
Missed chance to sweep Yankees leaves Dodgers in a precarious spot
The desperation of a toasted Dodger Stadium made itself abundantly clear Sunday in the fourth inning of a sunburn against the New Yankees.
With mighty Yankee Aaron Judge huffing and puffing at the plate, a lone insistent chant emerged from a Dodger fan lurking in the shadows.
'Ko-be! Ko-be! Ko-be!'
Sorry. Nice try. But on this day, the Dodgers lacked all evidence of a Mamba Mentality.
Coming off two inspirational wins in this three-game weekend showdown against their American League twin, the Dodgers ate the broom.
A team that had finally seemed to figure out its pitching watched its ace fold.
A team whose offense had become balanced and deep could barely poke a soft-tossing journeyman utility starter who they once cut.
And, yeah, a team that does everything right did bits of everything wrong, a wild throw scoring a run, a wild pitch scoring another run, and a foolish stolen base attempt costing yet another run.
In all, it resulted in a 7-3 Yankees victory that left the Dodgers facing another stark set of numbers.
Baseball's most talented team is 12-10 against legitimate championship contenders.
Baseball's richest team is 28-23 since starting the season 8-0.
And now one of baseball's most injury-plagued teams must strap back in for a four-game series against a first-place New York Mets team that has won seven of eight. Followed by three games in hot St. Louis. Followed by three games in angry San Diego. Followed by three games against the reborn San Francisco Giants. Followed by four more games against damn San Diego.
Whew. Gulp. A little Mamba would be nice.
That the Dodgers are facing this impossibly tough stretch would have made it extra sweet to sweep the Yankees, particularly coming 24 hours after beating them 18-2, and less than 48 hours after roaring back to beat them 8-5.
Everyone thought this defending champion Dodger team of gargantuan expectations had finally and permanently arrived.
Not so fast.
'When these guys came into town, I think we ramped up our focus, our approach, just the intensity,' said Dodgers manager Dave Roberts before Sunday's game. 'And it's fortunately showed.'
And then it disappeared again, which has sort of been the Dodgers issue all season, right?
'We've got our guy going tonight,' Roberts also said, referring to Yoshinobu Yamamoto, a Cy Young candidate who had shut down the Yankees twice last season. 'It's going to be fun..'
And then it wasn't.
Roberts refused to change his positive tune afterward, maintaining, 'For us, the takeaway is, we won a series, and that was the goal coming into this weekend.'
Yeah, but still...
Yamamoto had his second-worst stinker as a Dodger, surpassed by only his fumble of the division series opener last season against the Padres.
He gave up a career-high seven hits along with four runs in just 3 ⅔ innings, and didn't have much help.
The Yankees quickly put the Dodgers on the ropes with a messy first inning, scoring one and loading the bases on, among other jabs, two walks and a wild throw home from left fielder Andy Pages.
One inning later the Dodgers should have come back to take a 2-1 lead on Tommy Edman's homer. But on the previous pitch, Pages, perhaps trying to make up for that lousy throw, was thrown out trying to steal third despite there being only one out.
One inning after that, Yamamoto went bust, walking Judge, giving up a two-run homer by Ben Rice, then yielding two singles to set up a run-scoring wild pitch.
It was all pretty scary stuff for a pitching staff working on such a precarious tightrope. There's enough uncertainty in other places that the one arm they must be able to count on is the one attached to Yamamoto.
The four scheduled starters for the Mets series are Dustin May, Clayton Kershaw, Tony Gonsolin and Landon Knack. All have been both decent and struggling and the bottom line is, would you want to give the ball to any of them with your season on the line?
Honestly, the Dodgers need Yamamoto to be great, transforming a warm and sunny Sunday afternoon into a chilly missed opportunity.
His bad day was all the Yankees needed when the Dodgers' vaunted four-man top of the lineup — minus an injured Mookie Betts — went hitless in 16 at-bats. A day after their offense banged out 21 hits, the stars can't even raise a scratch on starter Ryan Yarbrough? How does that happen?
The Dodgers should have known all about Yarbrough. They had him for parts of the last two seasons, long enough for him to receive a World Series ring but not long enough to keep them from essentially releasing him before trading him.
