Tag: Clayton Kershaw

Dodgers’ Subpar Offense Poised to Waste Another Historic Kershaw Year

Right now, the Los Angeles Dodgers‘ focus is aimed intently at Clayton Kershaw‘s lower back.

Until the three-time Cy Young Award-winner and 2014 National League MVP returns from the disabled list, little else matters for the Dodgers.

The left-handed ace said he felt better after receiving an epidural on June 30, per MLB.com’s Jack Baer, but there’s no timetable for his return.

“I’m going to be very impatient and try to pitch tomorrow,” Kershaw said prior to Saturday’s game, per Mike DiGiovanna of the Los Angeles Times. “The DL [stinks]. There’s no getting around it; it’s awful. You come to the field every day and feel like you let the team down by not pitching. It’s just the way it is, and you have to get through it.”

Let’s get real, though. Even if Kershaw comes back immediately after the All-Star break when he’s eligible and resumes his dominant ways, Los Angeles’ frequently anemic offense could still doom the team to an also-ran finish.

Before we delve into that, let’s remember what Kershaw was doing before his balky back put him on the shelf. There’s a grab bag of ludicrous stats to choose from, but Joon Lee of the Washington Post summed it up neatly after Kershaw‘s most recent start:

As it stands, Kershaw’s WHIP ranks as the best all-time for a single season among all pitchers with more than 120 innings pitched. Earlier this season, the Dodgers lefty passed Cliff Lee for the best K/BB ratio at the 100-strikeout mark. Lee had walked seven batters when he reached 100 strikeouts; Kershaw had walked only five. At the moment, Kershaw is on pace to strike out 305 batters and walk 19.

Kershaw has been so great for so long, it’s easy to take him for granted. But even if you step back and fully appreciate his transcendence, it’s impossible to ignore what a drag the Dodgers’ bats have been.

It may seem an odd moment to lodge this particular complaint, considering the Dodgers just hit their way to a 7-5 win over the Baltimore Orioles on Monday.

Overall, however, Los Angeles ranks 17th in runs scored, 25th in OPS and 28th in team batting average in MLB.

Shortstop Corey Seager is the National League Rookie of the Year front-runner with a .305/.363/.540 slash line and 17 home runs.

Fellow rookie Trayce Thompson has chipped in 13 home runs and 32 RBI, and sophomore Joc Pederson has 13 home runs and 33 RBI of his own.

But first baseman and key lineup cog Adrian Gonzalez owns a pedestrian .384 slugging percentage, the second-lowest mark of his career. Catchers Yasmani Grandal and A.J. Ellis are hitting .188 and .196, respectively.

And despite raising his average 25 points since the start of June, Cuban slugger Yasiel Puig remains a mercurial enigma whose up-and-down performance could soon make him an ex-Dodger, as Bleacher Report’s Zachary D. Rymer outlined. 

When things click, this Dodgers offense can look competent bordering on dangerous, with veterans such as Justin Turner, Howie Kendrick and Chase Utley chipping in.

But it hasn’t been enough, particularly with the archrival San Francisco Giants rolling to a 53-32 record and a five-game lead over L.A. at the close of Independence Day.

The Dodgers haven’t consistently raked anywhere, but their offensive woes have been more pronounced at Chavez Ravine, where they sport a .233 average, as opposed to .244 on the road.

“Obviously, the numbers don’t lie, and where we are on the calendar, it’s enough of a sample size,” manager Dave Roberts said in June of his team’s home futility, per ESPN’s Doug Padilla

On June 30, Los Angeles acquired right-hander Bud Norris from the Atlanta Braves, a move ostensibly aimed at plugging the leak caused by Kershaw‘s injury. You could argue that’s like replacing a bazooka with a Super Soaker, but Norris did win his first start in Dodger blue. 

Now, however, the Dodgers and Andrew Friedman, the team’s president of baseball operations, need to add a hitter or two. 

They’ve been linked to Cincinnati Reds outfielder Jay Bruce. And they could likely land other sluggersincluding the Milwaukee Brewers‘ Ryan Braunwithout sacrificing any blue-chip prospects, provided they’re willing to eat some salary.

Or Los Angeles could dip into its deep farm system and go for a top trade target like Brewers catcher Jonathan Lucroy, who boasts a .296/.355/.484 slash line and an attractive $5.25 million team option for 2017.

Regardless of the route they take, the Dodgers need to do something. They’ve got baseball’s gaudiest payroll. And they employ the game’s best pitcher.

The Kershaw window won’t stay open forever, as this recent injury has made clear. And while the Dodgers have won three straight division titles, they haven’t advanced past the National League Championship Series in that span and haven’t won a title since 1988.

Recent results like Monday’s seven-run showing shouldn’t cloud Friedman’s judgement or lull him into complacency. This team needs offensive reinforcementsperiodor it runs the very real risk of coming up short yet again.

The Dodgers’ first objective is to get Kershaw back on the bump. Once he’s there, however, he’ll need some backup in the batter’s box.

 

All statistics current as of July 4 and courtesy of MLB.com and Baseball-Reference.com unless otherwise noted. 

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Clayton Kershaw’s Back Injury Casts Huge Question Mark over Dodgers’ Season

The hottest team in baseball is spending less than $14 million on a starting rotation that might turn Cleveland into the city of champions. The richest team in baseball has more than $36 million tied up in starting pitchers who aren’t healthy enough to pitch.

Uh, make that more than $70 million, because the Los Angeles Dodgers added Clayton Kershaw to their hefty disabled list Thursday.

