Los Angeles Times - 04.10.2019

(Ron) #1

D14 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4, 2019 LATIMES.COM/SPORTS


DODGERSVS.NATIONALS


Four rookies are on the
Dodgers’ National League
Division Series roster. A
fifth, Tony Gonsolin, nar-
rowly missed the cut. But
none of them were with the
club from the beginning this
season. The only rookie on
the Dodgers’ opening day
roster was outfielder Alex
Verdugo.
And it sounds as though
Verdugo, dealing with a back
injury for a month, will not
be on the roster for the end.
“As far as baseball activ-
ities, he’s really not doing a
whole lot,” Dodgers man-
ager Dave Robertssaid. “So
to see him ready at all in this
postseason, very unlikely.”
Verdugo, 23, was placed
on the injured list Aug. 6 with
a strained oblique. He was
scheduled to go on a rehab
assignment the first week of
September before rejoining
the Dodgers. That plan was
nixed when he injured his
back on a swing in a game
with the team’s rookie-level
affiliate Sept. 2. The rookie
outfielder was with the team
Thursday at Dodger Sta-
dium before Game 1 of the
NLDS. He was in workout
gear. He said he has prog-
ressed with his conditioning
program, but the rehab is
slow. He said he hasn’t
swung a bat or thrown a
baseball since injuring his
back.
Verdugo batted .294 with
12 home runs and an .817 on-
base-plus-slugging percent-
age in 106 games. He was one
of the Dodgers’ best at
avoiding strikeouts. If he re-
mains with the team — al-
ways an unknown after a
long offseason — he figures
to play a consistent role in
2020 after producing at the
plate while providing plus
defense in the three outfield
spots.
The Dodgers could’ve
used his defense and high
contact rate in October. In-
stead, Verdugo will be a
spectator.
“It could change but just
the trajectory he’s on,” Rob-
erts said, “it just doesn’t
seem likely.”

Matt Kemp drops by
One by one, the Dodgers
stopped by the bench to visit
the former teammate, who
was on their bench in a
Jackie Robinson jersey be-
fore Game 1.
Matt Kemp embraced
every one of them.
“What are you doing?”
Joc Pederson asked.
“Throwing out the first pitch
or something?”
“Absolutely not,” Kemp
replied. “That would mean
I’m done.”
Kemp, 35, intends on
playing next season. In his
second go-around with the
Dodgers last season, he was
the NL’s comeback player of
the year. Before the start of
this season, he was traded to
the Cincinnati Reds along
with Yasiel Puigand Alex
Wood. He fractured a rib col-
liding with an outfield wall in
late April and was released
by the Reds while on the in-
jured list.
Kemp was surprised by
the move.
“I wasn’t causing trou-
ble,” he said. “They had too
many options. I don’t think I
was in their plans.”
He signed a minor league
deal with the New York Mets
but played in only eight
games for their triple-A affil-
iate in Syracuse as he dealt
with the rib injury’s after-
effects. Once he recovered,
he started working out at
first base to make himself
more attractive to teams.
“It ain’t about the mon-
ey,” Kemp said. “I just love
competing. I like to play
baseball. You don’t think I
want to be out here with my
boys?”

NLDS REPORT

Verdugo


unlikely


for the


playoffs


By Jorge Castillo

MATT KEMP, right,
talks to Dave Roberts
before the game.

Harry HowGetty Images

Adam Kolarek had
waited a decade for this mo-
ment. His father used to
scout for the Baltimore Ori-
oles, and he grew up dream-
ing of a minute in the Octo-
ber spotlight. He played for
nine minor league teamsin
seven states before making
his major league debut.
So hats off to Gavin Lux,
who made his postseason
debut at 21. But Kolarek
made his at 30, and his Octo-
ber minute was literally that.
The national anthem
singer spent more time on
the field than Kolarek did.
He threw three pitches, and
his night was done. His
morning and afternoon had
dragged, in anticipation of


lining up on the third-base
line, sharing in the anthem,
taking in the fireworks.
“The day really crawled,”
he said. “I was really anxious
for game time.”
This wouldn’t be a story,
of course, had Kolarek not
done his job with distinction.
The final score might have
been lopsided — the Dod-
gers opened the National
League Division Series with
a 6-0 victory over the Wash-
ington Nationals — but Ko-
larek got a big out when the
game still was in doubt.
That was the only out the
Dodgers trusted him to get.
He is here to retire a left-
handed batter. Clayton Ker-
shaw or Kenley Jansen can
walk the first guy and strike
out the next; Kolarek usually
gets no second batter.
“I know the importance
of each pitch,” he said. “I try
not to let it be too jarring. I
know I have to bear down for
just a few short minutes.
“It’s a great role. It’s even
sweeter when you get your

guy out.”
Kolarek’s assignment on
this night was to retire Juan
Soto, the Nationals’ cleanup
batter and proud owner of
the “Childish Bambino”
nickname. When the Nation-
als finally roused from their
offensive slumber in the
eighth inning of Tuesday’s
wild-card game, Soto was
the guy who delivered the
game-winning hit.
The Nationals had out-
lasted Dodgers starter
Walker Buehler, who domi-
nated them over the first six
innings. They got one hit,
and all that seemed to stand
between Buehler and a shut-
out was his pitch count.
This would be the Na-
tionals’ chance, down 2-0.
Soto led off the seventh, but
his stay in the batter’s box
was brief.
Strike one. Strike two.
Strike three.
Soto stayed in the game,
of course. Kolarek did not.
He was not the reliever
the Dodgers fans coveted at

