Destiny’s Dodgers?

Andrew Friedman said he was not going to be forced to make trades at the deadline because it results in dope-fiend moves that frequently don’t give excellent results. SD gutted their farm, and they have not really flourished. What is happening with the Dodgers’ bullpen would be funny if it weren’t so pathetic. I disagree with Duke that AF should have gutted the farm for more closers. How many is the right number? Three, Seven?

The Dodgers had Treinen, Scott, Kopech, Yates, and Vesia. Only Vesia has been reliable. Dreyer has been reliable, but may be getting fatigued. Banda is worthy, and they will find out about Sasaki today. If he is healthy, he could be a HUGE difference maker out of the bullpen. There is no room for him as a starter, but there could be as a closer. Sounds crazy, right? There are also Wrobleski, Casparius, and maybe Kyle Hurt. Will Klein could be incredible… if he can get near the strike zone. Edgardo Henriquez may be in over his head right now. Michael Kopech? Will he be back? Who knows? If healthy, Brock Stewart is solid.

What do you do? Leave Yates, Treinen, and Scott off the playoff roster? That’s a consideration, but then you have to consider what happened to Josh Sborz in the 2023 playoffs – he had a 5.50 ERA during the season and almost 15.00 ERA in September. Then he had a 0.75 ERA in the playoffs.

Remember this: Relievers are fickle. They can look like world beaters one day and cannon fodder the next. I don’t think it should have ever been a consideration to trade for more relievers at the deadline. Somebody has to step up – The Dodgers are in much better shape than in the 2025 playoffs. The staff is loaded – they just have to pitch like it.

For starters, you have Ohtani, Snell, and Yamamoto… maybe even Glasnow (if he doesn’t have his control, you yank him quickly. Then, you have Sheehan and Kershaw as bulk guys who can pitch 3-5 innings.

Mason Miller would have been nice, but the Dodgers did not have the package to get him and he has demanded that he be a starter next season.

There comes a time when you have to say, “We have enough players – they have to produce.” I don’t know what the Dodgers will do, but here’s what I would do:

I would tell the team that it makes no difference what your baseball card says. We are taking pitchers who can pitch to the playoffs. Treinen, Yates, and Scott would be left off the roster. We cannot trust you any longer. That tactic has a downside as well. It’s what I would do, but maybe not what the Dodgers will do.

Yamamoto, Snell, and Ohtani would be the starters, with Kershaw, Glasnow, and Sheehan being the bulk relievers. That’s a whole lot better than last year. What it boils down to is: “Are these Destiny’s Dodgers?

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This article has 85 Comments

  1. Agreed – it is past comical on how bad the pen is.
    Hollywood would have a hard time writing a script to match the Dodger’s bullpen exploits this year, or if some body did they would be laughed out of the building – being told how stupid and nonsensical the script was.
    Previous posts that I could concur with noted that Robert’s keep putting TS into position to get him ready and gain confidence – WELL we are way past that time now.
    He hasn’t earned it and the other teams don’t fear him! He is liability now and shouldn’t pitch in the late innings.
    If anything he gives the other teams hope!

    Yates definitely should not be on the roster – between Treinen and Scott I would go with Treinen as it seems he is closer to figuring it out than Scott.

    1. Mechanical issues and he was tired. It’s why he was on a very regimented pitch count in AAA.

      His arm could be dead? Maybe?

  2. our starting pitchers need to go 7 innings The money they are being paid I can’t see why not This is the reason the bullpen is so tired Roberts cannot be blamed for what Tanner Scott did and has done all season for the Dodgers This is all on Friedman You’ll talk about getting rid of Roberts I don’t think Roberts is the problem we should start looking at Friedman and what he has brought to the Dodgers

    1. WOW – Really Friedman is at fault because Scott (and others) forgot how to pitch?
      What Friedman has brought to the Dodgers is massive success and we probably only get better in the future years.

      ALSO – nobody said to get rid of Robert’s as the majority of us realize he is probably more frustrated and PO’ed than any of us due to lack of production from the pen.
      Maybe outside of Vesia – not one of them have been able to take the mantle – says more about them than Robert’s or Friedman.

    2. Yeah, Friedman only has the best record of any President/GM in baseball with the Dodgers with a .620 winning percentage. Brian Cashman of the Yankees is second with .589.

      Secondly, his biggest star has a clause in his contract that if Friedman leaves, he can too.

      So, yeah – Let’s get rid of the bum!