Remember when the Dodgers’ problem was they didn’t have a good enough rotation behind Kershaw? Well, now they don’t have a good enough rotation at all, at least until Kershaw returns from the back injury that has sent him to the 15-day DL.

The Dodgers can’t, or won’t, say when that will be. As a result, we can’t, or won’t, say whether the Dodgers have any chance to keep this season from falling apart.

Los Angeles did get a good start from Kenta Maeda on Thursday afternoon in Milwaukee, and it got an 8-1 win over the Brewers that gave it a 44-37 record. If the season ended now, the Dodgers would be in the playoffs as a wild-card team.

Good thing for them the season doesn’t end now, because if the National League Wild Card Game were Friday night, they wouldn’t have Kershaw to pitch in it.

They’d have Bud Norris, the 31-year-old right-hander they announced they acquired Thursday from the Atlanta Braves, where he was in and out and back in the rotation. Norris has a 2.15 ERA in five starts this month, with wins over both the Chicago Cubs and New York Mets, but it’s hard to forget his 8.74 ERA in five starts in April.

He’s no Kershaw, but who is? Not Maeda, although Orel Hershiser said on Dodgers television that the Japanese rookie has been “impersonating an ace” lately. Not anyone in the rest of the pieced-together Dodgers rotation, which for now includes Scott Kazmir, Julio Urias and Brock Stewart after Maeda and Norris.

The “for now” is key, because both Brandon McCarthy (coming back from Tommy John surgery) and Hyun-Jin Ryu (coming back from shoulder surgery) are pitching on minor league rehabilitation assignments. Neither of them is Kershaw, either, but at least they’ve pitched in the big leagues before.

Counting Norris, the Dodgers have had 10 starting pitchers this season—only the Cincinnati Reds and Oakland A’s have used more—and four of them made their major league debut in 2016.

That’s part of the reason that while the Dodgers are 14-2 when Kershaw starts, they’re 30-35 when he doesn’t.

The without-Kershaw record was a problem before Thursday, when we were all thinking Kershaw was going to keep starting every fifth day. Besides being the best pitcher in baseball, the Dodger ace has been remarkably durable, averaging 32 starts and 215 innings in the seven seasons before this one.

He leads the major leagues this year with 121 innings, including six on Sunday in Pittsburgh. He apparently complained of discomfort Monday, flew home Wednesday and was diagnosed with what the Dodgers called a “mild disc herniation” in his lower back, per Andy McCullough of the Los Angeles Times. The team said Kershaw received an epidural injection for pain relief.

What it didn’t say was when he’ll pitch again. Perhaps it honestly doesn’t know. Perhaps it’d rather not even think about it.

“How his body responds to the epidural, that’s the most telling,” manager Dave Roberts told reporters, including McCullough. “I don’t know how it’s going to be. I don’t know. I’m hopeful. But I can’t say either way [whether this will be 15 days or longer].”

The Dodgers, for all their money, wouldn’t spend enough of it to keep Zack Greinke from leaving for the Arizona Diamondbacks last winter. For all their prospects, they wouldn’t part with enough of them to add Cole Hamels (or any of the top rental pitchers) last July.

They have what they have, and if they make it through whatever time Kershaw misses without sinking in the standings, it would be a major accomplishment—and something of a surprise.

As catcher A.J. Ellis told McCullough after the Kershaw news came out, “That’s probably why he hurt his back, he’s been carrying us so long.”

Kershaw was always the Dodgers’ guarantee against a long losing streak. Streaks are usually built on starting pitching, although few teams have ever done that as successfully as the Indians have over the last two weeks.

According to a stat cited on the Indians’ TV broadcast Thursday night, they were the first team since the 1916 New York Giants to win 12 straight games while never allowing more than three earned runs. They did it again for number 13 Thursday, with Carlos Carrasco striking out 14 in a 4-1 win over the Toronto Blue Jays.

The Indians have a five-man rotation that right now qualifies as baseball’s best, but they don’t have a Kershaw.

For at least the next two weeks, the Dodgers don’t have one, either.

 

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball.

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Clayton Kershaw Injury: Updates on Dodgers Star’s Back and Return

Los Angeles Dodgers ace Clayton Kershaw is suffering from back soreness, according to an announcement on Tuesday. He has been placed on the disabled list without an exact timeline for a return revealed.

Continue for updates.


Kershaw Placed on 15-Day DL

Thursday, June 30

MLB.com’s Ken Gurnick revealed that Kershaw was placed on the disabled list and received an epidural for the pain. Gurnick also noted that Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said he was uncertain if Kershaw will be ready after 15 days.


Dodgers Need Kershaw Healthy to Compete for World Series

Kershaw is not only one of the most dominant starting pitchers in baseball, but he’s also one of the most durable. He has landed on the disabled list just once—early in the 2014 season due to a back injury—across nine years in the majors.

Last year, the 28-year-old three-time Cy Young Award winner dealt with a minor hip problem in July. It only pushed back his next start a few days, though. Los Angeles will hope he can continue to navigate his prime without any serious health setbacks.

The Dodgers do have some depth in their rotation, led by Scott Kazmir and Kenta Maeda. That said, losing Kershaw for any type of extended period is among the biggest worst-case scenarios in all of MLB. He’s one of the most valuable players in the league.

One thing’s for sure: L.A. needs a healthy Kershaw to make serious noise in the National League

 

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How Prep Phenom Clayton Kershaw Became an L.A. Dodger 10 Years Ago

The kid was something special, all right. But the story of how Clayton Kershaw, a skinny stick-figured high schooler, landed with the Los Angeles Dodgers 10 years ago as the seventh overall pick in the draft?