The offensive struggles, which doomed late homers by Max Muncy and Pages, were epitomized by two middle-inning face plants.
The Dodgers put two runners on in the fifth, but a Miguel Rojas line drive to center field was caught, only briefly summoning memories of when it wasn't.
Then, the top of the order couldn't get the ball out of the infield in the sixth inning, meekly disappearing on 13 pitches.
'It's funky, it's funky,' said Will Smith of his former teammate's style, and he's not talking about a cool funky.
There was some good news for the Dodgers on Sunday, Betts working out while wearing a shoe for the first time since fracturing his toe during a midnight bedroom stroll and, according to Roberts, handling the pain. This means he could be back soon and, even though he has lacked his usual offensive greatness this season, his return can't come soon enough.
Betts met the media before the game to discuss it.
'Just going to the bathroom... whatever you picture, that's exactly what happened,' he said. 'I'm sure we all have fractured toes from stuff like this...Just clumsiness I guess.'
Two words, Mookie.
Night light.

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Los Angeles Times
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- Los Angeles Times
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an hour ago
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Yahoo
2 hours ago
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Yankees Build a Better Team After Losing Out on Juan Soto
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They lead the fourth-place Boston Red Sox by nine games already and are playing them for the first time in 2025 this weekend at Yankee Stadium. Soto is batting .232 with 11 homers, 31 RBIs and an .802 OPS so far this season; he will get better and is doing so already with three homers in his last five games through Wednesday night. Judge, playing without him, is having another monster season as the Mets have been jockeying for first place in the National League East with the Philadelphia Phillies. Judge's OPS: 1.237. Advertisement Thus far, advantage Yankees. 'It seems that way now,' David Cone, the former Yankees pitcher and currently ESPN and Yes Network color analyst, said in an interview this past weekend at Dodger Stadium. 'Ten years from now we'll make that judgment, but this year, the first half of the season? Absolutely.' For the Yanks, of course, this is a very short-term snapshot. Fried is signed for eight years, $218 million. 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The Yankees have the third-highest payroll in Major League Baseball for luxury tax purposes at $310.9 million, according to Spotrac, and the team is putting on a master class in short-term roster construction under today's collectively-bargained system. The Yanks spent $74.6 million on Fried, Bellinger, Goldschmidt and Williams, while Soto is earning $61.2 million alone from the Mets for luxury tax purposes. 'They've done very well with the money they spent this year, no question about it,' Cone said. 'The Yankees are much more well-rounded defensively. [Former Yanks, Mets and current A's pitcher] Luis Severino said the Yankees last year were a team with only two hitters: Judge and Soto. They've caught up with the Dodgers offensively and depth-wise.' Fried wouldn't be in New York had Soto chosen the Yankees. Advertisement At the time, the contract conversations with both players were occurring on concurrent tracks. Fried was New York's second choice. It was universally considered that Fried wanted to play where he grew up, in the Los Angeles area. But he also let it be known to the Yanks he was very much in favor of playing in the Bronx. 'Mostly I had a bunch of meetings, but before making a decision, I was just waiting for Soto to sign,' Fried said this past weekend at Dodger Stadium. Soto announced his decision on Dec. 8 at the Winter Meetings in Dallas and two days later Fried signed with the Yankees. The dominoes then started to fall. On Dec. 13 Williams was obtained in a trade with Milwaukee and Bellinger came over from the Cubs four days later. Goldschmidt was the last to sign on Dec. 30. With that the Yankees closed shop for the offseason. Advertisement While Williams has struggled at times in his back of the bullpen role, the other three have exceeded expectations. Fried, for one, replaced the injured Gerrit Cole and opened 7-0 with a 1.28 ERA before losing to the Dodgers this past Friday. His experience pitching at Yankee Stadium has exceeded his expectations. 'I love it,' Fried said. 'I'm very happy with where I'm at. Everything happened for a reason. I'm just happy I'm here with the Yankees.' The Yankees are happy to have him. In this case, sometimes the best deals are the ones you make. Best of Sign up for Sportico's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.