Los Angeles Times

THREE UP, THREE DOWN

- — Bill Shaikin

Iron men: There are two players who have ▲started every game this year — curiously, the one with the highest on-base-plus-slugging percentage and the one with the lowest OPS, among the 86 players with at least 500 at-bats through Friday. The OPS leader: first baseman Joey Votto of the Cincinnati Reds, an MVP candidate, who has 35 home runs, a .316 batting average and 50 more walks than strikeouts. Votto is trying to become the first Reds player to start every game in a non-strike season since Pete Rose in 1975. The OPS laggard: Alcides Escobar of the Kansas City Royals, a relic from the era of good-field, no-hit shortstops. Votto had reached base 304 times through Friday; Escobar 160.

Strike force: Strikeouts long ago lost their ▲stigma. For the 12th consecutiv­e year, the league will set a record for total strikeouts. A pitcher who strikes out three times as many batters as he walks is nothing special anymore. But here’s a tip of the cap to two Boston Red Sox pitchers: Chris Sale, who became the first pitcher with 300 strikeouts since the Dodgers’ Clayton Kershaw (2015) and the first American Leaguer to do so — in the circuit where pitchers do not bat — since Pedro Martinez in 1999. Red Sox closer Craig Kimbrel through Friday had faced 243 batters and struck out 121, chasing what would be the second season in major league history in which a pitcher threw at least 60 innings and struck out half the batters he faced. The only pitcher to have done that: Kimbrel, for the Atlanta Braves in 2012. Bryce back: It has been six weeks since Bryce Harper wrenched his knee and calf when he slipped on a wet base. The Washington Nationals hope their franchise player can get in a few at-bats this week before the end of the regular season. Harper leads the major leagues in OPS, but a few at-bats this week and then a four-day layoff before the start of the division series might jeopardize his ability to regain his timing. His karma probably was not helped when he donned a Mississipp­i football helmet in solidarity with the alma mater of Nationals teammate Aaron Barrett. The Rebels, members of the high and mighty Southeaste­rn Conference, last weekend lost to California.

Net gain: A little girl was rushed to the hospital ▼after she was struck in the face by a foul ball at Yankee Stadium on Wednesday, a sadly predictabl­e accident. When a woman left Fenway Park on a stretcher two years ago having been hit by a jagged bit of a broken bat, we wondered when legislator­s might start summoning baseball officials to public hearings and challengin­g them to explain why they refuse to mandate protective netting in front of seats down the baselines. Time’s up: The New York City Council has scheduled an Oct. 25 hearing. Commission­er Rob Manfred has declined to mandate a standard, saying each ballpark is different and each club should decide. Manfred ought not risk Congress’ summoning him for a nationally televised lecture on consumer safety, especially when the Reds, Colorado Rockies, San Diego Padres and Seattle Mariners all committed to extended netting within 24 hours of the injury at Yankee Stadium. Bad karma: The New York Mets two years ago were bound for the World Series, poised to contend for years behind a dominant core of young starters. They’re on pace for their worst record since 2003, when their ace was … Steve Trachsel. This year? Matt Harvey, who carried a shutout into the ninth inning of the final game of the 2015 World Series, has a 6.59 ERA; the Mets have been outscored 30-6 in his last two starts. Ace Noah Syndergaar­d missed five months because of a torn lat muscle, diagnosed only after he refused an MRI exam and the Mets let him try another start. When Syndergaar­d wondered this week whether the recent spate of hurricanes might be karma for the United States’ withdrawin­g from the Paris climate accord, he also tweeted: “… and I know Karma. #taketheMRI.” Hot seats: It was heartening to hear Detroit Tigers’ general manager Al Avila say that he would consider managerial experience a criterion in the managerial search that started Friday when Avila fired Brad Ausmus. Two other managers appear unlikely to return next season: the Mets’ Terry Collins and the Braves’ Brian Snitker. Of the division champion managers this year, only one — the Dodgers’ Dave Roberts — is in his first job. Experience ought not take a back seat to collaborat­ion with the front office.

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