
Dodgers take on the Yankees in first of 3-game series
New York Yankees (35-20, first in the AL East) vs. Los Angeles Dodgers (34-22, first in the NL West)
Los Angeles; Friday, 10:10 p.m. EDT
PITCHING PROBABLES: Yankees: Max Fried (7-0, 1.29 ERA, 0.93 WHIP, 67 strikeouts); Dodgers: Tony Gonsolin (2-1, 4.68 ERA, 1.44 WHIP, 28 strikeouts)
Advertisement
BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Yankees -132, Dodgers +111; over/under is 8 1/2 runs
BOTTOM LINE: The Los Angeles Dodgers host the New York Yankees on Friday to begin a three-game series.
Los Angeles has a 34-22 record overall and a 19-8 record at home. The Dodgers have a 25-5 record in games when they scored at least five runs.
New York has a 17-11 record in road games and a 35-20 record overall. The Yankees have the fifth-best team ERA in MLB play at 3.26.
The teams meet Friday for the first time this season.
TOP PERFORMERS: Shohei Ohtani leads the Dodgers with 20 home runs while slugging .648. Freddie Freeman is 12 for 39 with four doubles and two RBIs over the last 10 games.
Advertisement
Aaron Judge has 14 doubles, two triples and 18 home runs for the Yankees. Cody Bellinger is 12 for 37 with two doubles, a triple, three home runs and 11 RBIs over the past 10 games.
LAST 10 GAMES: Dodgers: 5-5, .215 batting average, 3.91 ERA, even run differential
Yankees: 9-1, .245 batting average, 1.82 ERA, outscored opponents by 29 runs
INJURIES: Dodgers: Evan Phillips: 60-Day IL (forearm), Kirby Yates: 15-Day IL (hamstring), Blake Snell: 60-Day IL (shoulder), Roki Sasaki: 15-Day IL (shoulder), Blake Treinen: 60-Day IL (forearm), Michael Kopech: 60-Day IL (shoulder), Tyler Glasnow: 15-Day IL (shoulder), Edgardo Henriquez: 60-Day IL (foot), Kyle Hurt: 60-Day IL (elbow), Emmet Sheehan: 60-Day IL (elbow), Michael Grove: 60-Day IL (shoulder), Brusdar Graterol: 60-Day IL (shoulder), River Ryan: 60-Day IL (elbow), Gavin Stone: 60-Day IL (shoulder)
Advertisement
Yankees: Fernando Cruz: 15-Day IL (shoulder), Oswaldo Cabrera: 10-Day IL (ankle), Jazz Chisholm: 10-Day IL (side), Giancarlo Stanton: 60-Day IL (elbow), Marcus Stroman: 15-Day IL (knee), JT Brubaker: 60-Day IL (ribs), Jake Cousins: 60-Day IL (elbow), Gerrit Cole: 60-Day IL (elbow), Luis Gil: 60-Day IL (back)
___
The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

37 minutes ago
Pedro Pagés hits a 2-run HR, Sonny Gray pitches into 7th inning as Cardinals beat Dodgers 5-0
ST. LOUIS -- Pedro Pagés hit a two-run homer, Sonny Gray pitched into the seventh inning and the St. Louis Cardinals beat the Los Angeles Dodgers 5-0 Friday night in a game that started after a 1 hour, 17 minute rain delay. Willson Contreras hit his sixth homer of the season in the eighth inning off Chris Stratton, who was re-signed by Los Angeles before the game, and Nolan Arenado had three hits to help St. Louis improve to a National League-best 21-9 since May 4. Gray (7-1) allowed eight hits and struck out five without walking a batter in 6 1/3 innings to earn his second win against the Dodgers in eight career starts against them. JoJo Romero, Phil Maton and Steven Matz combined to pitch 2 2/3 innings in relief to secure the Cardinals' eighth shutout of the season. Pagés lined the first pitch he saw from Justin Wrobleski (1-2) over the left-center field bullpen in the second inning for his fifth home run of the season to put St. Louis ahead 2-0. Brendan Donovan blooped a two-out, two-run single to center field in the fifth inning to push the Cardinals' lead to 4-0. Wrobleski allowed four runs on six hits and three walks in a career-best six innings after being recalled from triple-A Oklahoma City prior to the game. Shohei Ohtani and Mookie Betts each singled to lead off the third inning. However, Gray struck out Freddie Freeman and Teoscar Hernández, and Max Muncy flew out to right field to end the Dodgers' threat. Gray has tossed 14 consecutive scoreless innings dating back to the sixth inning of his start on May 25 against Arizona. Gray has not allowed a run in four of his last six starts. Dodgers RHP Yoshinobu Yamamoto (6-4, 2.39 ERA) is scheduled to face Cardinals RHP Erick Fedde (3-5, 3.82) on Saturday. ___