The astounding true fact that five pitchers—count ’em—were drafted ahead of him?

Oh, that story is every bit as dramatic as Kershaw’s current, majestic strikeout-to-walk ratio of 109:6.

That story involves (deep breath) Luke Hochevar, the Las Vegas school system, Jordan Walden, Kershaw’s mediocre performance in a state playoff game, subterfuge, Tommy Lasorda, a grand slam in the Seattle Mariners farm system years before and, even, a likely case of racial profiling. (Exhale.)

“I remember it like it was yesterday,” says Logan White, then the Dodgers’ scouting director, now the San Diego Padres’ director of player personnel.

“I remember in the draft room that day, there being some uneasiness in not knowing who was going to be picked ahead of you,” says Ned Colletti, then the Dodgers’ general manager, now a senior adviser to that club’s president and CEO.

“I just tried to throw as hard as I could and let them see it,” says Kershaw of the days leading up to the 2006 draft.

Calvin Jones was Los Angeles-born and, at the professional level, Seattle-bred. The Seattle Mariners had made Jones the first overall pick in the January phase of the amateur draft in 1984, back when the major leagues conducted two drafts a year, in January and June.

Jones played at Double-A Vermont with Ken Griffey Jr. in 1988 and then rejoined him in Seattle in 1991 and 1992. Jones’ major league career was brief: After 65 games with the Mariners over those two seasons, he bounced around the minors for the next four summers and then wound up pitching in Mexico and the independent Atlantic League before his playing days finished in 2002, at 38.

But the reason he was in position to become Los Angeles’ first man in on Kershaw went back more than a decade earlier.

“I was a closer, and he was a starter in the Mariners’ organization,” White says. “I came in in relief one night for him with the bases loaded, and I gave up a grand slam. Three of the earned runs went to him.

“I kid him to this day: The only good thing about that outing is that I hired you.”

The Dodgers hired Jones in 2003 to scout both professionals and amateurs. He was living in Las Vegas at the time.

“Logan asked me, would I be willing to move to Texas?” Jones says. “At the time, I didn’t like the Las Vegas schools. I did some research and got back to him and said, ‘Oh, I’ll take Texas.’ It was the best thing for me. Today, my daughter runs track at [the University of] Oklahoma. I have a son at the University of Arkansas…”

When Jones moved to Dallas, Kershaw’s hometown, the young pitcher wasn’t exactly a household name. Not yet.

“The funny thing was, going into that year, the guy in that area who was the most hyped-up guy was Jordan Walden,” White says of the longtime reliever now on the disabled list in St. Louis. “Nowadays, you have blogs and the internet [so word about others spreads quickly]. But at the time, Walden was the guy.

“Kershaw came out throwing well that spring. I saw him early with Calvin. Tim Hallgren (then the Dodgers’ national crosschecker—the point man responsible for comparing and contrasting reports from the organization’s area scouts) saw him. We were going in to see Walden, and of course Clayton was in the mix, so we go in and then you think the lefty is pretty special.”

Special enough that the Dodgers identified him early as a premium player. White made sure his team had someone there scouting every one of Kershaw’s outings that spring. The lefty was coming on strong. Texas A&M offered a full scholarship but, as the Dodgers got to know Kershaw, their read was he was solely focused on pro ball.

Especially as he lit up both radar guns and opposing lineups.

“Funny thing going into [his senior] year, I think Clayton would tell you he probably wasn’t expecting to go in the first round,” White says.

Says Kershaw: “I don’t remember what I was thinking in the fall. But if you had told me I’d have been drafted in the first round, I’d probably have been a little surprised, for sure.”

Part of it was that Kershaw didn’t become dominant until his senior season of high school, as both his fastball and curveball developed at warp-speed rates. When the season started, Baseball America ranked him as only the 34th high school player in the nation.

Part of it was that, come draft time, major league clubs generally favor college pitchers over high school pitchers because the college kids are viewed as being closer to major league ready.

That is largely why the five pitchers taken before Kershaw in the ’06 draft were all college-aged: Hochevar (No. 1 overall by Kansas City, from the University of Tennessee), Greg Reynolds (No. 2, Colorado, from Stanford), Brad Lincoln (No. 4, Pittsburgh, from University of Houston), Brandon Morrow (No. 5, Seattle, from Cal) and Andrew Miller (No. 6, Detroit, University of North Carolina).

At the time, the Dodgers still owned the rights to Hochevar. They had drafted him in the supplemental round of the 2005 draft, No. 40 overall, but could not agree to terms. Unsigned, the Dodgers would lose their rights to Hochevar with the ’06 draft, which, at one time, was viewed as a Los Angeles fumble.

Not today.

“Hochevar re-entering the draft turned out to be a blessing for us because it increased the number of high-quality arms that might have been drafted ahead of Clayton,” Colletti says.

Privately that spring, the Dodgers were becoming more excited each time they watched him pitch.

Publicly, they kept a low profile and a poker face.

“I can honestly tell you there was never a thought process in which he wasn’t our guy, since early in the spring,” White says. “The first time I saw him, that’s the guy. He honestly was the best guy I saw all spring. We liked other guys—Lincoln, those guys, too. But our main focus that whole year was on Kershaw.

“And I knew, having done this for a while, that high school pitchers fall in the draft. The sentiment is that everybody likes a high school pitcher during the spring, but when they get into the room with the GM and everyone, the thinking starts going that the high school pitcher might not make it or that he might be too far away.

“The reality is that a high school pitcher can look great, but not go one or two or three. He might fall. That’s what happened with Clayton.”

The Dodgers’ strategy was to stay quiet and lurk in the shadows.

