Dodgers feel urgency to deliver another World Series title to L.A.
At this time last year, the pressure was palpable.
Up until last October, the Dodgers had a reputation as postseason failures.
It wasnβt an unwarranted distinction. In each of the previous two seasons, the team had been upset in the National League Division Series by lesser opponents in the San Diego Padres and Arizona Diamondbacks. The fall before that, their title defense flamed out against the underdog Atlanta Braves in the NL Championship Series. Yes, they won a World Series in the pandemic-shortened 2020 season. But outside of that, itβd been more than three decades since they last triumphed under typical circumstances.
That checkered history weighed on them. Their urgency to change it in last yearβs playoffs was fervent.
βThat kind of sour taste that you have when you make an early exit from the postseason, our guys are tired of it,β manager Dave Roberts said on the eve of last yearβs postseason. βSo this is another opportunity. I do sense that edge.β
This week, of course, the Dodgers face a different kind of dynamic.
After their memorable run to a championship last year, the team has gotten the monkey of its full-season title drought off its back. And while expectations are still high, with the Dodgers and their record-setting $400-million roster set to begin the playoffs with a best-of-three wild-card round starting Tuesday against the Cincinnati Reds, the questions about past October disappointments have dissipated.
So, does the pressure of this postseason feel different?
βYou would think,β veteran third baseman Max Muncy said. βBut the pressureβs always going to be there. Especially when youβre this team, when youβre the Los Angeles Dodgers, thereβs a lot of expectations around you. Thereβs a lot of pressure.β
Indeed, after an underwhelming regular season that saw the Dodgers win the NL West for the 12th time in the last 13 years, but fail to secure a first-round bye as one of the NLβs top two playoff seeds, the Dodgers have a new task before them.
Erase the frustrations of their 93-win campaign. Maintain the momentum they built with a 15-5 regular-season finish. And recreate the desperation that carried them to the promised land last fall, as they try to become MLBβs first repeat champion in 25 years.
βFor us, the challenge is not letting that pressure get to you and finding our rhythm, finding whatβs going to work for us this year,β Muncy said. βEach year the team has to find their identity when they get to this point. You have an identity during the regular season, and you have to find a whole βnother identity in the postseason.β
The Dodgersβ preferred identity for this yearβs team figures to be the opposite of what worked last October.
Unlike last year, the team has a healthy and star-studded starting rotation entering the playoffs. Also unlike last year, the bullpen is a major question mark despite an encouraging end to the regular season.
For the wild-card series, it means the team will need big innings out of Game 1 starter Blake Snell, Game 2 starter Yoshinobu Yamamoto and (if necessary) Game 3 starter Shohei Ohtani β who is being saved for the potential winner-take-all contest in part to help manage his two-way workload.
Ideally, their production should ease the burden on a relief corps that ranked 21st in the majors in ERA during the regular season, and has no clear-cut hierarchy for its most trusted arms.
βThe starting pitching is considerably betterβ than it was last year, Roberts said Monday. βThatβs probably the biggest difference between last yearβs team.β
Granted, the Dodgers do feel better about their bullpen right now, thanks to the return of Roki Sasaki, the reallocation (at least for this series) of Emmet Sheehan and Tyler Glasnow from the rotation to relief roles, and recent improvements from Blake Treinen and Tanner Scott.
β[We have] much more confidence than we had a couple weeks ago,β Roberts said of the bullpen. βI think that itβs because those guys have shown the confidence in themselves, where theyβre throwing the baseball. I think last week we saw guys more on the attack setting the tone, versus pitching behind or pitching too careful.β
Dodgers reliever Tanner Scott delivers against the San Francisco Giants on Sept. 19.
(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
Still, itβs anyoneβs guess as to who will pitch in the ninth inning, or be called upon in the highest-leverage moments.
Close, late contests would be best for the Dodgers to avoid.
To that end, the continuation of the Dodgersβ recent uptick at the plate would also help. During a dismal 22-32 stretch from July 4 to Sept. 6, the Dodgers ranked 27th in scoring, struggling to overcome injuries to several key pieces, slumps from some of their biggest stars, and a general lack of consistent execution in situational opportunities. Over their closing 20 games, however, the lineup averaged an NL-best 5.55 runs per game behind late-season surges from Ohtani and Mookie Betts, plus team-wide improvements while hitting with runners in scoring position.
βThe team is starting to fire on all cylinders, finally,β Muncy said. βItβs something that we havenβt really felt all year.β
The Dodgers had good news on the injury front during Mondayβs team workout at Dodger Stadium. Muncy, who missed the last four games of the regular season while battling leg bruises and what Roberts has described as other βoverall bodyβ issues, is expected to be in the lineup. So too is Tommy Edman, who hasnβt played in the field since last Wednesday because of a lingering ankle injury.
The big question remains catcher Will Smith, who has been out since Sept. 9 with a right hand fracture.
Roberts said Monday the team has been βencouragedβ with Smithβs recent progress. The slugger was even able to take live at-bats Monday night.
βIf he can get through today and feel good,β Roberts said, βthen itβs a viable thoughtβ that he could be on the final 26-man roster the Dodgers will have to submit ahead of Tuesdayβs game for the wild-card series.
Either way, the Dodgersβ biggest concern remains on maintaining their recent level of play. Erasing past October failures might no longer be a motivation. But, like Muncy, Roberts said the urgency to win another World Series remains the same.
βI donβt know if itβs easier or harder that we won last year,β Roberts said. βBut, honestly, all we care about is winning this year.β