
Ohtani Hits His 41th Homer, but Toronto Beats Dodgers 5-4 to Avoid Sweep
Mason Fluharty earned his first career save in spectacular fashion after replacing erratic Jays closer Jeff Hoffman in the ninth with the bases loaded and one out. The rookie left-hander struck out Ohtani with a full-count breaking ball before getting Mookie Betts on a game-ending grounder.
After Vladimir Guerrero Jr. hit a tying homer and Addison Barger followed with a go-ahead shot for Toronto off struggling Blake Treinen in the eighth inning, Clement hit the first pitch from Alex Vesia (2-2) in the ninth into the left-field bleachers.
Hoffman (7-4) walked Freddie Freeman with the bases loaded to blow Toronto's lead in the eighth, and he walked three of the Dodgers' first four batters in the ninth.
Ohtani drove Eric Lauer's fourth pitch 400 feet. The three-time MVP's third homer in four games tied him with Philadelphia's Kyle Schwarber for the NL lead.
Freeman also homered in the first.
Ohtani had two hits and was intentionally walked twice.
The Dodgers' bullpen wasted another strong start by Tyler Glasnow, who yielded two runs on four hits and four walks while pitching into the sixth and striking out eight. Glasnow's winless streak stretched to 10 starts since March 31 despite his 1.82 ERA since coming off the injured list.
Key moment
Guerrero and Barger homered on juicy, belt-high sweepers from Treinen, while Clement put a great swing on a well-thrown low slider from Vesia.
Key stat
Ohtani, who only became an everyday leadoff hitter after joining the Dodgers last season, has already hit 23 career homers to start a game, including an MLB-leading 11 this season.
Up next
Yoshinobu Yamamoto (10-7, 2.51 ERA) opens another Freeway Series for the Dodgers in Anaheim on Monday.
Jose Berrios (8-4, 3.89 ERA) takes the mound in Toronto against the Cubs on Tuesday.

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The Mainichi
2 hours ago
- The Mainichi
Shohei Ohtani homers in 3rd straight game, but Dodgers' malaise continues in another loss
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) -- Shohei Ohtani's latest home run binge hasn't been enough to spark the Los Angeles Dodgers out of a summer malaise that's endangering their customary perch atop the NL West. Ohtani homered in his third straight game Monday night, hitting his 42nd of the season in the eighth inning of the Dodgers' 7-4 loss to the Los Angeles Angels. The Dodgers trailed 7-0 when Ohtani connected off Shaun Anderson with one out, driving his fourth homer in five games into the right field bleachers to tie Philadelphia's Kyle Schwarber for the NL lead. Seattle's Cal Raleigh leads the majors with 45 homers. Ohtani also started a rally: Mookie Betts and Will Smith then singled before Max Muncy brought them home with his 17th homer, trimming the Dodgers' deficit to three runs and inspiring thunderous roars from the Dodgers fans comprising more than half of the Angel Stadium crowd. But the Dodgers got no closer, with Connor Brogdon and longtime Dodgers closer Kenley Jansen calmly wrapping up the sub-.500 Angels' fifth consecutive win over their crosstown rivals. The loss shrunk the Dodgers' lead over San Diego in the NL West to just one game -- the smallest cushion since June 14. "I mean, it's a really bad loss for us," Muncy said. "There's not really any way of getting around that." Ohtani has a 10-game hitting streak in August, his longest of the season, and he has four homers among his nine hits in the Dodgers' last five games. The two-way superstar is the presumptive front-runner for his fourth MVP award. Despite his heroics, the Dodgers are 10-12 since the All-Star break. With meager production across their lineup and inconsistent relief pitching just when their problematic rotation finally started to click, they've only rarely looked like the juggernaut franchise that has won two of the past five World Series, four of the last eight NL pennants and 11 of the last 12 division crowns. "It's not going well for us right now," Muncy said. "We've got to find a way to snap out of it. No one is going to feel sorry for us. It's on us to find our way out of it, and we will." A day after the Dodgers' bullpen blew an eighth-inning lead in a 5-4 loss to Toronto, top starter Yoshinobu Yamamoto got raked by the Angels' largely average lineup for six runs on six hits and five walks, creating a hole the Dodgers couldn't escape. The Dodgers began the weekend with two solid performances against the AL-leading Blue Jays, only to fall back into another rut. "We're all looking for some traction here, and trying to stack some wins," manager Dave Roberts said. "Hate to say that yesterday's loss carried over to tonight. ... You win yesterday, and you feel even better about coming into today, but now you look at losing two games in a row. It's baseball, and we're good at resetting, coming back." Their loss in Anaheim ended a few minutes after the streaking Padres beat San Francisco to move one game back of the defending champions. Muncy said he doesn't watch the standings, but most Dodgers are aware of their biggest rivals breathing down their necks. "There definitely has to be some urgency," Roberts said. "I don't think anyone is blind to the fact that the standings are the standings, and so it's got a lot more interesting. We've got to go out there and play good baseball, but I definitely feel our guys are starting to feel that urgency. It's been long enough of middling baseball, as far as overall