Can Shohei Ohtani find it in NLCS? ‘At-bat quality needs to get better’
When Shohei Ohtani was asked about his woeful performance at the plate in the Dodgersβ National League Division Series against the Philadelphia Phillies last week, he first gave credit to the opposition.
Then, after a series that saw the Phillies counter him with one left-handed pitcher after the next, he was also quick to point out that he wasnβt alone.
βIt was pretty difficult for left-handed hitters,β Ohtani said in Japanese amid the Dodgersβ clubhouse celebration following their Game 4 victory. βThis was also the case for Freddie [Freeman].β
The Phillies did indeed make life tough on the Dodgersβ best lefty bats.
Freeman was only three for 15 in the series, albeit with a key Game 2 double and a .294 on-base-percentage.
Max Muncy was four for nine in the series, but spent most of it waiting on the bench, not getting a start in any of the three contests the Phillies had a southpaw on the mound.
And as a team, the Dodgers hit just .199 with 41 strikeouts in the four-game series.
However, no oneβs struggles were as pronounced as Ohtaniβs β the soon-to-be four-time MVP winner, who in the NLDS looked like anything but.
Ohtani struck out in each of his first four at-bats in Game 1. He didnβt get his first hit until grounding an RBI single through the infield in the seventh inning of Game 2.
After that, Ohtaniβs only other time reaching base safely was when the Phillies intentionally walked him in the seventh inning of Game 4.
His final stat line from the series: One for 18, nine strikeouts and a whole lot of questions about what went wrong.
Ohtani, who was coming off a three-hit, two-homer wild-card round, did acknowledge Thursday night that βthere were at-bats that didnβt go the way I thought they would.β
But, he quickly added: βThe opposing pitchers didnβt make many mistakes. They pitched wonderfully, in a way thatβs worthy for the postseason. There were a lot of games like that for both teams.β
The real question coming out of the series was about the root cause of Ohtaniβs unexpected struggles.
Was it simply because of the tough pitching matchups, having faced a lefty in 12 of his 20 trips to the plate? Or had his faltering approach created more legitimate concerns, the kind that could threaten to continue into the NL Championship Series?
βI think a lot of it actually was driven by the left-handed pitching,β manager Dave Roberts said Saturday, as the Dodgers awaited to face either the Chicago Cubs or Milwaukee Brewers in an NLCS that will begin on Monday.
However, the manager also put the onus on his $700-million superstar to be better.
βHoping that he can do a little self-reflecting on that series, and how aggressive he was outside of the strike zone, passive in the zone,β Roberts said. βThe at-bat quality needs to get better.β
For the Dodgers, the implications are stark.
βWeβre not gonna win the World Series with that sort of performance,β Roberts continued. βSo weβre counting on a recalibration, getting back into the strike zone.β
From the very first at-bat of Game 1 β when he was also the starting pitcher in his first career playoff game as a two-way player β Ohtani struggled to make the right swing decisions.
He chased three pitches off the inside of the plate from Phillies lefty Cristopher SΓ‘nchez, which Roberts felt βkinda set the toneβ for his series-long struggles, then took a called third strike the next two times he faced him.
From there, the 31-year-old slugger could never seem to dial back into his approach.
He went down looking again in Game 1 against left-handed reliever Matt Strahm. He led off Game 2 with another strikeout against another lefty in JesΓΊs Luzardo. On and on it went, with Ohtani continuing to chase inside junk, flailing at pitches that darted off the plate the other way, and finding his only reprieve in a rematch with Strahm in Game 2 when he got just enough on an inside sinker.
Robertsβ hope was that, moving forward, Ohtani would be able to learn and adjust.
βUnderstanding when he faces left-handed pitching, what theyβre gonna try to do: Crowd him in, off, spin him away,β Roberts said. βHeβs just gotta be better at managing the hitting zone. Iβm counting on it. Weβre all counting on it.β
Roberts also conceded that Ohtaniβs at-bats on the day he pitched in Game 1 seemed to be especially rushed.
β[When] heβs pitching, heβs probably trying to conserve energy, not trying to get into at-bats,β Roberts said. βIt hasnβt been good when heβs pitched. I do think thatβs part of it. Weβve got to think through this and come up with a better game plan.β
After all, while Ohtani might not have been the only struggling hitter in the NLDS, his importance to the lineup is greater than anyoneβs. The Dodgers can only endure without him for so long.