“Some guys contacted him early and stayed on him,” Jones says. “I didn’t contact him until closer to the draft. I didn’t call him and stay on him because I didn’t want to alert other teams that we were on him high.”

That is why, in the final days and hours leading up to the draft, the Dodgers’ interest took Kershaw by surprise.

“Wow, I didn’t talk to you much,” Kershaw told Jones. “I hadn’t heard from you guys.”

“Yeah,” Jones told him. “I didn’t want to alert the other teams I was high on you.”

Kershaw appreciated the less aggressive approach.

“He came to our house and talked to my mom and I and just said, ‘We’re interested,'” Kershaw tells Bleacher Report. “It was kind of the least formal of all the teams we talked to, which I thought was great.

“All the other teams have all their tests and all their stuff, which I think is pretty stupid. He just got to know us and hang out. Trying to get to know you as a person instead of trying to figure it all out on a piece of paper.”

The day Jones visited, Kershaw’s mother told him she had something she thought he would get a kick out of. She disappeared into another room and returned with a large photo of Kershaw playing youth baseball for a team called, yes, the Dodgers, in full uniform.

Already smitten, Jones swooned even more. This is meant to be, he thought.

Because of the pointedly subtle strategy, the Dodgers had to find other ways to get to know Kershaw. That wasn’t easy for Jones, being that he had just moved to the area and was living in an extended-stay hotel with his wife, three kids and dog at the time while waiting for construction to finish on his house.

A one-car family then, just getting his kids to and from school while bird-dogging Kershaw alone probably would make for a riveting HBO series.

“I said, ‘I’ve got to know something about this kid,'” Jones says. “So one night about 5 or 6, twilight, I started walking through his neighborhood in Highland Park.

“I ended up talking with one of his neighbors up the street.”

“Oh, yeah, the kid who plays baseball?” the neighbor told Jones. “Great kid. His mom is a really good person. He’s a ‘Yes sir,’ ‘No sir’ type of guy. He was a Cub Scout. Really good kid. I’ve never heard anything bad about him.”

Another guy was standing with the neighbor, and after they chatted, Jones continued his walk in the neighborhood…until a police car pulled up, asked for his identification and wanted to know what he was doing.

“I called my buddy later that night, another black guy, and asked him about it,” Jones says, now chuckling at the memory. “He said, ‘Really? You went walking through Highland Park? Where President George W. Bush lives? Really?’ I didn’t know that. He goes, ‘Yeah, Bush lives there.’ It was crazy. It was funny at the time.

“A black guy walking through the neighborhood with a Dodgers hat on? I didn’t know nothing about Highland Park. I just figured it was [Kershaw’s] neighborhood.”

Jones explained to the policeman that he was a Dodgers scout, produced a California ID (at least it matched his cap) and went on his way.

Meanwhile, some of the clubs picking ahead of the Dodgers were doing less outside legwork and spending more time in Kershaw’s home.

Not that Clayton and his mother were impressed.

“I remember the Pirates and even the Rangers [who picked 12th overall], they had a bunch of tests I had to take that I think I even failed at times,” Kershaw says. “It was like personality. It was a bunch of tests that, honestly, were pretty stupid.

“I don’t know. They were trying to figure it out, but the best way to do it is just to talk to you. The Dodgers did well; they just tried to figure it out. Which I thought was great.”

Says Jones: “You gotta know the human side of him rather than what a piece of paper could tell you about.”

With the draft now looming and Kershaw’s curveball crackling, every one of his Highland Park High School starts was a big draw. Jones estimates there were at least 25 major league scouts and executives at each one.

“They were like, ‘Man, this is the best high school arm we’ve ever seen,'” Jones says. “We were all in agreement.”

From the mound, as he stared in to each hitter, the 18-year-old kid clearly could see the cluster of men behind the screen who would decide his future.

“I don’t know if you really think about all that,” Kershaw says today. “I put a lot of pressure on myself to pitch well. I obviously wanted to get drafted, so I just tried to pitch well for the guys who showed up.”

One day, Highland Park mercy-ruled an opponent, and Kershaw struck out every single hitter in the five-inning game.

“He had pulled an oblique muscle before the playoffs,” Jones says. “I was like, ‘Oh man, he’s not going to be able to snap off curveballs.’ So he struck out every batter throwing all fastballs.

“Logan turned to me and said, ‘C.J., you ever done that?’ ‘No, never. I’ve never seen it.’ Then the next at-bat he hits a home run. And I’m saying, ‘Aw man, I’m not going to get him now!'”

But Kershaw was not invincible. In what the Dodgers thought was a pivotal moment for them that spring, Kershaw served up a first-inning home run in a state playoff game in Frisco, Texas, and, for one day, as his rivals chanted “overrated!” from their dugout, he looked mortal.

“Myself and Travis McCourt, Frank’s son, went in to see him,” White says of the Dodgers’ owner’s son at the time. “Travis wasn’t evaluating, but Frank wanted him to learn the business. Everything that everyone does.

“So we go in and the first kid of the game actually hit a home run off of Clayton, and he was just a little wild that day. He was scattered with his command. His breaking ball was just OK. But he battled, ended up winning 8-2 or 8-3, and I was probably one of the happiest guys in the ballpark that Clayton struggled.

“Because at the time I was thinking we might not get a chance to get the guy. But with him having an outing that was good, but subpar for him, I think it helped seal some of the teams’ decisions in front of us.”

Jones recalls being dejected that day, if fleetingly.

“Logan said, ‘You can’t be worried about yourself, Calvin! Don’t be mad. This might knock some people off of him,” Jones says. “I laughed and told him, ‘I’m not worried about myself.'”

