logo
Clayton Kershaw's first strikeout victim still in awe as Dodgers ace hits 3,000 Ks

Clayton Kershaw's first strikeout victim still in awe as Dodgers ace hits 3,000 Ks

USA Today2 days ago
There was actually laughter in the St. Louis Cardinals clubhouse that morning at Dodger Stadium before facing the Los Angeles Dodgers.
The Cardinals didn't have any tape of the 20-year-old kid who was going to make his major-league debut that afternoon, May 25, 2008. No one had any scouting reports. No one faced him in the minors. So, they began asking each other if anyone knew anything about the Dodgers' prized prospect.
'Someone said they heard that he could be the next Rick Ankiel," Schumaker tells USA TODAY Sports. 'No way. There is no way his stuff could be as good as Rick Ankiel's before he became a position player. So we are laughing that someone thought he could have a curveball as good as Ankiel's."
Schumaker was leading off for the Cardinals and stepped to the plate with a game plan.
'I figured I was going to ambush him and welcome him to the big leagues," Schumaker says. 'The first pitch was an elevated fastball. It was harder and faster than I thought, and I swung and missed. Then he threw a curveball. It was something different. It was like nothing I had ever seen before.
'And then, well, I struck out."
Now, 17 years and one month later – 6,247 days to be exact – that strikeout is immortalized in baseball history.
It was Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw's first career strikeout, making Schumaker his first victim.
Kershaw since has produced 2,996 more strikeouts in his future Hall of Fame career, and with three more strikeouts on Wednesday night against the Chicago White Sox at Dodger Stadium, he can become only the 20th pitcher in baseball history to strike out 3,000 in his career.
Kershaw, 37, the 10-time All-Star, three-time Cy Young winner, two-time World Series champion and MVP, will be only the fourth left-hander in baseball history to achieve 3,000 strikeouts, joining Hall of Famers Steve Carlton, Randy Johnson and CC Sabathia. Most important to Kershaw, he'll be only the third to produce 3,000 strikeouts wearing just one uniform, accomplished only by Walter Johnson and Bob Gibson.
'Clayton Kershaw," Schumaker says, 'is the most dominant pitcher I've ever played against in my career. I've never seen anybody like him.
'If anybody deserves a statue outside Dodger Stadium it's Clayton Kershaw. How cool is it for him to have just one uniform, especially in LA, and then have a statue of him in front of that stadium?
'It's unbelievable what he's meant to that organization, and really, what he's meant for baseball."
Schumaker, a career .278 hitter who hit .300 or better three consecutive seasons and never struck out more than 69 times in a season, faced Kershaw six more times in his career, including twice more that afternoon.
He finished 0-for-7 off Kershaw. And struck out six times.
'The only time I even made contact off him," Schumaker says, 'I grounded into a double play. How's that?"
So, does Kershaw ever bring up to Schumaker that he was his first strikeout victim?
'Oh, only every time I see him," laughs Schumaker, now a senior advisor with the Texas Rangers. 'He remembers. And how could I ever forget?
'You don't know at the time, it being his first start, but he just has that special unique look, and with the combination of his stuff, it's just so different. I knew he had a chance to be special, but I didn't know it was going to be 3,000 strikeouts, three Cy Young awards and 16 years in the big leagues special."
Schumaker, who was traded to the Dodgers before the 2013 season, fully grasped Kershaw's greatness in their first game together on Opening Day against the San Francisco Giants.
Kershaw threw a four-hit, complete-game shutout.
'I remember just looking at each other on the bench," Schumaker says, 'What the hell are we watching here? What is this?' He's this dominant on Opening Day? What's the rest of the season going to look like?"
Kershaw went 16-9 with a 1.83 ERA that season, pitching a career-high 236 innings with an NL-best 232 strikeouts, winning his second Cy Young award.
'Just to see him work, and know what kind of person he is," Schumaker says, 'that's what makes this so special. He's the ultimate teammate. He's the ultimate competitor. And he's the ultimate person."
Kershaw, who won the Roberto Clemente Award for his charitable work in 2012, is revered throughout baseball for his generosity, autographing baseballs, jerseys, or whatever is needed for charities, schools and programs.
When Schumaker was trying to help a group of kids from being discouraged during the 2020 COVID summer that cancelled their travel ball season, Kershaw spent an hour on a Zoom call with Schumaker and 15 kids.
'It was one of the most special moments that these kids will always treasure," Schumaker says. 'That's why he's so easy to root for. I can't wait to watch him get his 3,000th."
Kershaw will be the first pitcher to achieve 3,000 strikeouts since Max Scherzer in 2021. The next closest to 3,000 strikeout is 36-year-old Chris Sale with 2,528 strikeouts.
'I think it's cool man," says San Francisco Giants 42-year-old starter Justin Verlander, the three-time Cy Young winner, who leads all active pitchers with 3,471 strikeouts and 262 victories. 'I think the game should celebrate stuff like that and people lile him because it's clearly going away. There are very few of us left. So any time you get a moment to celebrate something like that, you don't know if you'll ever see it again.
'I'm looking forward to seeing it, and I'll surely reach out and congratulate him."
Schumaker, who competed against Kershaw for eight seasons during his career, played with him during the 2013 season, and even managed against him for two seasons while with the Miami Marlins, isn't about to miss Kershaw's start either. He plans on plopping down on his couch Wednesday night at home with his 17-year-old son, Brody, who has Kershaw's autographed jersey hanging in his room, watching history.
'It's just crazy to see him keep doing this," Schumaker says. 'You didn't know if he would even come back after a couple of surgeries. He comes back, and even though he's throwing 89-91 [mph] now instead of 97, he's still beating guys inside with his fastball, and pitches with so much intent and conviction."
Kershaw, who didn't start pitching this season for the Dodgers until May 17 after undergoing knee and toe surgeries during the off-season, is 4-0 with a 3.03 ERA, striking out 29 batters in 38 ⅔ innings. Who knows how much longer he'll pitch, or how long his body holds out – but the way he's going, why stop now?
'It's cool to have moments like these that shake you up a little bit," Verlander says. 'Getting to that number kind of puts things in perspective. But the great ones don't rest on their laurels. They keep working hard, put their nose to the grindstone, and want to keep being great.
'That's Kershaw."
Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale
The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast. Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