    3. Almost every sentence in this post is non-sensical.

      Of course every “sentence” doesn’t have punctuation, so you need to take poetic license to figure out where the sentences would begin and end.

  3. Maybe Doc should quit bashing his head against the wall putting Scott in super high leverage situations. He clearly is cooked for this and is not going to recover this season. 10 BS is enough to show this. Use him in the 6th or 7th only and see if he pitches better. The runway is about to come to an end and Doc is going to have to pull up. If the plan is to use somebody else as a closer in the playoffs, I think they should get 1 or 2 looks in these situations first.
    For now, everybody including Scott needs to forget about the size of his contract and do what’s best for the Ball Club to win ball games.

    1. Of course, at many points throughout the season, fans thought Muncy, Conforto, and Betts were also cooked.

      So, there is that.

      Also, how do you explain Josh Sborz? 5.50 ERA in 2023, including 15.00 in September and then 0.75 ERA in the playoffs?

      I can’t explain it!

  4. You keep citing the Josh Sborz example. Do you have others? The mostly likely thing is that Scott, Yates, Treinen et al will keep pitching the same way they have been pitching.

    1. Some are similar… some are different. All are intriguing!
      1. Byung-Hyun Kim (2001 Diamondbacks)

      Regular season: 2–7, 2.94 ERA, but allowed 13 HR in just 98 IP and often melted down in save spots.

      Playoffs (before WS Game 4–5 disasters): Was lights out in the NLDS and NLCS, striking out 17 in 10 innings. His World Series blown saves overshadowed just how dominant he was leading up to that.

      2. Brandon Morrow (2017 Dodgers)

      Regular season: 2.06 ERA looks good, but he’d bounced around teams with a long track record of injuries and inconsistency (career ERA over 4.00 entering 2017).

      Playoffs: He pitched in 14 of the Dodgers’ 15 postseason games (insane workload), giving up just 2 runs until being gassed in the World Series. He was arguably their most reliable arm outside of Jansen.

      3. Francisco Rodríguez – “K-Rod” (2002 Angels)

      Regular season: Barely pitched in the majors (5 games, 5.40 ERA). Hadn’t proven anything at that level yet.

      Playoffs: Out of nowhere, struck out 28 in 18.2 innings, with a 1.93 ERA. He became a household name as a rookie flamethrower.

      4. David Price (2018 Red Sox, in relief)

      Regular season: Solid starter numbers (3.58 ERA), but his postseason reputation was horrible (0–9 career in playoff starts).

      Playoffs (relief appearances): In the ALCS and World Series he finally flipped the script, closing the Astros out in relief in Game 5, then dominating the Dodgers in the World Series with clutch bullpen outings.

      5. Wade Davis (2014 Royals)

      Regular season (before 2014): Failed as a starter with Tampa Bay and early in KC (career ERA over 4.00).

      2014 regular season: Great as a reliever (1.00 ERA), but wasn’t yet a household name.

      Playoffs: Absolutely unhittable — 12 innings, 0 runs, 20 strikeouts. Cemented his reputation as a big-game weapon.

      6. Jeff Weaver (2006 Cardinals, in relief and spot starts)

      Regular season: Released mid-season by the Angels after posting a 6.29 ERA. Looked finished.

      Playoffs: Reinvented himself, throwing key relief and starts for the Cardinals, including a gem in Game 5 of the World Series to clinch the title.

      A lot of these guys were mediocre (or worse) in the regular season — either because of inconsistency, failed starting roles, or bad reputations — but when the lights came on in October, they turned into legends.

      1. This makes interesting reading. And in all sports there is someone unknown who comes thru in the big moment. And I’m sure Bear can write a whole book on that. But it doesn’t change the fact that the BP is a problem going into playoffs

      2. I remember when K-Rod emerged as a setup man for Percival.
        Just electric stuff from a rookie. That pen somehow carried a wild card team to the championship.
        Morrow was a great pickup for the Dodgers.

  5. Agreed about the Sborz situation – but, I hate the idea of hoping to catch lighting in a bottle again.
    BUT, we may have no other options:)

  6. I don’t blame AF for Scott’s failure. nor do i blame him for yates’s failures. Trienan is a victim of injuries and age. kopech likewise with injuries. henriquez? potential but not ready for prime time. Vesia is not the same as before the il stint. Banda is good for the most part but not 8th or ninth material. Dryer is good. i believe doc should have stuck with him last night, he chose not to and got out chessed in a game of chess with Lovello. the dodgers should not have the worst bullpen in baseball period! maybe in the playoffs they won’t. now i’m afraid they might fall behind the padres and have to go to chicago for 3 games. not saying they can or can’t best the cubs in wrigley. but it would be a lot easier with 3 at home. The starters are the best in baseball right now. the bullpen is the worst. something has to give! …. what a pleasure to watch the Detroit Tigers collapse! AJ Hinch has earned this remarkable streak of bad baseball! He’s been looking for “SIGNS “. to help stop the losing, but his lucky can isn’t in detroit. he must have left it in houston!

