Los Angeles Times

Kershaw stays with Dodgers

Star pitcher agrees to threeyear, $93-million contract

- By Jorge Castillo

The ace pitcher and face of the franchise agreed on Friday to a three-year, $93-million deal plus incentives to remain with Los Angeles.

When Clayton Kershaw contemplat­ed his future, and the prospect of entering free agency for the first time this week, two priorities ascended above all else: family and winning.

He sought to ensure his wife and children were happy while giving himself the best chance to complete a Hall of Fame resume with a World Series title.

It did not take long to decide returning to the Dodgers provided both. So on Friday, five days after the Dodgers’ season ended with a second consecutiv­e World Series disappoint­ment, Kershaw agreed to a three-year contract that guarantees him $93 million, plus potential bonuses, to remain with the only major league organizati­on he has ever known.

“I wanted to stay here,” Kershaw said during a conference call with reporters. “Financial, everything aside, it was more valuable to me to just stay here. I’m glad we got that done.”

Kershaw, 30, the ace and face of the franchise for a decade, had two years and $65 million remaining on the seven-year, $215-million deal he signed with the Dodgers in January 2014. He was scheduled to make $32 million next season and $33 million in

2020. In restructur­ing his contract to cover another year, he will receive at least an additional $28 million — $31 million in each of the next three years, not counting incentives.

The Dodgers officially announced the agreement a short time after the 1 p.m. deadline for Kershaw to decide to play out the final two years of his contract or opt out and become a free agent. Kershaw’s return leaves Hyun-Jin Ryu as the only Dodgers starter who could be a free agent this offseason. The club still has Walker Buehler, Rich Hill, Kenta Maeda, Alex Wood, Ross Stripling, Julio Urias and Caleb Ferguson as options for the 2019 rotation.

Kershaw is widely regarded as the best pitcher of his generation. He owns a 2.39 career regular-season earned-run average, the lowest for a starting pitcher in the game’s modern era. He has posted the National League’s best ERA five times and led the league in strikeouts three times. His 61.6 FanGraphs Wins Above Replacemen­t stat since making his major-league debut in 2008 at 20 is the best among starting pitchers in baseball. He has won the NL Cy Young Award three times and is the last pitcher in the majors to have been voted most valuable player, earning the award in 2014. He was an allstar for seven consecutiv­e seasons until 2018.

His career is only missing a World Series title.

“Winning is still the most important thing for me,” Kershaw said. “That hasn’t changed. It won’t change.”

Kershaw’s value in Los Angeles extends beyond his pitching accomplish­ments, something the Dodgers could not overlook. He has been instrument­al in the Dodgers’ run of eight postseason appearance­s over the past 10 years, and is a beloved figure whose relentless work ethic is a model for teammates.

But Kershaw’s history in October and his statistica­l trajectory complicate matters. Kershaw lugs a 4.32 ERA in 152 career postseason innings — an eight-year sample size too significan­t to discard — and endured another shaky October this year.

While he delivered two sterling starts and a clean inning to finish Game 7 of the National League Championsh­ip Series, he also yielded 14 runs (13 earned) over 14 innings in his three other appearance­s.

This October was also different in that he didn’t enter this postseason as the undisputed best pitcher in the sport. He wasn’t throwing as hard — his fastball velocity dropped from 93.1 mph in 2017 to 90.9 mph this season — and spent the regular season adjusting as necessary to counter the trimmer margin for error provided by his diminished stuff.

Only Justin Verlander and Max Scherzer have logged more innings than Kershaw over the past decade. The hefty mileage has produced injuries. Back ailments have forced Kershaw onto the disabled list each of the past three seasons. Biceps tendinitis sidelined him for most of May.

“No more DL time,” Kershaw said. “I’m really going to set my sights on that. Then, from there, hopefully the getting people out will take care of itself.”

Kershaw believes he can regain some of his lost velocity, and there’s a recent relevant example. Verlander added 2 mph to his fastball after it dropped to a careerlow in 2014, in his age-31 season. That is not the norm, but Kershaw will attempt to replicate that feat.

“I plan on getting back to that level that I was at,” Kershaw said. “If that means the velocity comes back — I’m not counting that out, it very well could; I have some ideas on maybe what I could do to improve on that. There’s a lot of guys older than me and a lot of guys with more innings than me in the big leagues that are still maintainin­g their velocity.”

Kershaw was more than effective this season. He wasn’t vintage Kershaw, but he still compiled a 2.73 ERA in 1611⁄3 innings — good for eighth among starting pitchers who logged at least 150 innings.

His down year would’ve been a career season for most of his peers. Maybe he won’t need to recoup some velocity to continue his success. Perhaps tinkering with what he possesses will spawn improvemen­t. He has at least three years to find out.

“It gives me a chance to prove a lot of people wrong,” Kershaw said. “I think this year especially, maybe rightfully so, but there’s been a lot of people [saying] that I’m in decline or not going to be as good as I once was. And I’m looking forward to proving a lot of people wrong with that.”

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ??
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times
 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? CLAYTON KERSHAW was certainly happy after the Dodgers won Game 7 of the the National League Championsh­ip Series in Milwaukee, but a World Series title still eludes him. He said Friday that family and the good chance to win a crown kept him in L.A.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times CLAYTON KERSHAW was certainly happy after the Dodgers won Game 7 of the the National League Championsh­ip Series in Milwaukee, but a World Series title still eludes him. He said Friday that family and the good chance to win a crown kept him in L.A.

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