2025 Arizona Cardinals training camp roster preview: RB Trey Benson
2025 Arizona Cardinals training camp roster preview: RB Trey Benson

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

2025 Arizona Cardinals training camp roster preview: RB Trey Benson

We will preview every player on the Cardinals roster leading up to training camp. This is about RB Trey Benson. The Arizona Cardinals report to training camp on July 22 and begin the process of preparing for the regular season, forming the roster and determining starting jobs and roles on the team. Leading up to the start of camp, we will take a look at every player on the offseason roster, their background, their contract, their play in 2024, questions they face and their roster outlook. This focuses on running back Trey Benson. Trey Benson background, 2024 season Benson was drafted by the Cardinals in the third round last year out of Florida State. He started his NFL career slowly but saw his role increase. He played in 13 games, missing the final four with an ankle injury. He played 137 total offensive snaps and rushed for 291 yards and a touchdown on 4.6 yards per attempt. He also caught six passes for 59 yards. Tre Benson 2025 contract details, cap hit Benson enters the second year of his four-year rookie deal worth $6.06 million. He will earn $1.07 million in salary and will count $1.38 million against the salary cap. Questions he faces and roster outlook As he enters Year 2 in the NFL, the biggest questions are about what sort of improvement he makes. Can he stay healthy for a full season after missing the final four games with the ankle injury? Is he ready to assume a larger role on offense? James Conner will be the clear starter, but can Benson see more playing time? He believes he and Conner can combine to be two RB1s together. As for the roster, he is all but a lock for the roster and is expected to be the primary backup back to Conner in 2025. Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire's Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on Spotify, YouTube or Apple podcasts.