  7. Come playoff time the idea of using Kershaw, Sheehan or maybe even Glasnow as bulk relievers is a no brainer. Still to be determined is whether the Dodgers will be in a one game wild card situation or a best 2 out of 3 as division winners. If they survive as the playoffs continue there will no doubt be challenges where matchups factor into Robert’s decision making regarding who is brought in from the bullpen beyond the bulk relievers. Who to trust? Who in fact will be in the bullpen and who will be left off the roster? Ah, the suspense of it all… Will some of us resort to self medicating with junk food and adult soda pop as the drama unfolds? Diggin’ the post season! GO DODGERS!!!

    1. “Still to be determined is whether the Dodgers will be in a one game wild card situation:” You don’t watch baseball much do you?

  8. Performance is on the player period. Not Doc’s or AF’s problem. I have seen some call for LA to just release Scott and eat his contract. Never going to happen, at least not in the first year of his deal.

    1. Most fans are in the process of losing their minds or have already lost them. In the instant case, he may have never had one. 😉

      1. The Dodgers site on X is a cesspool of retardism. You would think we were finishing behind the Rockies.

      2. No creo que Dodgers pueda competir dignamente en playoffs con tantas deficiencia en relevo y defensa ( y fundamentos)?

    2. Beg to differ.
      Roberts and the front office may not be on the field, but they definitely need to perform.
      Tanner Scott is talented and he should have better years ahead. But right now he’s leads the majors with 10 blown saves.
      I wonder if the brass gave Kenley serious consideration. Were some bridges burned? AF wound up paying Yates $13 million for one season, while the Angels paid Kenley $10 million–and while playing for a much weaker team he’s been adding to his HOF nomination papers the entire season.
      Oh well.

      1. All Roberts can do is play the cards he is dealt. Once on the field, performance is always on the player. Roberts has had less to work with this season due to the injuries and the fact that all of his stars are performing at lower levels than they did last year save Freeman who has a higher BA and one less homer. But he still went through a horrible stretch where he couldn’t hit water if he fell out of a boat. Pages has passed last year’s numbers which has been a plus. Especially since it looked like he was going to get sent down to AAA early in the year. Fans bitch about the deadline, but we have no clue what the Dodgers were trying to do. We only know how it ended up, and AF never talks about who he might have targeted at the deadline. Ohtani swings at way too many pitches he couldn’t hit if he were in the other batter’s box. Yes, he is a pitcher also and a good one which improves his value, but if he had about 50% more plate discipline, the guy would be a .300 hitter or better every year. Instead, he has struck out 183 times this year, just 6 shy of his career high with the Angels. His slug, OPS, are down, he does not drive in a lot of runs, probably because the bottom of the lineup has been so inept most of the year. Freeman 128 K’s, 28 more than last year. Ohtani 183 K’s, 21 more than last year, Teo 132 Ks, less than last year simply because he has played 23 less games. Pages 129, 21 more than last season, Conforto has almost matched his number from last season when he had a much better offensive year. As a team, they are 23 Ks from matching last year’s numbers. I think the pen has suffered from the loss of Phillips and Graterol a lot. Expectations for Scott were through the roof. There are a lot of reasons for this year’s struggles that one cannot lay at managements feet. And there are things ownership and the front office might have done earlier in the year to shore things up rather than trying to find a diamond in the rough all the time. Bottom line, they did what they did, and we as fans have to live with that. You can bet your house that this winter, one of the first things they will address will be the bullpen. But there are no guarantees that the fixes will be any better than what they have.

  9. most of us are still enjoying the spoils of last season! the comeback against the team that isn’t afraid of the dodgers. the complete beat down of the hated yankees! Probably not every person on this site watches baseball 24-7! i’m watching paul skeenes and hunter green go at it tonight! i’m checking in on the tigers and cleveland also. would i watch the twins play say, the rockies? probably not. would rather watch gunsmoke! We all love the dodgers and want them to win! It may not happen this year, but don’t bet against them!