Kershaw? Competitive as he is, even today he looks back on that game and will not admit being off.

“I didn’t think I pitched that bad,” he says. “We won and got to go on.”

As decision day approached, the Dodgers had a few other thoughts, even if none of them were as serious as Kershaw.

They liked pitcher Bryan Morris but ascertained he probably would still be around for their 26th pick in the first round (he was, and he is still pitching today for the Miami Marlins, though he’s currently on the disabled list with a sore back).

They liked Clemson University outfielder Tyler Colvin, who eventually fell to the Cubs, who picked 13th.

“Tim Lincecum was a thought,” says White of the University of Washington right-hander whom San Francisco picked three slots after Kershaw (and right before Arizona selected right-hander Max Scherzer with the 11th pick in a draft memorable for aces). “I don’t know if that was a reality.

“I’d love to tell you if we didn’t take Kershaw we would have taken Lincecum. I would love to tell you that. But it was more Kershaw, Morris, Colvin.”

More and more as draft day approached, with that seventh overall pick, it was Kershaw, Kershaw, Kershaw.

“I put a lot of value in conversations,” says Colletti, who had been named Dodgers GM less than a year earlier, on Nov. 16, 2005. “And [in] my conversations with Logan and Calvin, they were so strong on him. Especially Calvin.

“I didn’t know Calvin as well as I would know him in later years—or Logan for that matter—but I could tell the conviction they had for Clayton Kershaw was about as strong as I’d heard on anybody. That helped push me to think that this certainly was the right player for us to pick.”

Colletti saw Kershaw two or three times in person that spring as well and emerged thinking the young lefty would not be a long-term minor league project.

“Best player on the field,” Colletti says. “Same delivery really. There were different parts to the delivery, and I was curious about that—how that would play long term. But he was as dominating then as he is now.”

In Los Angeles for meetings the week of the draft, Jones made his pitch to all who would listen, including a certain Dodgers Hall of Famer.

“What makes you think we should take your guy over the others?” Tommy Lasorda (then a special adviser with the team) demanded. “This is one of the highest draft picks the Dodgers have ever had.”

“Well, Tommy,” Jones said. “I’ve played with and seen the best. I played with Randy Johnson. I’ve seen Nolan Ryan. I’ve seen Roger Clemens. I’ve seen Greg Maddux. I’ve played with or against all of these guys. And Tommy, this is the best arm I’ve ever seen.'”

“You really think so?”

“Yeah. He has a major league curveball right now.”

On draft day, the Dodgers knew the Detroit Tigers, picking immediately before them, were a threat to take Kershaw. But once the Royals picked Hochevar No. 1 overall, that caused Andrew Miller to tumble down a bit. The Tigers took him at No. 6.

“Logan called right before the draft started,” says Kershaw, who watched on his computer that day (the draft was not yet on television). “He said, ‘If you’re around at the seventh pick, we’re going to take you. It’s not a sure thing, but we think we’re going to take you.’

“It was a cool feeling.”

Says Jones: “I just kept thinking about that picture of him as a boy in a Dodgers uniform. It was giant-sized. I left the house that day and said this sounds like a storybook ending. No way this is going to happen.

“I stuck with him—went to see his last game. He played first base that day, and they lost. I’m watching him walk back toward the bus with his head down; he was by himself. I said, ‘You know what, this is probably the last chance I’ll ever get to talk with him.’

“So I ran up and said, ‘Clayton, I’ve seen a lot of guys play, I’ve scouted a lot of guys, but you’re the best I’ve ever seen. The best stuff I’ve ever seen.’ He said, ‘You think so, Mr. Jones?’ I said, ‘Oh yeah, you’re the best I’ve ever seen. The draft is Tuesday. I probably won’t get you, but if I do, it’ll be the best thing I ever get out of scouting.’ He said, ‘You think so? I read up on the Dodgers, and it seems like you have a really good organization.'”

All that was left was the sweating. The first five picks went down. Then came Detroit, in the midst of a surprising ’06 season that would end with the Tigers storming all the way to the World Series.

“It’s getting close, and I’m going, ‘C’mon, Detroit, draft Andrew Miller! I will root for you in the playoffs!'” Jones says.

The Tigers picked Miller.

That night, his first official night as a Dodger, Kershaw celebrated.

“We went over to my girlfriend’s house—my wife now,” he says of Ellen. “We had a lot of people over there and hung out. Had a party.”

Within a week, Jones was flying to Los Angeles with Kershaw and his mother, Marianne, so Clayton could sign his first major league contract: A $2.3 million signing bonus.

“We get to stadium, and they had life-size pictures of Orel Hershiser and others,” Jones says. “And Clayton says, ‘Wow! Look at that!’

“I go, ‘What are you marveling at? Your picture is going to be up there one day.’ ‘You think so? I hope so, this is great.’

“I said, ‘Get used to L.A., because you’re going to be here for a while.’ I was so happy. His mom is such a great lady, and he was such a great kid.

“It couldn’t happen to better people.”

Colletti vividly remembers meeting Kershaw and his mother in a suite on the first base side of Dodger Stadium that day.

“He was like a young colt,” Colletti says. “We were thrilled to have him. He was quiet, observant, and he had this young colt look to him that he was gonna be a thoroughbred at some point in time.”

A decade later, a thoroughbred for the ages has emerged. Kershaw has won three Cy Young Awards, been to five All-Star Games and is on track to do both again this summer. He remains the Dodgers’ best hope to win their first World Series since 1988 as he’s regularly compared with Hall of Famer Sandy Koufax. The two have become good friends.