2025 Arizona Cardinals training camp roster preview: RB James Conner
2025 Arizona Cardinals training camp roster preview: RB James Conner

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

2025 Arizona Cardinals training camp roster preview: RB James Conner

We will preview every player on the Cardinals roster leading up to training camp. This is about RB James Conner. The Arizona Cardinals report to training camp on July 22 and begin the process of preparing for the regular season, forming the roster and determining starting jobs and roles on the team. Leading up to the start of camp, we will take a look at every player on the offseason roster, their background, their contract, their play in 2024, questions they face and their roster outlook. This focuses on running back James Conner. James Conner background, 2024 season Conner entered the NFL in 2017 as a third-round pick of the Pittsburgh Steelers. He played there four seasons before signing with the Cardinals in 2021 on a one-year deal. He signed a three-year contract after that and last year added a two-year extension. He has increased his rushing output each season since 2021. He was a Pro Bowler for the second time in 2021 when he had 18 total touchdowns and 1,127 total yards from scrimmage. Last season, he rushed for a career-high 1,094 yards, his second consecutive 1,000-yard season, and scored eight touchdowns. He added 47 receptions for 414 yards and a touchdown, giving him a career-high 1,508 yards from scrimmage and nine total touchdowns. James Conner 2025 contract details, cap hit Conner signed a two-year extension worth $19 million. He received a $6.75 million signing bonus last year and will earn $3.64 million in salary and up to $510,000 in per-game roster bonuses. His cap hit this season is scheduled to be $6.47 million. Questions he faces, roster outlook The only question Conner faces is whether he can continue to play at the level he has over the last two seasons, as he just turned 30 years old. How many targets will he have, and can he surpass last year's rushing total. He said after his 2023 season that he wanted that year (1,040 rushing yards) to be his baseline moving forward. As for his roster outlook, he is a lock for the team and is the unquestioned starter and workhorse, although depending on the development of 2024 third-round Trey Benson, he might see fewer touches in 2025. Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire's Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on Spotify, YouTube or Apple podcasts.

Dodgers' Shohei Ohtani throws hardest pitch of his career vs. Royals
Dodgers' Shohei Ohtani throws hardest pitch of his career vs. Royals

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Dodgers' Shohei Ohtani throws hardest pitch of his career vs. Royals

The post Dodgers' Shohei Ohtani throws hardest pitch of his career vs. Royals appeared first on ClutchPoints. Unicorn. Shotime. Nito-Ryu. No matter what you call him, Shohei Ohtani is one of the most uniquely gifted athletes in MLB, nay, the world, with a collection of tools the likes of which few could even imagine. Advertisement As a hitter, Ohtani is among the best bombers in the business, with 29 home runs and counting in his second season with the Los Angeles Dodgers. While Ohtani aims for power more often than not, he's also one of the Dodgers' top extra-base hitters, and in 2024, he joined the 40/40 club, becoming one of the rare players who steal as many bases as they destroy dingers. And now, as a pitcher, Ohtani is reminding fans in Los Angeles and beyond just how special he is on the mound, too, with the MVP throwing his third game of the season against the Kansas City Royals in impressive fashion. Before the game, skipper Dave Roberts noted that the Dodgers would try to get Ohtani past the first inning for the first time this year, assuming things went well for the two-way star. While Ohtani did have some struggles early on, getting two of his first three batters on base – including his first walk of the season – 'Shotime' launched the fastest heater of his career, with Vinnie Pasquantino hitting the 101.7 mph fastball into a double-play. Ohtani then pitched the second inning without as much excitement, with the No. 17 retiring the side in order on 13 pitches with Salvador Perez lining out to center, Jac Caglianone striking out, and Nick Loftin fouling out to Dalton Rushing. Advertisement Will Shohei Ohtani eventually give the Dodgers a 'full game,' making it into, or even past, the fifth inning on a regular basis? Potentially so, but for now, he's once again proving why he's one of the most exciting players in MLB, as even in limited action, Ohtani can still do things with a baseball – both throwing and hitting it – that few others could even dream of. Related: Dodgers' Dave Roberts provides important Tyler Glasnow update Related: Dodgers' encouraging Roki Sasaki injury update comes with a catch

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store