Los Angeles Times

Jansen hits a low point in his tough season, angering fans

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gotten when Jansen imploded in the ninth.

At the start of the inning, Jansen emerged from the bullpen slowly, pointing to the sky before jogging to the mound. The right-hander hadn’t needed much divine interventi­on previously this September. In his first six games of the month, he was three for three in save opportunit­ies and had a 1.42 ERA.

On Wednesday, that progress seemed to come undone.

After getting ahead of Tommy Pham 1 and 2 with one out, Jansen missed with a high cut fastball before leaving another one in the zone. Pham singled. Jansen also got ahead of Matt Duffy 1 and 2 in the next at-bat but eventually missed with a full-count cutter for ball four.

He “didn’t have the command he did the last few times out,” Roberts said. “When you don’t, you get exposed.”

Ji-Man Choi fell behind Jansen too, taking a pair of cutters to dig an 0-and-2 hole. Jansen tried to retire Choi with the same pitch and appeared to catch the corner of the zone. But Johnson, the umpire, stayed still behind the plate. When Jansen threw another cutter, Choi drove it into left to score Pham and move Duffy to third.

“I thought he got squeezed on the Choi pitch,” Roberts said. “Next pitch, base hit right there. It flipped the inning.”

Two pitches later, Travis d’Arnaud lifted a sacrifice fly to center that scored Duffy and tied it up. Chavez Ravine bellowed with exasperati­on. Fans resumed voicing their displeasur­e as Jansen walked back to the dugout at the end of the inning. Such hostile receptions have become commonplac­e for the 31-year-old closer this year.

Roberts still thinks, given Jansen’s recent success prior to Wednesday, the pitcher is “in a good place.” Asked what it would take for the team to consider a change at closer, Roberts responded: “I’m not really entertaini­ng that thought right now.”

Jansen also remained sanguine about his season. He didn’t blame his performanc­e on pitching in back-to-back nights and didn’t think Wednesday was an indication of any longterm issues. On Tuesday, he brushed off the idea of being booed when he spoke with reporters.

“They have high standards for me,” he said of Dodgers fans. “I do too. I know they’re gonna have my back no matter what.”

But in baseball, such trust is usually a two-way street. Loyalty is often cemented only by confidence. And in Jansen, Dodgers fans are running out of faith.

“You can’t control the outcome,” Jansen said. “Yes, the command wasn’t [as good as] the last three games it was. But you can’t let this one frustrate you.”

‘They have high standards for me. I do too. I know they’re gonna have my back no matter what.’ — Kenley Jansen, Dodgers closer, on the team’s dissatisfi­ed fans

 ?? Mark J. Terrill Associated Press ?? WILLY ADAMES of the Tampa Bay Rays scores in the sixth inning at Dodger Stadium on a throwing error by center fielder Cody Bellinger. Bellinger’s throw eluded catcher Will Smith after a single by Jesus Aguilar.
Mark J. Terrill Associated Press WILLY ADAMES of the Tampa Bay Rays scores in the sixth inning at Dodger Stadium on a throwing error by center fielder Cody Bellinger. Bellinger’s throw eluded catcher Will Smith after a single by Jesus Aguilar.

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