Jones left scouting for a construction venture a couple of years ago—a career that is more family-friendly and financially puts him in better position to pay for his kids’ college tuition. But he misses the baseball life and figures he will return to scouting one day soon. Memories of the spring of 2006 only whet his appetite.

“That was one of my best years in scouting,” he says. “You know how you have a Christmas list as a kid and you want a Big Wheel, Rock ’em Sock ’em Robots, an electric football set? My thing back then was I wanted the Big Wheel, and I wanted it bad.

“Clayton was my Big Wheel. I didn’t care about any Rock ’em Sock ’em Robots.”

 

Scott Miller covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

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Scott Miller’s Starting 9: Minus Fanfare, Conforto Becoming Star Mets Need

Got your graduation gifts all purchased? That time of year again….

 

1. Big Apples, Monuments and The Millennial Men

They are both 23, and each will play an enormous role as the summer heats up and the Washington Nationals and New York Mets duel in the National League East.

One is as flamboyant as a pink flamingo in the front yard, as ostentatious as a Porsche in the driveway. Yeah, you know all about Bryce Harper, who came in as one of the hottest prospects in the history of Major League Baseball and put his stamp on the NL MVP award last summer.

The other? As nondescript as a welcome mat at the front door, as plain Jane as a sprinkler watering the lawn. But know this: Despite the fact that his batting average dipped during the month of May, the Mets have gone 22-12 in 34 games in which Michael Conforto has batted either third or fourth in the lineup.

Yeah, Conforto. Oregon State kid. First-round pick in 2014. The Mets got him 10th overall. Spotted Harper a huge head start into the majors: Bryce debuted at 19, of course, in 2012. Conforto didn’t land in New York until last summer, though he zoomed all the way up from Class A St. Lucie in just four months.

Then, Conforto did something Harper still hasn’t done: stepped to the plate in a World Series game.

In fact, Conforto started all five games of the Mets’ Fall Classic loss to Kansas City last October.

Yes, they both are 23, and though the natural comparison/rival for Harper has always been the Los Angeles Angels’ Mike Trout, Conforto is Harper’s intradivisional peer, and won’t it be a blast watching these guys jockey for position in what might become the most thrilling race in baseball this summer?

The three hole is where Mets manager Terry Collins and his staff envisioned Conforto would end up all along in the Mets lineup, though when they moved him there for good on April 15 at Cleveland, with Yoenis Cespedes hitting behind him, nobody knew then how it would solidify things.

“We talked about it in spring training,” Collins tells B/R. “We thought down the road, this guy’s going to be a three-hole hitter. Then when we looked at it early in the year we thought, ‘You know what? This guy is swinging the bat good right now, let’s put him in that spot and see how it goes.’

“And it’s paid off.”

Funny how “down the road” during spring training can suddenly translate into two or three weeks.

“It might have even been next year,” Collins says. “We just thought, this kid’s a good hitter and he’s going to produce runs. And we just said one of these days he’s going to be a three-hole hitter.

“We didn’t know if it was going to be this year, next year or two years from now. I just thought he’s going to be a guy with a high ceiling offensively, so we just took a shot.”

Despite hitting .169/.242/.349 in the month of May, Conforto, who swings lefty, is still hitting .261/.339/.503 overall with eight homers and 24 RBI.

Of Conforto’s 17 career home runs, 10 have either given the Mets the lead or tied the game (eight go-ahead, two game-tying). And for those of you who are Sabermetrically inclined, through Monday, Conforto had a well-hit average of .275 against right-handers, fourth-highest in the majors.

“He has the ability to drive the ball to all fields; he has power. And the good thing with this team is…it wasn’t like, ‘Isn’t so-and-so supposed to hit there?'” Mets outfielder Curtis Granderson says.

As Granderson notes, that’s the “cool thing” about the Mets: They have the ability to move guys around, which helps lessen the pressure on any one individual.

Tell Harper about it. Nobody in the game is under more pressure than him each night, given who he is and what he’s capable of. When he went 11 consecutive games in May without homering, let’s just say it was the loudest silent streak anybody has had in the majors this season.   

During that streak, from May 14-26, Harper was 4-for-33 with 11 walks. Overall this season, he’s still not exactly tearing it up, hitting .242/.415/.535 with 13 homers and 34 RBI.

Conforto is no Harper. Though he is capable of carrying the Mets on his back for a couple of games, he’s certainly not going to do so all summer. Nor is he expected to. But with Cespedes hitting behind him, he is one of New York’s keys, especially with David Wright facing another trip to the disabled list (herniated disk in his neck) and Matt Harvey’s struggles (through Monday, at least). Cespedes and Neil Walker can’t do it all themselves.

Conforto hit third in the lineup throughout high school, college and the minor leagues.

“It’s been my spot,” he says. “It’s where I want to be. But I felt it was something I needed to earn. I wasn’t going to have it right away.

“I still have to earn it.”

Part of that is hitting left-handers better: Against them in 2016, through Tuesday, he was hitting .118/.143/.118. As such, it was no coincidence that Collins gave him a day off Sunday, when the Mets faced Los Angeles Dodgers ace Clayton Kershaw.

After Conforto hit .365/.442/.676 overall in April, rival pitchers spent much of May searching for holes in his swing. What he noticed was a steady diet of breaking balls and sliders, with a few changeups thrown in.

“When I first got there, it was clear I was getting an extra fastball a game, or a pitch that they would have buried in the dirt before, they weren’t,” Conforto says of the move to third from lower in the order.