42 minutes ago
Yankees' Jazz Chisholm Jr. has The Seventy Percent Solution
NEW YORK -- Jazz Chisholm Jr. has The Seventy Percent Solution. While most athletes talk about the urge to give 100% or even 110%, the New York Yankees infielder thinks his success since returning from the injured list has been caused by limiting intensity. 'Just go at 70%. That's what's been working for me,' he said Friday night after his three-run, go-ahead homer in the first inning and four RBIs sparked the Yankees over the Boston Red Sox 9-6 in the opening meeting this year of the AL East rivals. 'Play at 70%: defense, offense, running, everything. Stay healthy. You don't overswing. You don't swing and miss as much, and you're a great player at 70%.' Chisholm is hitting .500 (8 for 16) with two homers, six RBIs and three steals in four games since returning Tuesday from a strained right oblique, an April 29 injury that caused him to miss 28 games. 'He's squaring balls up. He's got so much talent and power, and he doesn't have to go reach for it," manager Aaron Boone said. 'That kind of wiry thing he's got inside him, he doesn't have to work too hard to generate it. So nice and easy is always good for Jazz." Chisholm raised his season average this week from .181 to .223. 'He's a game-changer,' Yankees captain Aaron Judge said. 'When you step out there in Yankee Stadium, the adrenaline is going to be flowing. It's really just about slowing everything down and just take a nice, easy approach.' Solving the mindset issue was credited by Chisholm to assistant hitting coach Pat Roessler. 'Like my coach Six said, he said: `At 70% you're one of the best out there'. At 100%, I might be dog crap,' Chisholm explained, referring to Roessler by the coach's nickname. Chisholm prepared for a rehab stint at Double-A Somerset last weekend by joining coaches to review video of his minor league days. 'I've really heard that, all my life, is that I need to tone down on the way I play, because it's really over — it's electric, but you can be electric while being controlled at the same time," Chisholm said. "My 70% running is probably faster than a lot of guys in the league, too. So if at 70% I'm hitting balls 108, 109 (mph), playing great defense and out running and having stolen bases. I think that's where I should stay at." He also mentioned a NASCAR analogy. 'It's super challenging for me because only thing I knew was like how to go fast,' Chisholm said. 'Basically I was Ricky Bobby growing up.' Chisholm had three hits, including an RBI single in the second, and stole two bases in three tries — the third was originally called safe but overturned in a video review. Anthony Volpe hit a two-run homer in the first off Walker Buehler, boosting the lead to 7-0. 'In his mind it might be 70%, but I think what everyone in the clubhouse loves and respects about him is that it looks like every night he's playing with his hair on fire and over 100%,' Volpe said. Following Oswaldo Cabrera's broken left ankle and the return of DJ LeMahieu from a calf strain, the Yankees moved Chisholm back to third base from second. He was a middle infielder for the Miami Marlins from 2020-22, was moved to center field from 2023-24, then inserted at third when the Yankees acquired him in a trade last July 27. Chisholm is happy at any of the infield positions. He just doesn't want an outfield return. 'I'm comfortable anywhere where there's dirt,' he said. 'Once the ball is on the ground, I'm going to catch it. That's all I worry about. In the air is a little shaky. It gets a little scary out there.' Chisholm said Game 5 of last year's World Series is a constant reminder. The Yankees led 5-0 the Los Angeles Dodgers in the fifth inning and were eliminated with a 7-6 defeat. 'We not only want to win the division but we want to in every category. We want to be the best team in MLB,' he said. 'That's why we're out here trying to win the World Series. We already went there last year and we thought we had it and we didn't have it. So this year we're going to make sure we have it.'


