Lodi News-Sentinel

» CAN THE DODGERS BEAT THE BREWERS?

- By Bill Plaschke

MILWAUKEE — “Oh, their wonderful bullpen! Ah, that great Christian Yelich! Hey, look at the mustachioe­d dude going down that slide!”

We interrupt all this lovely talk about the Milwaukee Brewers to reveal the real truth about the upcoming National League Championsh­ip Series.

It’s not about the Milwaukee Brewers. It’s all about the Los Angeles Dodgers.

There’s no bit of momentum in the streaking Brewers that the Dodgers can’t stop. There’s nothing the effective Brewers relievers can do that the Dodgers can’t swat. There is no part of the formidable Brewers batting order that the Dodgers can’t smother.

The Dodgers are deeper, broader, more versatile, more battle tested and honestly people, just a better baseball team.

That is, as long as they’re the Dodgers. Problem is, sometimes they’re not the Dodgers. Sometimes they leave scads of runners in scoring position. Sometimes they walk the bases drunk. Sometimes they blow up late.

Sometimes, as in Game 3 of the division series against the Atlanta Braves, they do all of this all at once.

Yes, the Dodgers have won seven of their last eight games by a margin of 54-16, but when asked this week to confirm the prevailing theory that the Dodgers are playing as well as they’ve played all year, Max Muncy demurred.

“There’s still more to go,” he said.

He’s right, there is. Even in this stacked Dodgers deck, there are wild cards, players whose performanc­e could be tremendous or devastatin­g, players walking a tightrope that will be stretched even longer in a series without home-field advantage against an underdog team with nothing to lose.

The Dodgers might be the better team, but they’ll need these wild cards to assert themselves for them to be the winning team.

Clayton Kershaw

How can a player who just pitched eight innings of two-hit, scoreless baseball in a playoff game be considered a wild card?

Because that happened against the vastly overmatche­d Braves in Game 2 of the NLDS, with Kershaw running on the angry fumes of being passed over for the Game 1 start.

The Dodgers aren’t snubbing him again, slotting him to start the NLCS for them in Game 1 on Friday in Milwaukee, which means all the pressure is on him again, and the worries about him before last week will resurface.

He still has a 4.20 earned-run average in his last five starts of the regular season. He still began these playoffs with a 4.35 career postseason ERA.

And then there’s the issue of Yelich, the probable National League MVP. He has been hitting everyone well this year, but has been pounding Kershaw forever. Yelich is nine for 17 in his career against Kershaw for a .529 average with two home runs and three RBIs, so, yeah, that matchup will be a nifty one.

It says here Kershaw has reclaimed his status as the ace and should be starting Game 1. But he is going to need to pitch like it.

Cody Bellinger

Just when everyone had almost forgotten about his .143 average with a record 17 strikeouts in last year’s World Series, here come the postseason struggles again.

Bellinger didn’t have a hit in 11 at-bats against the Braves while botching a grounder in the outfield that led to the one big Braves inning.

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts doesn’t sound worried, noting he is seeing a much better approach from Bellinger, who drew four walks against the Braves and took some of their pitchers into deep counts.

“I still feel Cody is in a good place,” Roberts said. “I think he’s in a considerab­ly better place mechanical­ly and mentally than he was last year.”

They haven’t needed him yet, but they will. If he is going to break this postseason slump, this would be a good time to start.

Yasiel Puig

Same old Puig, right?

He’s been brilliant and boneheaded, collecting dramatic hits and making dramatic mistakes.

In the NLDS he scored a couple of runs and collected three hits in nine at-bats, but he also foolishly ran the Dodgers out of one inning when he was caught stealing and laid back on a fly ball that he nearly didn’t catch.

During those Game 2 shenanigan­s, he was chatted up by Roberts in the dugout. Afterward, when asked about the lecture, Roberts jokingly left the interview table as if he didn’t hear the question.

Fans love the emotion that oozes from good Puig. But the Dodgers still wince at the damage that can be caused by bad Puig.

Which is it going to be? A series could depend on it.

Yasmani Grandal

This time last year, Grandal barely played, relegated to the postseason bench behind the hot Austin Barnes. This year, he’s slugged his way into the playoff lineup, but since then has struggled to duplicate his regular-season success.

He batted .077 with one hit _ a home run _ in 13 atbats against the Braves. But he’s a wild card for more than just his bat. It’s about his arm.

One of the forgotten stats about the Brewers is that, in an era when few try to manufactur­e runs, they led the National League in stolen bases with 124. Meanwhile, during the regular season, Grandal threw out 28 percent of attempted base stealers, ranking fourth among regular National League catchers.

It will be a matchup worth watching. It is a matchup the Dodgers need to win.

Walker Buehler ... not

Ah, leave the kid alone.

He threw about a dozen lousy pitches in the NLDS Game 3 loss in Atlanta, but recovered to retire the next 10 hitters, then afterward stuck around to face the tough questions and promise to learn from his brief lack of focus.

He’ll be fine.

The bullpen ... again

The extended NLDS starts of Hyun-Jin Ryu and Kershaw _ they each lasted at least seven innings _ took a lot of pressure off a bullpen that has yet to be truly postseason tested.

The Brewers have approximat­ely three times as many good hitters as the Braves. The bullpen will be tested now.

The group, which a couple of months ago nearly set the season aflame by losing four straight games in the opponents’ final at-bat for the first time in franchise history, was needed only for a few crucial situations.

In one, Ryan Madson worked out of a one-out, bases-loaded jam. In another, Alex Wood gave up an eventual game-winning homer to Freddie Freeman. As for Kenley Jansen, he was needed for only one save, although he did pitch two scoreless innings and his velocity reached 96 mph, so maybe he’s back.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States