Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Buehler, Kershaw to start first two games

- NLCS NOTES By Jack Harris and Mike DiGiovanna

Walker Buehler and Clayton Kershaw will remain the Dodgers’ Game 1 and 2 starters in the National League Championsh­ip Series, respective­ly, manager Dave Roberts said Saturday, lining the pair up to potentiall­y pitch in Games 6 and 7 as well, if needed.

For Games 3, 4 and 5, Roberts said the Dodgers probably would use more traditiona­l starters than they did in the third game of the division series, when Dustin May was a one-inning opener. The order of the rotation, however, remains undecided.

While Buehler and Kershaw will remain on their normal betweensta­rts routine, making them unlikely to be used as relievers in the series, Roberts wanted to keep the team’s “optionalit­y” open with its other three starters: May, Julio Urías and Tony Gonsolin.

In the NLDS, May came on as a reliever in Game 1 before opening two nights later. Urías threw the bulk of the innings in Game 3 as a reliever. Gonsolin, who was set to start Game 4, didn’t pitch in the three-game sweep.

“I honestly don’t know who [the starters in Games] 3, 4 and 5 are,” Roberts said of the NLCS. “Until we need to answer that question, I’ll feel good about it. But right now I just don’t feel the need.”

The Braves seem to have a slightly clearer rotation. Lefthander Max Fried, a Santa Monica native whom Roberts called “one of the elite pitchers in baseball” after going 7-0 with a 2.25 ERA in the regular season, will start Game 1 for a third straight series. After holding the Cincinnati Reds scoreless over seven innings in the wildcard round, he gave up four runs in four innings against the Miami Marlins last week.

Rookie right-hander Ian Anderson pitched both of the Braves’ previous Game 2s, improving upon his strong 1.95 ERA in the regular season with back-to-back scoreless starts to open this postseason. Right-hander Kyle Wright was also sharp in Game 3 of the NLDS, throwing six scoreless innings of his own to complete the sweep.

Josh Tomlin and Huascar Ynoa were the only other pitchers on the Braves’ NLDS roster to make more than two starts this year. The bullpen recorded MLB’s fourth-best ERA, 3.50, despite pitching the second-most innings.

“Those guys collective­ly are very good,” Roberts said. “They just do a good job of preventing runs. They’ve done it better than anybody this year in the postseason, so we’ve got our work cut out for us.”

First things f irst

This series will feature two of the most dynamic and productive leadoff batters in baseball in Braves center fielder Ronald Acuña Jr. and Dodgers right fielder Mookie Betts.

Acuña, 22, hit .250 with a .987 onbase-plus-slugging percentage, 14 homers, 29 RBIs, 38 walks and eight stolen bases in 46 games this season to help Atlanta win the NL East. He has hit .273 with a homer and two doubles in five playoff games.

He had a monster 2019 season, batting .280 with 41 homers, 101 RBIs and 37 stolen bases.

Betts, 28, hit .292 with a .927 OPS, 16 homers, 39 RBIs, 10 stolen bases and 24 walks in 55 games in his first season with the Dodgers. The 2018 American League most valuable player hit .368 with five doubles, four RBIs and six runs in his first five playoff games for the Dodgers.

“They both impact the game in every aspect — in the batter’s box, in the field, on the bases,” Roberts said. “They’re both energizing players that players gravitate toward, fans gravitate toward.

“Having them at the top [of the order] taking potentiall­y five atbats or getting the most at-bats on your club and kind of igniting, setting the tone, they both do that for their clubs.”

Potential roster moves

Dodgers corner infielder Edwin Ríos, who missed the NLDS because of a groin injury, took swings on Friday and ran the bases at 75%, and Roberts said there is a chance he could be activated for the NLCS.

Ríos, who hit .250 with a .946 OPS, eight homers and 17 RBIs in 32 games this season, started at designated hitter in the Sept. 30 playoff opener against the Brewers and would give the Dodgers a lefthanded-hitting option.

Roberts said the team is also mulling over possible changes in the makeup of the bullpen to “continue to make sure all the matchups make sense for us.”

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