team wins and losses." The rivalry is about to hit a fever pitch, too: The Padres and Dodgers are meeting in three-game series on each of the next two weekends. Dodgers fans are well aware that San Diego made a frenzied flurry of moves at the trade deadline, acquiring seven major leaguers while addressing every perceived need on their roster. The Dodgers did almost nothing, making only secondary additions to their bullpen instead of acquiring a difference-making position player or another starting pitcher. Ohtani played his first six major league seasons in Anaheim, winning two MVP awards and a Rookie of the Year award while never playing on a winning team. He is scheduled to pitch at Angel Stadium on Wednesday night for the first time since he left for a $700 million contract with the Dodgers and promptly won the World Series. Ohtani's homer was the 100th of his career at the Big A, making him just the sixth major leaguer to hit that mark.


Yomiuri Shimbun
7 hours ago
- Yomiuri Shimbun
Shohei Ohtani Homers in 3rd Straight Game, but Dodgers' Malaise Continues in Another Loss
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) — Shohei Ohtani's latest home run binge hasn't been enough to spark the Los Angeles Dodgers out of a summer malaise that's endangering their customary perch atop the NL West. Ohtani homered in his third straight game Monday night, hitting his 42nd of the season in the eighth inning of the Dodgers' 7-4 loss to the Los Angeles Angels. The Dodgers trailed 7-0 when Ohtani connected off Shaun Anderson with one out, driving his fourth homer in five games into the right field bleachers to tie Philadelphia's Kyle Schwarber for the NL lead. Seattle's Cal Raleigh leads the majors with 45 homers. Ohtani also started a rally: Mookie Betts and Will Smith then singled before Max Muncy brought them home with his 17th homer, trimming the Dodgers' deficit to three runs and inspiring thunderous roars from the Dodgers fans comprising more than half of the Angel Stadium crowd. But the Dodgers got no closer, with Connor Brogdon and longtime Dodgers closer Kenley Jansen calmly wrapping up the sub-.500 Angels' fifth consecutive win over their crosstown rivals. The loss shrunk the Dodgers' lead over San Diego in the NL West to just one game — the smallest cushion since June 14. 'I mean, it's a really bad loss for us,' Muncy said. 'There's not really any way of getting around that.' Ohtani has a 10-game hitting streak in August, his longest of the season, and he has four homers among his nine hits in the Dodgers' last five games. The two-way superstar is the presumptive front-runner for his fourth MVP award. Despite his heroics, the Dodgers are 10-12 since the All-Star break. With meager production across their lineup and inconsistent relief pitching just when their problematic rotation finally started to click, they've only rarely looked like the juggernaut franchise that has won two of the past five World Series, four of the last eight NL pennants and 11 of the last 12 division crowns. 'It's not going well for us right now,' Muncy said. 'We've got to find a way to snap out of it. No one is going to feel sorry for us. It's on us to find our way out of it, and we will.' A day after the Dodgers' bullpen blew an eighth-inning lead in a 5-4 loss to Toronto, top starter Yoshinobu Yamamoto got raked by the Angels' largely average lineup for six runs on six hits and five walks, creating a hole the Dodgers couldn't escape. The Dodgers began the weekend with two solid performances against the AL-leading Blue Jays, only to fall back into another rut. 'We're all looking for some traction here, and trying to stack some wins,' manager Dave Roberts said. 'Hate to say that yesterday's loss carried over to tonight. … You win yesterday, and you feel even better about coming into today, but now you look at losing two games in a row. It's baseball, and we're good at resetting, coming back.' Their loss in Anaheim ended a few minutes after the streaking Padres beat San Francisco to move one game back of the defending champions. Muncy said he doesn't watch the standings, but most Dodgers are aware of their biggest rivals breathing down their necks. 'There definitely has to be some urgency,' Roberts said. 'I don't think anyone is blind to the fact that the standings are the standings, and so it's got a lot more interesting. We've got to go out there and play good baseball, but I definitely feel our guys are starting to feel that urgency. It's been long enough of middling baseball, as far as overall team wins and losses.' The rivalry is about to hit a fever pitch, too: The Padres and Dodgers are meeting in three-game series on each of the next two weekends. Dodgers fans are well aware that San Diego made a frenzied flurry of moves at the trade deadline, acquiring seven major leaguers while addressing every perceived need on their roster. The Dodgers did almost nothing, making only secondary additions to their bullpen instead of acquiring a difference-making position player or another starting pitcher. Ohtani played his first six major league seasons in Anaheim, winning two MVP awards and a Rookie of the Year award while never playing on a winning team. He is scheduled to pitch at Angel Stadium on Wednesday night for the first time since he left for a $700 million contract with the Dodgers and promptly won the World Series. Ohtani's homer was the 100th of his career at the Big A, making him just the sixth major leaguer to hit that mark.