No small part of that, of course, was that pitchers wanted to take their chances with him rather than with the big bopper hitting next, Cespedes.

So now, for both his sake and that of the Mets, it’s time for Conforto to again start turning some of those sliders and breaking balls around, a lot more frequently than he has of late.

“You’ve always got to be cognizant of what they’re trying to do,” he says.

And if he happens to chat with Harper behind the cage during batting practice one of these days when the Mets and Nationals next meet later this month, the Washington megastar undoubtedly will tell him, “Yes, you do.”

 

2. Messing With the Strike Zone

Look out, the MLB Competition Committee is at it again, and the resulting changes could mean a remapped strike zone and the extinction of the good old-fashioned four-pitch intentional walk.

The first idea is questionable at best.

The second idea stinks.

Where the strike zone is concerned, the competition committee agreed on a motion to raise the bottom part of the strike zone from below the knees to above the knees. Given that almost 30 percent of at-bats are ending in a strikeout or walk this season (and that’s not even when Kershaw is pitching; see next item), it is worth discussing ways to lessen the dead time in games and put more balls in play.

The problem is beware the laws of unintended consequences: If the strike zone is raised, many players and managers think all it will do is turn some of the strikeouts into walks, not help hitters put more balls in play.

Why? Because it is far easier for a hitter to drop the bat head down on a 95 mph fastball than it is for him to get around on a higher fastball. So, in theory, this change could cause hitters to stop attempting to swing at the low fastball, figuring it will be called a ball.

So now you may not be doing anything but ladling more walks into games.

Nothing will change until approved by the playing rules committee. So while we continue to mull the strike zone, here’s hoping that committee quickly shoots down the idea of abolishing the four-pitch intentional walk.

Look, pace of game is an issue, no question, with games this season averaging just over three hours, per Baseball Prospectus. But a manager holding up four fingers instead of a pitcher lobbing four balls? Saves maybe 20 seconds, tops.

And it completely eliminates a part of the game that requires execution. There are times when a pitcher tosses a wild pitch…or leaves an intentional ball too close to the plate and the hitter reaches out and swats it.

Eliminate the four-pitch intentional walk, and you’ll deprive people of entertaining (and potentially game-changing) moments like this:

 

3. Clayton Kershaw’s Dead Time

That 30 percent of at-bats in today’s game ending without the hitter putting the ball in play?

That’s low when Dodgers ace Clayton Kershaw pitches.

When he’s on the mound, a whopping 36 percent of at-bats end without the ball being put into play.

Following his last start, Sunday night against the Mets, Kershaw entered this week with the astounding strikeout-to-walk ratio of 21-1. He had 105 whiffs against just five walks. He also had hit one of his 309 batters faced.

 

4. The Life and Times of Yankees Pitching

The New York Yankees optioned young prospect Luis Severino to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre on Monday, another significant move for a club stuck carefully juggling starting pitchers as if they were knives.

Severino was viewed as a potential savior this spring after going 5-3 with a 2.89 ERA in 11 stretch-run starts last summer. This year, he is 0-6 with a 7.46 ERA.

With him gone, all eyes turn to the enigmatic Michael Pineda, who next starts Thursday in Detroit. Into that start in the Motor City, among qualifiers, Pineda ranks last (52nd) in the AL in ERA (6.92) and second-to-last (51st) in opponents’ batting average (.322).

But just when things look bleak for the Bronx Bombers, check this out from Sunday’s game against Tampa Bay, started by Nathan Eovaldi and then turned over to bullpen stars Dellin Betances, Andrew Miller and Aroldis Chapman, as Inside Edge noted:

That’s some serious cheese right there. Wow.

 

5. Cheating With the Dodgers Outfielders

More than once this season, alert fans have posted brief videos or photos on Twitter showing a Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder dipping into his pocket and checking what looks like a cell phone:

What gives? Have we finally reached the point where even players cannot go half an inning without checking for messages?

Are there pressing dinner reservations? Social arrangements for tonight that cannot wait until after the game? What?

Well, none of the above, it turns out. Rather, Dodgers outfielders now take their positions with cheat sheets for their intricate shifting patterns. There is so much information to remember for each hitter that sometimes a guy like Howie Kendrick needs to fish some of that information out of his pocket to see where to station himself because he can’t remember it.

In fact, according to Ken Rosenthal of Fox Sports, the Mets complained to MLB officials last Friday after learning that Los Angeles intended to mark prearranged defensive positions on the CitiField grass. The Dodgers now use a laser rangefinder before games to determine certain fielding positions. Were they to use it in-game, it would be a violation of rules.

Stay tuned.

 

6. Weekly Power Rankings

1. Memorial Day: Finally, summer (unofficially) begins. Put those cheeseburgers on the grill and cue up some Jimmy Buffett.

2. Matt Harvey: Not only did he fire seven shutout innings against the Chicago White Sox on Monday, he even spoke with reporters afterward. Maybe he’s not washed up, after all.

3. Indianapolis 500: Other than a hand-scooped milkshake, the best reason to drink milk.

4. Golden State Warriors: Did you see those pregame aerial shots of the Oakland Athletics’ home field? You couldn’t even see any leaking sewage. That’s how impressive Stephen Curry is.

5. Julio Urias: Dodgers wunderkind debuts at age 19 on Friday but is dispatched back to Triple-A Oklahoma City in time for Saturday’s Thunder-Warriors Game 6. I know they say teenagers have short attention spans, but, man, that was quick.

 

7. Bat Flip This

Et tu, Mickey Mantle? Wonder how Goose Gossage would frame this!

