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Roki Sasaki and Clayton Kershaw Spark Dodgers’ Final Push with Magic Number Now Just 1—Can They Seal the Deal?

Roki Sasaki and Clayton Kershaw Spark Dodgers' Final Push with Magic Number Now Just 1—Can They Seal the Deal?

Well, wouldn’t you know it — the Dodgers might just have stumbled upon a fix for that ever-frustrating bullpen dilemma that’s been gnawing at fans all season. The savvy move? Tap into their pool of starters to mop up the late innings. Sounds odd, right? But hey, desperate times call for creative measures.

Take their nail-biting 5-4 victory against the Arizona Diamondbacks, stretching into extra innings and shrinking their magic number to a tantalizing one away from clinching the National League West. It’s the kind of win that didn’t come easy — the Dodgers once again threw away a late lead thanks to shaky performances from their usual relievers. Still, somehow, they scrambled through to secure the W.

The real breakout heroes? Roki Sasaki and Clayton Kershaw, both stepping into relief roles and delivering two crucial innings without a run. The game’s fate was sealed only in the 11th, when Tommy Edman’s timely hit put the Dodgers ahead for good.

This late-game twist wouldn’t have materialized without the gutsy bullpen contributions from those starting pitchers filling in. It’s a fresh twist for a team scrambling for reliable late-inning arms.

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The Dodgers might’ve finally found an answer to their long-maddening bullpen problems.

Just use some starters.

In a 5-4 extra-innings win over the Arizona Diamondbacks that lowered their magic number to clinch the National League West to one, the Dodgers again squandered a late-game lead when their traditional relievers faltered. They still didn’t make winning look as simple as it should have.

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But win, they did on this night — thanks in large part to two scoreless innings of relief from Roki Sasaki and Clayton Kershaw.

The game wasn’t decided until the 11th inning, when Tommy Edman gave the Dodgers a lead they finally wouldn’t relinquish.

It never would’ve gotten there, however, without the contributions of Sasaki and Kershaw out of the bullpen.

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Sasaki’s fastball averaged 98-99 mph, was located with precision on the corners of the strike zone, and even induced a couple of swing-and-misses, things he never did consistently while posting a 4.72 ERA in eight starts at the beginning of the season.

He paired it with a trademark splitter that was also commanded with more precision than at any point in his initial MLB stint.

Sasaki needed only 13 pitches to retire the side in order, punctuating his outing with a pair of strikeouts on 99-mph four-seamers. As he walked back to the dugout, he glanced toward his teammates with a stoic glare. Just about all of them, including Shohei Ohtani, applauded in approval.

Disaster did strike in the eighth, after the Dodgers extended their lead to 4-1 on Teoscar Hernández’s RBI double in the top half of the inning.

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The bullpen’s one season-long stalwart, Alex Vesia, ran into trouble by giving up a single to Ketel Marte, a walk to Geraldo Perdomo, and an RBI double to Corbin Carroll — all with one out.

Hard-throwing rookie righty Edgardo Henriquez couldn’t put out the fire from there, giving up one run on a swinging bunt from Gabriel Moreno in front of the plate that spun away from catcher Ben Rortvedt, then another when pinch-hitter Adrian Del Castillo stayed alive on a generous two-strike call (which was no doubt impacted by Rortvedt dropping the pitch behind the plate) before lifting a sacrifice fly to center.

For the second straight night, a late-game three-run lead had evaporated into thin air.

This time, however, manager Dave Roberts had a new card to play. A night after Kershaw volunteered to pitch in relief, the future Hall of Fame left-hander was summoned for the ninth inning.

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Read more: Dodgers Dugout: Is this the worst bullpen in L.A. Dodgers history?

In what was his first relief appearance since the infamous fifth game of the 2019 NL Division Series, Kershaw was effective. He retired the side in order with the help of a diving catch from Tommy Edman in center. He looked comfortable in the kind of high-leverage relief role the Dodgers might need him to fill come October.

In extras, the rest of the bullpen finally held up. Blake Treinen inherited a bases-loaded jam with two out in the 10th, but got James McCann to fly out to shallow right field. Justin Wrobleski (another pitcher who began this season as a starter) was handed a save situation in the 11th, after Edman singled home a run with his third hit of the night, and retired all three batters he faced.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

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