  10. “Dodgers right-hander Roki Sasaki is set to rejoin the team on Wednesday. He’s expected to be activated from the 60-day IL after missing more than four months with a shoulder impingement. Sasaki will work out of the bullpen, manager Dave Roberts told reporters (including Sonja Chen of MLB.com). Los Angeles already has an open 40-man roster spot after waiving Chuckie Robinson over the weekend, so they’ll only need to make an active roster move”.

  11. I don’t blame Friedman for signing Scott. We were all excited. He looked lights out last year and maybe he will next year but right now he doesn’t belong out there closing games. He’s a mess, his confidence is shot, and it’s pretty much a blown save unless the opponent happens to hit a rocket right at someone.

  12. Mark yiu keep mentioning Sborz. He ptoblem with hHe Dodgers is that their problem is more than 1 player. Dryer, Henrique’s and Scott all had problems. S Do you really think all 3 will suddenly turn it around?

    It will be interesting to see how Sasaki does out of the pen what’s going g in with Stewart? Is Klein really an option? Next 5 games will be interesting.

  13. Magic number down to 2 for the Western Division title and the number 3 seed playing TBD at home in a best of 3 staring next Tuesday with all games at Dodger Stadium as the Padres lost to the Brewers today 3-1

  14. Another wasted brilliant performance by our starting pitchers. Right now if the Dodgers don’t figure who can close out games innings 6-9 or maybe 7-9, it will a short post season. Can’t believe what I’m witnessing when the game is on the line. We praise AF for his great trades and roster building, but his signings of this year’s bullpen has been, nothing less than awful! Watch the body language of Yates, Scott and Treinen when they come into the game, they show NO confidence waiting for something bad to happen.

  15. “The Dodgers are going to place right-hander Kirby Yates on the injured list due to a hamstring issue. Manager Dave Roberts passed the news along to reporters, including Fabian Ardaya of The Athletic. That will be the corresponding move for fellow righty Roki Sasaki to be reinstated from the IL, a move that was reported yesterday”.

    Yates’ career as a Dodger is hopefully over!

  16. 9:40 PM ET

    Dodgers (88-69)
    Diamondbacks (80-77)

    SP Blake Snell L
    5-4 2.44 ERA
    SP Ryne Nelson R
    7-3 3.34 ERA

    Confirmed Lineup
    DH S. Ohtani L
    SS Mookie Betts R
    1B F. Freeman L
    3B Max Muncy L
    RF T. Hernandez R
    CF Tommy Edman S
    LF Andy Pages R
    2B Miguel Rojas R
    C Ben Rortvedt L

    In Domed Stadium

  17. Once again, the Book of Mormon rises to the defense of Andrew Friedman, the Dear Infallible Leader, and his failure to bring in a marquee closer.
    Mason Miller. Jhoan Duran. David Bednar.
    All three were traded to contenders not called the Dodgers. Miller, the biggest talent, joined the Padres mighty bullpen–and is under contract for a few more seasons. Not a rental.
    AF either lost out or didn’t try. The Padres added Miller, the Phils added Duran, the Yankees added Bednar. Meanwhile, the Dodgers flipped Outman for Brock Stewart, who isnow injured. Yippee.
    How about old friend Kenley Jansen? He’s having a terrific season, with only one blown save. The Angels signed him for $10m last winter, while AF was writing much fatter checks to ensure the services of Tanner Scott, Kirby Yates and Blake Treinen.
    Gee, even the author of the Book of Mormon questioned some of those deals.
    And remember: AF said he did that because the cost of talent at the trade deadline was just too damn high! Well, we don’t really need to do a cost-to-benefit analysis to see the deals really haven’t worked out–and that the $17 m for Conforto wasn’t a great investment either.
    And what about Kenley Jansen? Would the prospect-starved Angels, with one of the game’s worst farm systems, been interested in a couple of decent prospects for ol’ Kenley? How about Bobby Miller and/or Kendall George and.or Maddux Bruns or ???
    It’s funny to me that a fan will boast about how the Dodgers have a loaded farm system but then balk at the idea of trading two or three prospects — or maybe “suspects”–to fill an immediate need that could be the difference between an early exit in the playoffs or another championship. Not only did the Pads and Phillies add a better closer, they also added better bats and defenders, with Laureano and Hearn going to the Pads and Harrison Bader to the Phils. If you have a #1 or top five farm system, you can deal a few prospects and it won’t be “gutted.”
    Just last season, the front office pulled off deals that landed three key players: Edman, Flaherty, Kopech.
    This season, AF landed Call and Stewart. Ho-hum. Remarkably, it turns out that Rortvedt, who was expected to be the No. 3 catcher, may be the most important addition. And yes, the Dodgers added a couple more prospects to that prospect-rich farm system–which is another reason not to worry about trading a couple of top prospects to fill an obvious need.
    Which of the Dodgers’ top prospects now turns out to be the next Diego Cartaya?

