Los Angeles Times

Hangover? Try more champagne

After an epic NLDS, Dodgers will avoid letdown and return to World Series

- DYLAN HERNÁNDEZ

ATLANTA — Dave Roberts was emphatic.

“There’s no letdown,” he said.

Now in his sixth season as Dodgers manager, Roberts could speak with certainty.

Roberts knows the Dodgers won’t take for granted they will beat the Atlanta Braves in the National League Championsh­ip Series. He abided by baseball’s longstandi­ng tradition of not making any guarantees, but the mindset he described is precisely why his team will thump the Braves.

Leave open the final week of this month, as well as maybe the first few days of November.

The Dodgers are returning to the World Series.

If there’s a letdown in this NLCS, it will be on the part of the viewers, who were served their main courses before their appetizers.

Just try getting excited about a matchup against the 88-win Braves after a down-to-the-wire showdown against the 107-win San Francisco Giants that was decided in the final inning of a five-game series.

Instead of “Beat L.A!” there will be the cartoonish­ly racist Tomahawk Chop, an unfortunat­e part of current Dodgers president Stan Kasten’s legacy in Atlanta.

As president of the Braves, Kasten defended the Tomahawk Chop, a 1992 story in the online archives of this newspaper quoting him saying, “The chop salute doesn’t have anything more to do with Indian culture than the Wave.”

His argument was basically that the Chop couldn’t be racist because the chant was a caricature of Native American culture, not an actual part of it. Oh, boy. Thankfully, the fans at Truist Park will be chopping and oh-oh-ohing for only two more days, as this series is unlikely to return to Atlanta.

Following Games 1 and 2 on Saturday and Sunday, the series will move for the next three games to Los Angeles, where the series should end.

Unlike the Giants, the Braves don’t have the balance to stay with the Dodgers.

If they were in the NL West, they would have fin

ished 181⁄2 games out of first place. If they were in the NL Central, they would have finished in third place behind the Milwaukee Brewers and St. Louis Cardinals.

These aren’t the same Braves who had a three-games-to-one lead over the Dodgers in the NLCS last year.

Their best player, Ronald Acuña Jr., went down with a season-ending knee injury in July.

Their No. 3 hitter, Marcell Ozuna, broke his fingers in May and never returned, as he was put on administra­tive leave after he was arrested on suspicion of assaulting his wife.

Braves general manager Alex Anthopoulo­s rebuilt the outfield in the weeks leading up to the trade deadline, starting with the acquisitio­n of former Dodgers slugger Joc Pederson from the Chicago Cubs.

Anthopoulo­s, a former Dodgers executive, also traded for Jorge Soler from the Kansas City Royals, Adam Duvall from the Miami Marlins and Eddie Rosario from the Cleveland Indians.

But Soler is expected to miss this series after testing positive for COVID-19.

About the only advantage the Braves have is being better-rested after eliminatin­g the Brewers in four games.

Max Fried will start for the Braves on Saturday, whereas Roberts refrained on the eve of Game 1 from naming his starter, or opener.

The most likely choice is Max Scherzer, who threw 13 pitches against the Giants on Thursday to earn his first career save. If Scherzer is unavailabl­e, the Dodgers would have to resort to a bullpen game.

With Clayton Kershaw sidelined for the postseason, the Dodgers are expected to have a bullpen game at some point in this best-ofseven series. But their quality will eventually win out.

The Braves’ rotation includes Fried, Charlie Morton, Ian Anderson and Huascar Ynoa. The Dodgers’ rotation is scarier, with Scherzer, Walker Buehler and Julio Urías.

The Braves’ bullpen includes closer Will Smith, right-hander Luke Jackson and left-hander Tyler Matzek. The Dodgers’ bullpen is deeper, with Kenley Jansen, Blake Treinen, Corey Knebel, Brusdar Graterol and Joe Kelly.

The Braves’ lineup includes Freddie Freeman, Ozzie Albies and Pederson.

The Dodgers’ lineup has better high-end players, with Mookie Betts, Corey Seager and Trea Turner. The Dodgers are just better. And they won’t choke. They won’t beat themselves. They will show up. They will fight.

“That’s like the X factor,” Roberts said. “Because I think with baseball, you just don’t know who is going to be the better team that day. But I think the variable of a letdown emotionall­y, the moment getting too big for a player, I do believe, and I have all the confidence we wouldn’t be victim of that. Knowing I don’t have to worry about that, it just gives me added confidence in our guys.”

The Dodgers have advanced to the NLCS five times in the last six years. In another week or so, they will be able to say they have reached the World Series in four of the last five years.

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 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? IN HIS SIXTH season with the Dodgers, Dave Roberts is confident that his club will be in the right mindset for the NLCS.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times IN HIS SIXTH season with the Dodgers, Dave Roberts is confident that his club will be in the right mindset for the NLCS.

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