Los Angeles Times

Kershaw to get the ball with Dodgers in a better place

- BY MIKE DIGIOVANNA DiGiovanna reported from Los Angeles. Times staff writer Maria Torres contribute­d to this report from Los Angeles.

Dodgers left- hander Clayton Kershaw, scratched from his scheduled Game 2 start because of back spasms, will start Game 4 against the Atlanta Braves on Thursday, manager Dave Roberts announced after Game 3 Wednesday night.

Kershaw’s back issue f lared up after Saturday’s bullpen workout and forced the Dodgers to start Tony Gonsolin in Game 2 — an 8- 7 loss to the Braves — on Tuesday. Kershaw had “a pretty aggressive” bullpen workout before Tuesday’s game in Globe Life Field and received treatment Wednesday.

“He was letting [ the ball] go, and he came out of it great,” Roberts said before Game 3. “Every day it’s been better. … I talked to him brief ly [ Wednesday]. He’s in a good head space. I just know that we’re in a better place than we were [ Tuesday]. What that means, I don’t know quite yet.”

Kershaw threw eight shutout innings, giving up three hits, striking out 13 and walking one, in a 3- 0 win over Milwaukee in Game 2 of the wild- card series on Oct. 1. He yielded three runs and six hits, struck out six and walked none in six innings of a 6- 5 win over San Diego in Game 2 of the division series on Oct. 7.

Roberts said he does not expect Kershaw’s start to be shortened in any way.

“My expectatio­n is that he’s going to go out there and make a start and help us win a ballgame,” Roberts said.

Kershaw’s return will allow the Dodgers to start Dustin May in Game 5 and Walker Buehler in Game 6 if necessary. If the series goes seven games, Gonsolin would be available to start the finale on regular rest.

Youth movement

Bryse Wilson will start Game 4 for Atlanta, marking the sixth time in nine games the Braves will start a rookie pitcher this postseason. The 22- year- old right- hander spent most of 2020 at the team’s alternate training site. He went 1- 0 with a 4.02 ERA in six big league games, two of them starts.

Asked whether he could have imagined over the summer that he’d be starting Game 4 of the NLCS, Wilson said, “Uh … no, not in a million years. Obviously, this is a goal of mine. For it to actually be coming true. I’m just super thankful.”

Wilson, a Hillsborou­gh, N. C., native who was a fourth- round pick out of high school in 2016, mixes a two- seam sinking fastball that averages 94 mph with a slider ( 88.8 mph), changeup ( 87.1 mph) and an occasional curve ( 78.8 mph).

“I really liked what I saw his last few starts,” Braves manager Brian Snitker said. “He’s starting to take a step forward and f igure things out. I liked how he attacked guys and used his fastball.”

Wilson threw a six- inning, 88- pitch simulated game Friday after Atlanta’s division series sweep of Miami, so he’s “ready to go as long as the team needs me to,” he said. Wilson will be the third straight rookie to start in the NLCS, following Ian Anderson in Game 2 and Kyle Wright in Game 3.

“You watch video and you just have to kind of go as the game goes,” Dodgers right f ielder Mookie Betts said. “You’ve never faced them, so there’s no way to calibrate how it comes out of his hand and what his pitches look like. But it is what it is. It’s new for him. It’s new for us.”

Aaron Award f inalists

Dodgers shortstop Corey Seager and Angels center fielder Mike Trout on Wednesday were named two of 14 f inalists for the Hank Aaron Award, which is given each year to the best offensive player in each league.

Seager led the Dodgers in RBIs ( 41), tied for the team lead in average (. 307) and was second on the team in OPS (. 943). It remains to be seen if he did enough to rival National League batting champion Juan Soto, who hit .351 with an MLB- best 1.185 OPS.

Trout won the Hank Aaron Award in 2019, a few weeks before being named American League MVP for the third time. He batted . 281 with a .993 OPS. He didn’t lead the American League in any notable offensive categories — though he did finish tied for third in home runs with 17.

Fans will decide the fates of Trout and Seager. Ballots for the award can be cast online at MLB. com / hankaarona­ward.

Trout was also nominated by his peers for the outstandin­g player award in the AL. Betts received the same honor in the National League. Freddie Freeman, Juan Soto, José Abreu and DJ LeMahieu are the other f inalists. Winners in each category of the Players Choice Awards will choose charities that will receive donations from the Players Trust.

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