their way to winning it all. This year, the starters are probably what’s going to get them deep into the playoffs if that happens. Emmet Sheehan will be a big part of that. The team used an opener for him, which didn’t exactly go as planned with Anthony Banda allowing Kyle Schwarber to go deep right off the bat, but Sheehan then came in to deliver 5.2 innings of one run ball, allowing one hit and striking out seven. He shut down a very good Phillies offense for a good chunk of the game and will be a weapon in the bullpen if he continues that.

Tanner Scott – back?

Every Dodger fan collectively groaned when Dave Roberts put Tanner Scott in the game in the ninth when the Phillies had a 5-4 lead. But he showed up this time, setting down the Philles 1-2-3 and keeping the game within one run which allowed Pages to tie it in the ninth.

Overall, it was a pretty decent game to start the series. The bats stayed going, Mookie Betts is continuing his Player of the Week status, and they kept battling. Worrisome that Jack Dryer, Anthony Banda and Alex Vesia gave up runs, but hopefully those are just blips. Blake Treinen, well, as we said yesterday, that has been happening all season.

The Dodgers will face another tough pitcher in Cristopher Sanchez on Tuesday. He is 13-5 on the season with a 2.57 ERA. He has allowed exactly one run in each of his last three starts and has only walked nine batters in his last seven games. Sanchez has faced the Dodgers three times in his career, has a 2-0 record and 3.57 ERA. Teoscar Hernandez has homered twice against Sanchez, and Alex Call only has one hit against him, but that too was a homer.

Shohei Ohtani will start for the Dodgers, and it will be a test to see how he looks against a playoff caliber team. He only went 3.2 innings in his last outing against the Baltimore Orioles, in what was a spot start after his own missed start in Pittsburgh. He should be back at full strength, and it would be good to see him go a full five innings.

If there is any such thing as a positive loss, the Dodgers had one last night. The Phillies look like the team to beat in the playoffs this year, and the Dodgers were right with them. You can say “yeah they should be!” and you would be right, but the Dodgers have not looked like those Dodgers most of the season. They just need to carry this momentum forward and good things will happen.

Tuesday game info​

  • Teams: Dodgers vs. Phillies
  • Ballpark: Dodger Stadium
  • Start time: 7:10 p.m.
  • TV: SportsNet LA, TBS (out of market)
  • Radio: AM 570 (English), KTNQ 1020 AM (Spanish)

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-scores-standings/103867/dodgers-phillies-head-round-two
 
Dodgers notes: Shohei Ohtani, Tanner Scott, bullpen concerns

imagn-27100684.jpg


If there was any doubt that Shohei Ohtani wouldn’t win his second straight NL MVP, those doubts were officially silenced after he clobbered his 50th home run of the season while dazzling for five no-hit frames on the mound.

Ohtani became the first player in Dodgers history with multiple 50 home run seasons— let alone one— and is now the first player in baseball history to hit 50 home runs and strike out 50 hitters in the same season. All this while trying to keep his team afloat in the National League playoff picture in the pursuit of a first round bye.

Ohtani has already proven in his time with the Dodgers that he can contribute in the postseason— disregarding a shoulder injury that derailed his World Series numbers— but the newest test will see how well he is on the mound in October. Ohtani spoke with Kirsten Watson of SportsNet LA postgame on Tuesday about his dominant start and how it’ll prepare him for the playoffs.

“I felt like everything went according to the plan this outing… It was pretty impressive to be able to come up with a really good game plan.”
Shohei Ohtani (5.0 IP, 0 H, 5 K, BB, 68 P; 2-5, HR (50), RBI) talks with the media after the #Dodgers drop their 2nd straight to the Phillies, losing 9-6. pic.twitter.com/o0WZXFjmlT

— SportsNet LA (@SportsNetLA) September 17, 2025

Links​


Out of all the moments to describe as “rock bottom” for Tanner Scott’s 2025 campaign, it came on Friday as he served a walk-off grand slam to the light hitting Patrick Bailey in the Dodgers’ 5-1 loss to the San Francisco Giants. Since then, he has been lights out over his past two appearances.

Could this finally be the turning point for Scott? Dave Roberts, who has put Scott in high regard and has only given his reliever the benefit of the doubt, is hopeful that it is the case, per Bill Plunkett of the Orange County Register.

“I really believe without a doubt that, for us to win the World Series, we’re gonna need him. For me, I don’t see any other side. So the most important thing is for him to get the confidence that baseball doesn’t hate him, and he’s the best option when he goes out there.”

Stop me if you’ve heard this before; a Dodgers starting pitcher limits the opposing team to zero hits only for the bullpen to blow the lead and the team’s chances of winning. Well, it happened again on Tuesday night, as the Dodgers bullpen allowed nine runs to the Philadelphia Phillies after Shohei Ohtani tossed five no-hit innings.

Blake Treinen took the loss on Tuesday after allowing the Phillies to score three runs in the ninth inning, and he spoke with Kirsten Watson of SportsNet LA after another frustrating loss thanks in large part to the bullpen.

“I can promise you, from the bottom of our hearts, we are trying our darnedest every single night. There’s nothing we haven’t done, there’s no stone we haven’t unturned… It’s literally just sometimes, thing aren’t working… Obviously, it’s been a frustrating stretch.”
Blake Treinen (L (1-6), 1.0 IP, 2 H, 3 ER, HR, BB, 19 P) talks with the media after the #Dodgers drop their 2nd straight to the Phillies, losing 9-6. pic.twitter.com/clsAV9ElL9

— SportsNet LA (@SportsNetLA) September 17, 2025

Source: https://www.truebluela.com/dodgers-links/103885/dodgers-shohei-ohtani-tanner-scott-bullpen-concerns
 
Back
Top