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While Dodgers are secretive for Game 5, Padres just want to 'pop champagne'
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LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles Dodgers spent $325 million and won the bidding war last winter for Yoshinobu Yamamoto.
They offered the best package of prospects to the Detroit Tigers at the July trade deadline, landing the best available starter in Jack Flaherty.
So just who do they plan to start in their winner-take-all game Friday night against the San Diego Padres at Dodger Stadium in Game 5 of the National League Division Series?
After all, both starters are available on normal rest.
Well, if you can believe it, perhaps neither one.
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The Dodgers, so buoyed with confidence after watching their bullpen shut down the Padres the last two games in San Diego, with the Padres scoring in just one of 17 innings, they’re tempted to run back the same strategy in Game 5.
Dodgers manager Dave Roberts wasn’t ready to show his hand Thursday evening, saying only that Yamamoto will be part of their plan.
Will he start?
The Padres and everyone else will have to wait a day to find out.
“Obviously, I'm sure Yoshinobu will be a part of it," Roberts said. “How we will deploy the relievers around it, if that's the case, I just don't know. … We have six or seven relievers available. So, I feel good about the relief kind of coverage.
“How Yoshinobu is a part of it, we're still talking through it."
If the Dodgers bullpen wasn’t so powerfully effective in this series, it wouldn’t be so enticing. In the Dodgers’ two victories, the bullpen pitched 15 consecutive scoreless innings.
“Our bullpen is special," left-handed reliever Alex Vesia said. “We’ve got eight, nine, 10 guys that can all come in in very high-leverage situations, and I think it shows. The script for us can be written in many different ways, and we use that in our favor, big time.”
Egos and bruised feelings aside, it may be foolish for Dodgers to mess with a good thing.
"Coming off of what they did,’’ Roberts said, “makes everyone feel pretty confident going into Game 5."
Hey, if it’s not broken, why fix it?
“It’s definitely working, that’s for sure," said Dodgers reliever Ryan Brasier, who started Game 4 and retired the only four batters he faced. “We have a really close-knit group and have a really good game plan relaying to the staff what that game plan is going to be."
The only aspect of a bullpen game that Brasier hates, he said, is that once he’s done pitching early in the game, he’s relegated to the bench instead of sitting with his buddies in the bullpen.
“That part sucks because I get so bored after I throw and come in and sit down," Brasier said, laughing. “I don’t get to hang out with my guys in the bullpen when I start."
The Dodgers employed eight different pitchers in Game 3, one shy of the major-league record in a playoff shutout. The only intrigue is who Roberts calls upon to pitch to which batters, and when.
The Dodgers implemented a different twist to the normal bullpen game Wednesday by having their high-leverage relievers pitching early, instead of saving them until late in the game.
“I've shown that there's not a guy I don't trust in big spots," Roberts said. “So, you have a lot of neutrality with our guys. I think that when you have to go to the same well for every big hotspot, it has a tendency in the postseason to catch up to you.
“Where this year, I feel that we have a lot of different guys that we can kind of deploy in certain lanes or certain spots.’’
If it works, the Dodgers should have Yamamoto and Flaherty available in four starts in the NLCS.
If it backfires, and the Dodgers don’t get out of the first round again, they will go down as one of the biggest disappointments in franchise history.
The Padres, on the other hand, don’t bother with any secrecy or gamesmanship.
They announced they are starting Yu Darvish. No trickery involved.
“Everybody operates their own club the way they operate it," Padres manager Shildt said. “We're more like Vince Lombardi; power sweep, 'here it is.'"
It’s the same lineup that was throttled in all but one inning in their two games in San Diego – but also one of the best in baseball.
“This is who we are,’’ Shildt said. “We're going to compete and execute. If we do that, we'll shake hands and pop champagne."
They’ll be leaning heavily on Darvish, who dominated the Dodgers in their 10-2 victory in Game 2, yielding three hits and one run in seven innings.
He may be 0-4 in elimination games but in his last six postseason starts since the 2017 World Series (0-2, 21.60 ERA) with the Dodgers, he has gone 3-2 with a 2.56 ERA, permitting 28 hits and striking out 32 batters.
Darvish also has quite the glossy record against the Dodgers, yielding a 2.35 ERA in 17 career starts, and has won the two postseason games he has started against them.
“Maybe it is the experience that I have accumulated up until today," Darvish said, “that's making me feel calm right now.’’
Really, the only nerves may be wondering how the baseball fans back home in Japan will react when they see two of their greatest pitchers face one another.
“I think it's a great thing that we're able to go at it with each other in Game 5 of an NLDS game," Darvish said. “At a personal level, really good friends with him as well. Just for us to be able to go out there and pitch on the same day, a playoff game, I think it means a lot."
The Padres can only hope that history repeats itself, having won the three previous three winner-take-all games in franchise history, while the Dodgers would love to celebrate their first postseason series clinch in front of their hometown fans since 2013 – though they did win the 2021 NL wild-card game at home.
“We have a bunch of grinders and a bunch of fighters,” Dodgers right fielder Mookie Betts said. “They’re a tough team. We knew this wasn’t going to be easy. Nothing’s easy. So you just got to take whatever cards you’re dealt and play them.
“And that’s what we’ve been doing.”
Says Padres center fielder Jackson Merrill: “I don’t care if we’re down to our last life. They’re down to their last life, too.’’
Win or go home.
What more could you want?
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