    1. Running a team with a time machine sure would be useful!

      Similarly, of the current prospects which turns out to be the next Will Smtih or Sheehan or Busch?

      1. Yes, it’s impossible to predict the future. Yes, retrospect is just that: retrospect.
        But again: Just one season ago, the front office dealt a few prospects and landed three guys who were vital in the Dodgers’ championship run. Edman remains in the starting lineup. In years past, the Dodgers dealt prospects to land the likes of Scherzer, Trea Turner, Machado, Darvish, Manny Ramirez—all impact players. (To get Manny, the Dodgers gave up future non-superstars Andy LaRoche and Bryan Morris.)
        So here’s my argument: To get PROVEN major league talent–like a Mason Miller– it’s OK to deal prospects who might turn out to be darn good players, even all-star caliber, but really haven’t proven anything yet at the highest level. If you look at any “Top 100 Prospect” list from five years ago, you’ll find some successes and some guys who fell short. Tarik Skubal was ranked in the 50s and wound up winning the Cy.
        So in years past, the front office swung for the fences.
        This season, they played small ball.
        No, we can’t predict the future….
        But is anybody here delighted with the state of the bullpen? Would a Mason Miller or Jhoan Duran represent an upgrade–even if it cost a couple of good prospects who might be crushing it at OKC next season?

  18. Now let’s commit another heresy and criticize manager Dave Roberts, who recently had this to say about rookie Hyesong Kim:
    “I don’t feel comfortable with him versus left-handed pitching. Balls that are going away from him,” Roberts said recently. “I think with Hyeseong, I love the defense. … This is his first year in the major leagues and I think he’s done a great job.”
    So let’s look at Kim’s stats against southpaws, against whom he’s only had 19 ABs, evidently because of Roberts comfort level.
    So it’s not a large sample–but Kim has hit lefties to a team-best .947, topping Shohei’s .892. Among his seven hits are one HR and one double.
    What about this makes Roberts “uncomfortable”?
    Remember how he kept penciling Conforto into the lineup when Conforto wasn’t hitting a lick? Was he comfortable with that? Is he comfortable with Scott, Treinen and Yates?
    Could playing Kim more often make Roberts feel a little bit more comfortable?

    1. Says the guy who thinks James Outman should be our CF’er!

      Don’t say that too loud, or you will be institutionalized!

      Just looking out for your safety!

      1. Says the guy who thought Miguelito was “stellar” at 2B….
        But yes, I think in retrospect the Dodgers would have been wiser to pass on Conforto and play Outman in CF, perhaps in a platoon with Edman.
        That would have saved the Dodgers about $16 million–and it would have dramatically improved the OF defense while enhancing the flexibility of the roster.
        If Outman flopped as badly a Conforto, well, he would not be that hard to replace. Heck, perhaps they’d even call up Ryan Ward to see if he could hit ML pitching. (Estuery Ruiz and Justin Dean would get their chances–but not the minor league HR and RBI champ.) And if Ward flopped, the Dodgers could have fixed this at the trade deadline by trading for Bader or Laureano.
        Mark, please tell us again why Ryan Ward isn’t worthy of a shot in the majors.
        If Conforto flops–and he certainly was flopping until recently–the front office would still saddled with that $17 million investment, not too mention the executive ego invested in the decision. That’s a problem harder to fix. Conforto’s contract limited the Dodgers’ flexibility.
        All of this is, of course, Monday morning quarterbacking.

        1. Why are you asking Mark why Ward isn’t worth of a shot in the majors.

          The reason Ward isn’t in the majors is that he’s not good enough. Any other team could have traded for him, as Tampa did for Feduccia at the deadline.

          Any team could have claimed Ward in the Rule 5 draft.

          Any team who thought he deserved to be on a major league roster, that is.

          None do, none did, it’s most probable that none will.

  19. And BTW, if the Dodgers had traded for two closers, they would have had to GUT the farm (5 or 6 prospects) and then cut Treinen, Yates, and /or Scott at a cost of about $100 million.