Forbes
an hour ago
- Forbes
After Closing Out World Series, Walker Buehler Struggles At Yankee Stadium With Red Sox
Before Friday, Walker Buehler's previous appearance at Yankee Stadium was a pair of massive contributions for the Los Angeles Dodgers, resulting in the visiting clubhouse turning into a massive celebration and a place of cursing and drinking ahead of a celebration spilling onto the field until about 3 am. Buehler's five scoreless innings of two-hit ball in Game 3 and his two strikeouts in a 16-pitch save two nights later resulted in the massive dogpile on the field and also was his last pitch as a Dodgers for the time being. About eight months later, Buehler was on the mound this time in the context of the Red Sox-Yankees rivalry. He was part of an aggressive offseason for the Red Sox, who signed him to a one-year, $21 million contract after a notable postseason following recovery from Tommy John surgery on his elbow. And the feelings were nowhere near as joyful when he secured the Dodgers' first full season World Series title since 1988. The Yankees looked much better against him, tagging him for five runs in the first inning after he was one strike away and two more in the second, sending him into the night following his shortest outing since joining the Red Sox on the 'prove-it' deal. About two-plus hours after his final pitch, Buehler showed some massive frustration, unleashing a few expletives along the way. The summary on the transcription service most people use nowadays says the 'subject is frustrated with his performance' and it is putting it diplomatically. 'This organization put a lot of faith in me this offseason and I've been (expletive) embarrassing for us,' Buehler said. 'So, it's tough. It's obviously a big game and a big rivalry that I was excited to be a part of and for it to go the way that it did is super disappointing, especially after the past two, three weeks of prep and throwing and all that kind of (expletive) and how I'm feeling. Physically I feel great and for it to happen that way (stinks)' Buehler is operating with a different pitch mix nowadays, throwing his four-seam fastball 24 percent of the time at 93.8 mph, down from the 28.9 percent at 95 last season. He also is throwing his slider 84 percent of the time after throwing 11 sliders last season. In his first taste of the rivalry that will get the FOX and ESPN treatment the rest of the weekend, Buehler deployed his slider 29 times and gave up a three-run homer on the curveball to Jazz Chisholm Jr. after getting ahead 0-2. 'I don't want to dig too deep into it. Obviously, I'm throwing a lot of sliders. I'm throwing a lot of (the) two-seamer,' he said. 'Those traditionally haven't been what I do very often. And I think when the sweeper is never in the zone like it hasn't been, the curveball's gonna get hit more than it has, the cutter's gonna get hit more than it has.' .While physically Buehler is fine after a brief injured list stint due to shoulder bursitis, the results are not and continuing an alarming trend of struggling in the first inning and getting sub-par results from starting pitchers when Garrett Crochet is not pitching. Opponents are hitting .326 in the first inning against the Red Sox this season and 21-for-41 in the past seven opening innings since Brayan Bello pitched a 1-2-3 first inning May 28 at Milwaukee. 'He feels great physically, he feels his stuff is really good, and then that happened, you know?" Red Sox manager Alex Cora said. "So it's not easy to be out there and get your ass kicked, right? I think we're all frustrated, you know, and he's trying to find a way.' Those were Cora's words about 5 1/2 hours after he answered a question to assess the state of his team so far. When asked about it, he quietly and succinctly said 'not good'. Not good is a vastly different feeling than what Buehler felt like in the wee hours of Halloween when he celebrated with the likes of Shohei Ohtani, Freddie Freeman and Mookie Betts.