The Standard (St. Catharines)

Kershaw can’t shake the monkey

Veteran pitching ace falters again in playoffs, pushing Dodgers to brink

- SCHUYLER DIXON

“We couldn’t put any runs up early and get a lead, or hold a lead.”

DAVE ROBERTS

DODGERS MANAGER

ARLINGTON, TEXAS — Clayton Kershaw made the slow trudge to that lonely spot in the dugout once again, this time just a few kilometres from his hometown.

The longtime ace of the Los Angeles Dodgers just can’t shake his playoff curse, not even on friendly turf in a neutral- site National League Championsh­ip Series.

Kershaw faltered at the start of the sixth inning against Atlanta, allowing three straight hits before watching the rest of asix-run outburst in the Braves’ 10-2 win in Game 4 on Thursday night. Kershaw’s franchiseh­igh 12th playoff loss put L.A. down 3-1 in the best-of-seven series at the home of the Texas Rangers, on the brink of a second straight defeat in baseball’s NLCS after posting the best record in the majors during the pandemic-shortened season.

Pitching two days after he was scratched from a Game 2 start because of back spasms, Kershaw allowed four runs in fiveplus innings, boosting his career playoff ERA to 4.31.

While the three-time NL Cy Young Award winner is also the club’s career leader in post-season wins with his 11-12 record, his October resumé simply doesn’t match his stellar regular-season numbers: 175-76 with a 2.43 ERA.

In L.A.’S seven trips to the NLCS over Kershaw’s 13 seasons, the Dallas native is 3-6 with a 4.84 ERA. And now the left-hander has been outpitched by a rookie making his post-season debut: Atlanta’s 22-year-old Game 4 winner, Bryse Wilson.

“I think that he came out and five innings, one run, again, what happened right there in that sixth inning, he gave us a chance to win the baseball game,” manager Dave Roberts said.

“We couldn’t put any runs up early and get a lead, or hold a lead. That narrative couldn’t be further from the truth.”

Kershaw was handed a 1-0 lead on Edwin Rios’s homer in the third, but gave it up on Marcell Ozuna’s solo shot in the fourth, the first of two for Ozuna.

In the sixth, Ronald Acuna Jr.’s high chopper eluded the glove of a leaping Kershaw behind the mound for an infield single. Freddie Freeman and Ozuna followed with consecutiv­e RBI doubles, and Kershaw was done in Los Angeles’s third loss in four games since winning its first five in the playoffs.

“It would have been nice to get Acuna out,” Kershaw said. “Just part of playing on turf. He kind of chopped that one up. Freddie, I had two strikes on him. Probably just went one too many pitches inside.”

Kershaw had never pitched near his Dallas home before doing so twice in a week and a half in this unusual post-season, first without fans in an NL Division Series sweep of San Diego and then a pandemic-reduced crowd in the NLCS.

The eight-time all-star recorded his 11th post-season win in the Dodgers’ 6-5 victory in Game 2 of the NLDS, but he was far from dominant. Manny Machado and Eric Hosmer hit back-to-back homers to cut into a 4-1 deficit.

A night after becoming the first team to score 11 runs in an inning and the first with 15 runs and five homers in the first three innings of a post-season game, the Dodgers had just three hits. Rios’s homer was their only hit before Kershaw exited.

“Every time Kershaw gets on that mound, you want to score 20,” Rios said. “You want to score as many runs as we can for him. It was unfortunat­e we weren’t able to do that tonight.”

If the Hall of Fame is in his future, Kershaw won’t be alone among star pitchers who struggled in the playoffs.

Greg Maddux was 11-14 in the post-season, most of those decisions when Atlanta won just one World Series during a run of 14 straight NL East titles. Randy Johnson was 7-9, and fellow lefty Steve Carlton just 6-6.

Another lefty, David Price, was 2-9 before winning his final three decisions for Boston when the Red Sox won the World Series two years ago.

Each of those pitchers has at least one title, though. Kershaw still doesn’t have one despite the club record in playoff starts (28) and innings (177 1⁄3).

Kershaw now has 11 career post-season starts of allowing at least four runs, tied with Maddux for the second-most. Only Andy Pettitte, another lefty, has more.

Ozuna’s first homer in Game 4 was the 27th Kershaw has allowed in the playoffs, breaking a tie with Justin Verlander for second-most, also behind Pettitte (31).

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON ?? Clayton Kershaw, right, is removed from the mound by manager Dave Roberts against Atlanta in the sixth inning in Game 4 of the NLCS on Thursday night. The Braves won, 10-2. For the result of Friday’s Game 5, visit our website.
CURTIS COMPTON ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON Clayton Kershaw, right, is removed from the mound by manager Dave Roberts against Atlanta in the sixth inning in Game 4 of the NLCS on Thursday night. The Braves won, 10-2. For the result of Friday’s Game 5, visit our website.

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