Los Angeles Times

Kershaw sharp again in victory

The Dodgers left-hander is dominant in six shutout innings and reaches two career milestones.

- By Jack Harris

He didn’t fluster. He didn’t fatigue. He didn’t fade.

Even as Tim Locastro fouled off pitch after pitch in a third inning atbat Thursday, spoiling wipeout sliders and looping curveballs and fastballs painted all over the corners, Clayton Kershaw seemed to grow only sharper with every throw.

“He’s just very good at staying in the moment,” manager Dave Roberts said. “Focusing on the next pitch.”

On the 12th offering, Kershaw finally froze Locastro with his hardest pitch of the night, firing a 93mph fastball over the plate for strike three — a common result during another typically dominant Kershaw start.

With eight strikeouts in six scoreless one-hit innings in the Dodgers’ 5-1 win over the Arizona Diamondbac­ks on Thursday, Kershaw collected two more career accolades.

In the second inning, the 32year-old became the third-youngest pitcher in MLB history to record 2,500 strikeouts, reaching the milestone slower than only Nolan Ryan and Walter Johnson.

Kershaw’s punch-out of Locastro an inning later moved him to 38th on the all-time strikeout leaderboar­d, lifting him past early 20th century star Christy Mathewson’s mark of 2,502, according to MLB. Kershaw stands at 2,505.

“It’s hard for me to think about or wrap my head around,” Kershaw said. “But being associated with names like that, getting to see your name on different types of leaderboar­ds is cool. It’s hard to grasp.”

Kershaw retired nine of 10 batters to begin the game and had a nohitter until two outs in the sixth, when Christian Walker reached on an infield single.

Still, he lowered his season ERA to a career-low 1.50, third among pitchers with at least 30 innings this season, and improved to 5-1.

After missing the opening weekand-a-half of this pandemic-shortened season with a back injury, the three-time Cy Young Award winner is starting to vault himself into discussion for a fourth.

“For him to be healthy and not have to guard and protect against his body, his back or whatever, it just allows him to have that freedom to execute pitches,” Roberts said. “He was our ace last year, and he’s pitching like an ace again.”

The Dodgers offense aided Kershaw’s cause Thursday, scoring twice in the first and seventh innings before tacking on another run in the eighth to complete their fifth sweep of the season and win their 10th straight at home.

“It was methodical,” Roberts said. “Starts with pitching, defense — and we did that. I thought today, the at-bats up and down the lineup were better. Just really good baseball.”

Turner named Clemente nominee

Justin Turner was named the Dodgers’ nominee for the 2020 Roberto Clemente Award, his philanthro­pic work during the pandemic making him a finalist for MLB’s prestigiou­s community service honor.

Through the foundation he cofounded with wife Kourtney, Turner this summer organized food delivery from local restaurant­s to the Los Angeles Dream Center, where nearly 900,000 meals were provided to those in need.

Turner also provided food donations to staff members at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles and support for homeless military veterans.

“It’s something that means a lot to Kourt and I, something we take a lot of pride in, giving back to the community,” Turner said during a video call. “To be nominated on a team full of guys who are really excellent helping out our community and helping out the city of Los Angeles is pretty special to us.”

Short hops

Turner is also progressin­g from a left hamstring strain that landed him on the injured list Tuesday (retroactiv­e to Aug. 29) and is expected back next Tuesday. … Relievers Joe Kelly and Pedro Baez could return from the injured list as soon as the end of next week, Roberts said. Both are scheduled to face hitters in the next several days.

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? THE DODGERS’ Max Muncy slides into second as Diamondbac­ks shortstop Nick Ahmed fails to handle an errant throw.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times THE DODGERS’ Max Muncy slides into second as Diamondbac­ks shortstop Nick Ahmed fails to handle an errant throw.

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