Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Large investment in Betts paying off

Betts, the Dodgers’ $365-million leadoff man, has paid immediate dividends

- By Jorge Castillo

The star right fielder came through in clutch in his first two playoff games with team.

The Dodgers acquired Mookie Betts in February and committed $365 million to him in July for one reason above all: To put them over the top in October. They wanted him for the kind of game-changing playoff moment he delivered in the fifth inning against the Milwaukee Brewers on Thursday.

Betts had never faced Brandon Woodruff, a hard-throwing righthande­r, before Game 2 of the National League wild-card series. The first two encounters were onesided.

Betts struck out trying to check his swing on a 97-mph fastball up and out of the strike zone in the first inning. He didn’t even bother waiting to see the first base umpire’s ruling on the appeal. He knew he committed.

In his second at-bat, Woodruff fooled Betts with an 85-mph changeup that dove back over the outer half of the plate for strike three looking to end the third inning. Betts walked to the dugout without protest. He was again soundly defeated. The strikeouts were two of the eight Woodruff accumulate­d in the first four innings.

“He’s obviously one of the best of the best,” Betts said. “What he was doing, he pitched amazing.”

The circumstan­ces were different when Betts stepped into the batter’s box for a third time against Woodruff in the fifth inning. The Dodgers, preying on the Brewers’ inability to turn an inning-ending double play, had manufactur­ed a run with two outs on an RBI groundball single up the middle from Austin Barnes to lead 1-0.

The Brewers gave them an opening. It was on Betts, working with intel from the first two atbats, to make sure the Dodgers further capitalize­d with two on and two out.

Betts took the first two pitches outside to jump ahead. With Corey Seager on deck, the pressure was on Woodruff to walk the line between throwing a strike and not offering Betts a pitch to drive. He tripped.

The next pitch was a 96-mph sinker that darted over the middle. Betts turned on it and clobbered a

line drive down the left-field line. Two runs scored. Betts raced to second for his third double in two nights. The Dodgers went ahead 3-0 — a lead that held thanks to Clayton Kershaw’s dominant eight-inning pitching performanc­e — and advanced to the NL Division Series.

“Mookie just has a way of staying in the moment, seeing the pitch, getting a good pitch to hit,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “To add a couple insurance runs on that double was huge for us, a little breathing room for Clayton. It certainly makes us all better when he’s in the lineup.”

Betts’s initial place in the Dodgers’ lineup raised eyebrows. Despite communicat­ing his preference to hit leadoff, Betts batted second on opening day.

He flipped between first and second for the season’s first three weeks depending on the opposing starting pitcher’s handedness. He was the leadoff man against left

handers and batted second against right-handers. The Dodgers were experiment­ing with eyes on October.

But the Dodgers’ alternativ­es in the leadoff spot struggled and Betts batted leadoff against a right-hander for the first time Aug. 13. He went four for four with three home runs in an 11-2 win over the San Diego Padres and he stayed there.

“I think it’s just more comfortabl­e in the leadoff spot, knowing I don’t have to look at the lineup,” the 27-year-old Betts said. “I know where I’m hitting and where I’m playing. That was just a comfort thing.”

The Dodgers went 31-10 to finish the regular season upon the switch. Betts finished the season with a .302 batting average, 13 home runs and a .952 on-base-plus-slugging percentage in the spot he covets, cementing himself as an NL MVP contender.

He supplies plus defense and

baserunnin­g. Off the field, he continues to establish himself as a leader. He gives teammates pointers. His work ethic resonates with peers. He operates with reassuring tranquilit­y. He expects to win and teammates absorb the confidence.

“Mookie kind of separates himself, I feel like, with the consistenc­y,” Kershaw said. “And then the other things he can do on the baseball field if he happens to not be getting hits — that’s what separates him. And there’s also confidence there, just a really calming influence, I think.”

On Thursday, he calmed any nerves with one swing. It was one of many game-changing moments the Dodgers envision Betts producing this postseason and for a long time. He’s the superstar talent they sought to push them to that elusive championsh­ip. Two games into the postseason, he’s already delivered.

“Thankfully,” Kershaw “he’s on our team.” said,

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? THE DODGERS’ Mookie Betts batted .302 with 13 home runs and an OPS of .952 from the leadoff spot in the regular season to slide into the National League’s most valuable player conversati­on.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times THE DODGERS’ Mookie Betts batted .302 with 13 home runs and an OPS of .952 from the leadoff spot in the regular season to slide into the National League’s most valuable player conversati­on.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States