the July trade deadline, pri-
marily because they did not
know who he was.
He was drafted in the 11th
round, nine years ago. He
made his major league de-
but two years ago, at 28. He
was an especially anony-
mous bullpen cog for the
generally anonymous
Tampa Bay Rays.
This is the first year in
which he has not spent any
time in the minors. It could
be his last too.
He has done his job
splendidly, but his job could
cease to exist next year. The
so-called LOOGY — left-
handed, one-out guy — is an
endangered species.
If major league owners
enact their plan to force re-
lievers to face a minimum of
three batters next year, Ko-
larek could struggle to re-
main in the majors.
He faced at least three
batters in 38 of his 80 appear-
ances this season — and six
of 26 times with the Dodgers.
Thursday’s game marked

the ninth consecutive time
he has faced one batter, and
he has retired the batter
eight times.
Kolarek said he is not
worried about next year. His
splits justify how the Dod-
gers have used him — his ca-
reer OPS is .524 against left-
handed batters, .849 against
right-handed batters — but
he relies on a sinker, not on
the sweeping curve so preva-
lent among left-handed spe-
cialists.
“If I can get my ground
ball, I can still contribute,”
he said.
He attributed at least
some of his contribution on
Thursday to the fans. If he
had remained in Tampa Bay
and then made his postsea-
son debut in front of a sellout
crowd after playing in front a
mostly empty dome all sum-
mer, well, maybe he would
have been a little nervous.
“That’s an advantage of
playing at Dodger Stadium,”
Kolarek said. “You have a
good crowd every night.”

ADAM KOLAREKstruck out Nationals cleanup hitter Juan Soto on three pitches. Soto was the only batter Kolarek faced.


Wally SkalijLos Angeles Times

His one out is one for the ages


Called in to retire a


fellow left-hander,


Kolarek realizes his


postseason dreams.


By Bill Shaikin


The Washington Nation-
als were just 48 hours re-
moved from a raucous cele-
bration after their wild-card
win over Milwaukee on Tues-
day night, when players
bounced in unison to the
reggaeton thumping from
the clubhouse sound system
and turned the room into an
alcohol-soaked mosh pit.
Then the bright lights
came on in Dodger Stadium
on Thursday night, and the
Nationals looked like a team
in need of a fistful of Advil
and a cure for a nasty hang-
over.
Starting pitcher Patrick
Corbin had never walked
four batters or more in any of
the 1,147 innings he’s thrown
in seven big-league seasons;
the left-hander walked four
in the first inning of an even-
tual 6-0 loss to the Dodgers
in the opener of the National
League Division Series.
Veteran utility man
Howie Kendrick committed
one error in 304 chances of
the 48 games he played first
base this season; the 35-
year-old former Angel and
Dodger committed two er-
rors Thursday night, one
that allowed the second
Dodgers run to score, in the
fifth inning.
The Nationals are among
baseball’s most disciplined
teams at the plate — they
had the second-fewest
strikeouts and fourth-most
walks in the NL; they man-
aged two hits, struck out 13
times, walked three times
and “chased way over 20
pitches,” manager Davey
Martinez said, “which is un-


characteristic of our team.”
About the only phase of
their game that played true
to form was Washington’s
bullpen; Tanner Rainey gave
up a walk and a single in the
seventh, Fernando Rodney
gave up a two-run single, and
Hunter Strickland gave up
solo homers to Gavin Lux

and Joc Pederson in the
eighth.
“You see some weird
things in the playoffs,”
Kendrick said, “but some-
times things just happen.”
A few of those weird
things happened to Corbin
and Kendrick in the fifth.
With the Dodgers leading

1-0, Corbin struck out David
Freese and Justin Turner
and got ahead of dangerous
cleanup man Cody Bellinger
with two strikes.
But just as he did in the
first inning, when he lost
command of his fastball and
spiked a few too many slid-
ers, Corbin threw four of his

signature breaking pitches
for balls to put Bellinger on.
Washington third base-
man Anthony Rendon made
a spectacular back-hand
diving stop of Chris Taylor’s
shot down the line, but Tay-
lor beat the long throw to
first for a single, Bellinger
taking third on the hit.
Max Muncy ripped a
grounder to first. Kendrick
dropped his right knee to the
ground but still couldn’t
block the ball, which scooted
through his legs and into
right field. Bellinger scored
for a 2-0 Dodgers lead.
“You try to make every
play, and tonight it didn’t
work out,” Kendrick said.
“Unfortunately it’s in the
postseason, but I wouldn’t
change anything about the
way I tried to make that play.
Just one of those times you
miss it. You try to suck it up
and hope you make it up on
the other end. We weren’t
able to do that.”
The Nationals had five
hits against the Brewers on
Tuesday, rallying for three
runs in the eighth. Their best
scoring chance Thursday
came in the fourth, when
Dodgers starter Walker
Buehler walked three to load
the bases. The rally fizzled
when Asdrubal Cabrera hit
a one-hopper to the mound.
To even the series in
Game 2 on Friday night,
shortstop Trea Turner
thinks the Nationals need to
try a little easier.
“I feel like right now we’re
trying to do too much,”
Turner said. “It’s the post-
season, but we should have a
little bit of fun. Look around
... there’s energy in the sta-
dium, a great atmosphere.
“I don’t care what the
score is, what situation
you’re in, this is why you play
the game. I think if we realize
that, we can come out to-
morrow and play a little bet-
ter and have a little fun.”

Unbefitting the National character


Aberrant errors,


Corbin’s walks and


undisciplined offense


help sink Washington.


By Mike DiGiovanna

HOWIE KENDRICKdisputes a call after one of the Nationals’ 13 strikeouts.
Kendrick, usually a reliable fielder, also committed two errors at first base.

Wally SkalijLos Angeles Times
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