    Yeah, that’s smart!

    Yeah -I’m a moron, but if stupid could fly, you’d be a jet!

  20. Also, let’s not forget that the Dodgers will have to pay around $150 million in Luxury Tax this year. Yikes!

    1. First, I don’t think they’d have needed to trade for two closers. One closer is all that’s needed. My prefered target would have been Mason Miller, but right now Kenley Jansen would look damn good back in Dodger blue.
      So no, they would not have had to “gut” the farm system.
      But I find it amusing how you are now defending the $100 million investment in Scott, Yates and Treinen… even after you had previously criticized those moves.
      So confusing!
      Surely you’re not arguing that the Dodgers should simply roll out the players with the fattest contracts. Would you play Scott or Treinen instead of Sheehan?
      Of course we are discussing this because of Scott’s major-league-leading TENTH blown save, coming on the heels of Treinen’s latest debacle.
      The trio of Scott, Treinen and Yates were supposed to be, um, stellar.
      Seriously, my hope now is that some combination of Sheehan, Sasaki, Kershaw and Heaney come to the rescue

  21. If the Dodgers lose again today, and if they plan to blame Roberts for taking Sasaki out of the game after just one inning, Don’t do it, because the plan is to use Sasaki from the bullpen, and they plan to use him again in two days to see if he can do the job.

  22. The second I saw Vesia was on the mound, I stopped watching the game because I was already expecting this to happen, you don’t need to be a fortune teller to know what was going to happen.

    I hope not, but it seems like I’m going to be left wanting to see them celebrate in the stadium pool!

  23. Post-season Edman needs to be in the lineup every game. I don’t give a rats ass what Conforto has hit lately. The Dodgers are going to have to ride the starting pitching to win. They need the best defense they have on the field. That does not include playing Conforto and his .200 average. Edman needs to be in CF every game. I’d platoon Kim and Miggy at 2B. Doc won’t so I would play Miggy every game there then.

    1. The Conforto experiment for 2025 should NOW be declared over. I also would rather see Pages in left, Edman in center and if they have to Teo in right(preferably Teo and Pages should switch positions).

      1. I agree. 100%. Pages arm plays way better in right than Teo’s. Anyone who thinks differently is a moron.
        🙂

  24. STOP using Vesia till next Tuesday when the playoffs start in LA against TBD. He is clearly overworked .

  25. This injury will hurt the Padres:

    Laureano was diagnosed with a fractured finger after his removal from Wednesday’s game against the Brewers, Dennis Lin of The Athletic reports.

    “Manager Mike Shildt added that Laureano’s injury will keep him sidelined through at least the NL Wild Card Series, and he could remain out if the Padres are able to advance further. The 31-year-old outfielder will finish his best regular-season campaign since 2019 with a .281/.342/.512 slash line to go with 24 homers, 76 RBI, 72 runs scored and seven stolen bases across 441 plate appearances between Baltimore and San Diego”.

  26. Day ONE!! Kershaw and Sasaki in relief. Worked so far. and Yates gone. Will they be bold enough to leave Scott off roster?

    1. My guess it’s with the magic number at 1. Scott has a couple more chances to try to prove something, anything. Treinen too. One batter last night was not enough of a positive sample.

    2. And Scott threw a clean inning along with Kershaw and Saski. We know Trenien and Scott haven’t been reliable but Doc keeps parading them out there because they have incredible breaking stuff and velocity.
      We really don’t talk enough about Pages’ defense (and his 26 dingers), or Rojas, not to mention Mookies defense. These three are the glue on defense along with Freddie.

  27. Let’s wrap things up today ,celebrate the Western Division title and rest some of the bullpen and position players this weekend against the Mariners and get ready for Tuesday.

  28. 3:40 PM ET EARLY GAME TODAY

    Dodgers (89-69)
    Diamondbacks (80-78)

    SP Y. Yamamoto R
    11-8 2.58 ERA
    SP Nabil Crismatt R
    3-0 2.61 ERA

    Confirmed Lineup
    DH S. Ohtani L
    SS Mookie Betts R
    RF T. Hernandez R
    1B F. Freeman L
    CF Andy Pages R
    LF M. Conforto L
    2B Miguel Rojas R
    3B E. Hernandez R
    C D. Rushing L

    In Domed Stadium

  29. The first step is done, I think there are 13 more games left to complete the mission…
    Congratulations Dodgers!

    I LOVE KIRSTEN WATSON

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