
Dodgers’ Slump Deepens: Can They Break Free from Zac Gallen’s Dominance?
Over the next few weeks, the Dodgers and the San Diego Padres were staring down what seemed like a pretty straightforward mission: handle business, rack up W’s against struggling teams, and gain an upper hand in a division race the Dodgers currently lead by a slim two games. With the Dodgers slated to play 15 consecutive games against sub-.500 squads and the Padres facing 13 of 16 against losing teams (with the Reds as the lone exception), the path looked primed for momentum-building. But, as Thursday turned to Friday night, this clean-cut plan suddenly got a reality check neither team saw coming.
Both clubs stumbled — hard. The Dodgers, in a rare offensive blackout at Chavez Ravine, fell 3-0 to the Arizona Diamondbacks, managing just three hits and getting one runner in scoring position before enduring their seventh shutout of the season. Meanwhile, the Padres couldn’t capitalize against the waning Minnesota Twins, losing 7-4 and facing an early injury blow with Xander Bogaerts heading to the injured list.
No doubt, these missteps shook the table, pausing any potential shifts atop the standings and showcasing just how tricky it can be to conquer so-called “easy” opponents. With no more head-to-head clashes remaining this regular season between these two NL West rivals, these slip-ups might prove costly — emphasizing the brutal importance of seizing every chance to win, even against teams expected to falter.
For both the Dodgers and San Diego Padres, the assignment over the next few weeks figured to be simple:
Take care of business, and beat the teams you’re supposed to.
After all, the Dodgers are beginning a stretch of 15 straight games against clubs below .500. The Padres, meanwhile, will play 13 of their next 16 games against opponents with losing records, the lone exception being the 68-67 Cincinnati Reds.
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It seemed to be an opportunity for each contender to stack up wins, build late-season momentum, and try to wrestle away control of a division race that the Dodgers currently lead by two games.
The only problem: They flunked their first test on Friday.
Beating the bad teams, it turns out, isn’t always as easy as it seems.
In Los Angeles, the Dodgers suffered a lackluster 3-0 loss to the underperforming Arizona Diamondbacks, managing just three hits and getting only one runner in scoring position en route to suffering their seventh shutout this season. The Padres, meanwhile, were knocked around by the tanking Minnesota Twins in a 7-4 defeat earlier in the evening.
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It meant, for one night, the standings remained static.
Instead of catapulting themselves into exceedingly soft portions of their schedules, both teams stumbled to equally disappointing results.
At Chavez Ravine, the Dodgers’ loss snapped their four-game winning streak — halting their recent upswing both on the mound and at the plate.
Starting pitcher Blake Snell gave up three runs in 5⅓ innings, and battled through a stark drop in fastball velocity. After entering the night averaging 95.4 mph with his heater, Snell was stuck closer to 93 mph in his first start since the birth of his second child last weekend.
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Though he struck out eight batters and allowed only four hits, one of them was costly: a two-run home run by Blaze Alexander in the fourth, on a fastball over the plate that clocked in at only 93.4 mph. Snell’s night ended after two more knocks brought in a third run in the sixth, with Corbin Carroll hitting a leadoff double and scoring on Gabriel Moreno’s RBI single.
The bigger problem for the Dodgers (77-58), however, was their offense.
Arizona starter Zac Gallen entered the night in the midst of a dismal contract season, beginning play with a 5.13 earned-run average despite improved form in August. Against the Dodgers, though, he was lights out, yielding only two hits in six scoreless innings with eight strikeouts and three walks.
Even more troublesome was the Dodgers’ inability to generate much against the Diamondbacks’ bullpen — a woebegone unit that has spoiled Arizona’s playoff aspirations by ranking 26th in the majors with a 4.73 ERA.
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Andy Pages managed a two-out single in the seventh but was left stranded. After that, the Dodgers’ only other baserunner came on a walk from Teoscar Hernández in the game’s penultimate at-bat.
Of course, things didn’t go much better for the Padres on Friday, either.
Before their game in Minnesota, the team announced that shortstop Xander Bogaerts was going on the injured list with a foot fracture, which could keep him out for the rest of the regular season. Then, Nestor Cortes followed up his six shutout innings against the Dodgers last week with a three-inning, three-run clunker that was punctuated with an ejection.
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The night served as a missed opportunity for both NL West pace-setters; the Padres squandering a chance to cut the Dodgers’ two-game lead in half, only for the Dodgers to whiff on an opening to grow their lead at the top of the standings.
And in the coming days and weeks, both clubs will have to try to take care of business better. Because, with no head-to-head matchups left between the Dodgers and Padres in the regular season, beating bad teams — and avoiding ugly losses like Friday’s — could dictate who ultimately wins the division.
Freeman, Call back in action
Despite the loss, the Dodgers did get good news on the injury front Friday, with both first baseman Freddie Freeman and outfielder Alex Call back in action after missing Wednesday’s game.
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Freeman had been battling a neck stinger, but returned to the starting lineup and drew a walk in an otherwise 0-for-3 performance. Call avoided an IL stint after having a flare-up in his back on Tuesday, and came off the bench as a pinch-hitter for a groundout in the seventh.
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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
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