Los Angeles Times

Kershaw goes after hitters differentl­y

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‘The thing that just makes him so special is his attitude, his intent to go out there and dominate. That hasn’t changed.’ —Dave Roberts, Dodgers manager, on Clayton Kershaw

dugout bench in Dodger Stadium after he exited the game. He was trapped in a five-start skid in which he surrendere­d 10 homers.

Kershaw shrugged off some of the fusillade. He prides himself on limiting damage, and of those 18 homers, 12 were solo shots and the rest counted for two runs each. Yet, he acknowledg­ed the depth of the problem as he regrouped after facing the Mets.

As he huddled with pitching coach Rick Honeycutt, Kershaw focused on the predictabi­lity of his patterns to attack hitters. He described himself as being “more open-minded” to suggestion and undergoing a “little bit of a mind-set shift, for me, just rethinking a few things.” The difference­s were slight. Kershaw sharpened the command of his curveball and slider, and increased their usage. He also varied the deployment of his fastball.

In his first 15 starts, Kershaw leaned on his fastball 49.2% of the time, according to Pitch f/x data from Brooks Baseball. In his next four outings, Kershaw reduced his fastball usage to 43.2%. He filled the void with offspeed pitches, and showed a willingnes­s to break out his curveball earlier in games.

“It’s no secret that I want to throw fastballs and get ahead, and work from there,” Kershaw said. “And it’s no secret that guys are swinging early. Sometimes you have to deviate from that. And it might take a few homers to realize that.”

Kershaw often pounds his fastball inside to righthande­d hitters so he can set up the slider aimed at the batter’s back foot. The combinatio­n is malignant when effective. But it is also foreseeabl­e.

Honeycutt noted he threw too many strikes with his fastball. His control prevented walks, but it gave opportunit­ies to opponents.

“His command has gotten so good,” Honeycutt said. “He throws the breaking ball out of the zone, but he doesn’t really take his fastball out of the zone on purpose. That’s the part where you try to just throw in there, when the time is right.”

On June 19 against Colorado, five days after his start against the Mets, Kershaw escaped from a basesloade­d jam in the first inning to log six scoreless frames. He showed a willingnes­s to try his curveball earlier in counts and to spot his fastball out of the zone.

Five days later, facing the Angels, Kershaw picked up strikes in the first inning when Cameron Maybin and Albert Pujols fouled off fastballs that missed inside. He struck out both with sliders, rolling to a 12-strikeout performanc­e.

For the most part, Kershaw looks like Kershaw. There is little obvious significan­ce in seeing him strike out Arizona first baseman Paul Goldschmid­t with a first-inning curve, as he did July 4, or expand the strike zone with an elevated 94mph fastball to strike out Kansas City outfielder Lorenzo Cain, as he did July 9. But the adjustment­s have kept Kershaw in control.

Honeycutt credited Kershaw for continuing an adaptation process that started around 2015, as the three-time Cy Young Awardwinne­r’s arsenal became well-known.

“He’s a smart man,” Honeycutt said. “He looks at it, and he sees it.”

He added: “You just don’t want to get where you’re giving them any advantage at all.”

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