Japan Times
9 hours ago
- Japan Times
Dodgers enter pivotal week, starting with series against Angels
With their National League West lead having dwindled down to just two games over the San Diego Padres, the Los Angeles Dodgers begin a key week against their Southern California rivals with three games against the Los Angeles Angels in the Freeway Series beginning Monday night in Anaheim, Calif. The Dodgers then return home to host the Padres, winners of 11 of their past 14 games, for a three-game showdown starting Friday night. On paper, the games against an Angels team that has dropped four of its past five games and is six games below the .500 mark would appear to be the easy part of the schedule. But the Angels swept a three-game series at Dodger Stadium in May, outscoring Dave Roberts' squad 23-15 in the process. Yoshinobu Yamamoto (10-7, 2.51 ERA) will make his first career start against the Angels in Monday's opener and will be opposed by fellow right-hander Jose Soriano (7-9, 4.01). The Dodgers, just 5-5 over their past 10 games, blew a chance to complete a sweep of American League East-leading Toronto with a frustrating 5-4 loss on Sunday. Ernie Clement smashed the first pitch by reliever Alex Vesia in the top of the ninth into the left field bleachers to break a 4-4 tie, and the Dodgers couldn't answer, despite Blue Jays closer Jeff Hoffman walking the bases loaded with one out in the bottom of the ninth. Rookie left-hander Mason Fluharty, the eighth Toronto pitcher, relieved Hoffman and struck out Shohei Ohtani and then got Mookie Betts to ground into a fielder's choice to end the game. It was the first major league save for Fluharty. The Dodgers had 10 hits, including Ohtani's 41st homer in the first inning, and were gifted 13 walks by Toronto pitchers. However, the Dodgers went just 1-for-10 with runners in scoring position and left a season-high 16 men on base. "I just felt there's no way we should lose this game today," Roberts said, "We had them on the ropes numerous times. For us not to win today, it's a frustrating one." The Angels are six games behind the New York Yankees for the final American League wild-card spot after losing the rubber match of their three-game series at Detroit on Sunday, 9-5. Jack Kochanowicz, who was sent down to Triple-A Salt Lake after the loss, gave up seven runs (six earned) on nine hits, including a three-run homer to Kerry Carpenter, in three innings to suffer his 10th loss of the season. It was the 13th consecutive start without a win for Kochanowicz dating back to, ironically, a 6-2 victory over the Dodgers on May 16. Soriano has made one career relief appearance against the Dodgers and is 0-0 with a 13.50 ERA. Soriano has lost back-to-back starts to the Texas Rangers and Tampa Bay Rays. After Soriano allowed seven runs on seven hits in four innings in a 7-3 loss to the Rays on Tuesday, Angels pitching coach Barry Enright enlisted the help of Hall of Fame member Pedro Martinez to discuss with Soriano how to mix up his pitch selection better. The Angels believed Soriano was becoming too reliant on throwing his 97.1-mph sinker, which has made up 51% of his pitches this season. "One of the underrated aspects of Pedro's career was as much power as he had, he had precision and could pitch too, maybe better than anybody ever," interim Angels manager Ray Montgomery told the Orange County Register. "I think Sori has that capability. He just has to be able to harness in the moment, and be able to step off the gas as much as he wants to step on it." Ohtani, who won two of his three Most Valuable Player awards while with the Angels in 2021 and 2023, is scheduled to start Wednesday afternoon's series finale for the Dodgers against Angels veteran Kyle Hendricks.