 

8. Chatter

• The Miami Marlins are thrilled with some of the things Barry Bonds is doing as hitting coach, most notably in reaching outfielder Marcell Ozuna. Things between the Marlins and Ozuna haven’t always been copacetic, but that’s changed this summer. Ozuna’s on-base streak reached 36 consecutive games, longest in the majors this season, before finally ending Monday. “It meant a lot because it meant that I maintained my swing and showed a lot of patience at the plate,” Ozuna, 25, told Miami reporters (via MLB.com). “Now it’s a matter of maintaining that and moving forward.”

Look out for the Pittsburgh Pirates: They’ve won 11 of 16 to shave the deficit between them and the first-place Chicago Cubs from a season-high nine games on May 14 to 6.5 through Tuesday’s games. We knew Pittsburgh had one of the game’s best outfields in Andrew McCutchen, Starling Marte and Gregory Polanco, and the trio is hot: Pittsburgh outfielders lead the majors in batting average (.301) and extra-base hits (72) and rank second in on-base percentage (.371), slugging percentage (.500) and OPS (.871).

Good move by the New York Mets to acquire James Loney, who was languishing in El Paso, San Diego’s Triple-A affiliate. He’s a perfect place-holder for the injured Lucas Duda. Loney, 32, was hitting .342 with a .373 on-base percentage. A scout who saw him last week praised his offensive work and noted that his defense was Gold Glove-caliber.

No question, sources tell Bleacher Report, the San Diego Padres absolutely would love to trade right-hander James Shields and unload a contract that pays him $21 million this year, $21 million in 2017 and another $21 million in 2018 with a $16 million club option or a $2 million buyout in 2019. Shields has an opt-out option after this season, which could discourage potential trade partners.

The Chicago White Sox are among the teams talking Shields with San Diego, sources say. The Sox could use an upgrade in their rotation over Mat Latos, who started 4-0 with a 0.74 ERA but is 2-1 with a 7.21 ERA since, and Miguel Gonzalez.

Of course, after their weekend series with Kansas City, the White Sox look like they could use some bullpen reinforcements, too. They blew a 7-1 ninth-inning lead on Saturday, one of three staggering bullpen losses, and their relievers combined to surrender 17 runs, 15 hits and eight walks over 6.1 innings to Kansas City in the three days. Ouch. And that was only the start of a 10-game trip to KC, New York (Mets) and Detroit.

One of the issues with Tim Lincecum, says a scout who was at his showcase in Scottsdale, Arizona, a couple of weeks ago, is that his stride toward the plate has shortened significantly. That is likely a result of his hip procedure, which is a contributing factor as to why his fastball no longer sizzles. There was little interest in Lincecum after the showcase, except from the injury-depleted Los Angeles Angels of Our Rotation Is Broken. Lincecum is next scheduled to start for Triple-A Salt Lake at Tacoma on Thursday and, if all goes well, is expected to join the Angels in 10 or so days.

Great news, Hall of Fame broadcaster Marty Brennaman confirming that he will return to Cincinnati’s booth in 2017.

Here’s why it is imperative the Cleveland Indians get their pitching sorted out. Through Tuesday, Cleveland had played 50 games—tied for fewest in the majors with the Baltimore Orioles, Cubs and Rays—yet scored 238 runs, fourth-most in the American League. There’s an opportunity here…if manager Terry Francona can get all the pieces moving in the same direction.

Speaking of the Indians, it still could not be more fitting that a slugging designated hitter named Carlos Santana plays in the city that houses the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame museum.

Thursday’s Arizona-Houston match features two of the most disappointing starting pitchers in the land: the Diamondbacks’ Zack Greinke, whose 4.71 ERA ranks 78th in the majors (you sure couldn’t tell by that $206 million contract) against the Astros’ Dallas Keuchel, whose 5.58 ERA ranks 97th (nowhere near last season’s Cy Young form).

 

9. Andrew Miller IS Going to Throw the Slider

The New York Yankees’ ace setup man, into last weekend, per Inside Edge:

 

9a. Rock ‘n’ Roll Lyric of the Week

Paul Simon’s new record, Stranger to Stranger, drops June 3, and the man who gave us the immortal line “Where have you gone, Joe DiMaggio? A nation turns its lonely eyes to you” goes back to baseball again with a song called “Cool Papa Bell.” Hall of Famer Satchel Paige once said, in one of the greatest quips in the history of baseball, that Bell was so fast that he could click off the light and jump in bed and be under the covers before the room got dark.

“Have you all heard the news?

“‘Heaven finally found!’

“OK, it’s six trillion light-years away

“But we’re all gonna get there someday

“Yes, we’re all gonna get there one day

“But, but not you!

“You stay and explain the suffering

“And the pain you caused

“The thrill you feel when evil dreams come true

“Check out my tattoo!

“It says ‘wall-to-wall fun’

“Does everyone know everyone

“Mr. wall-to-wall fun

“We got the well, well, well

“And Cool Papa Bell

“The fastest man on Earth did dwell as

“Cool Papa Bell”

— Paul Simon, “Cool Papa Bell”

 

Scott Miller covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Scott on Twitter and talk baseball.

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Kershaw Posts Record-Setting 0.52 WHIP in Month of May

Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw posted the best single-month WHIP by any starting pitcher (minimum five starts) since 1913, recording a sterling 0.52 mark over his six starts in May, per MLB Stat of the Day on Twitter.

Well on his way to a fourth Cy Young Award, the 28-year-old lefty went 5-0 with a 0.91 ERA in May, allowing just five runs (all earned) on 24 hits and two walks in 49.2 innings while striking out 65 batters.

Also impressive in April, Kershaw now owns a 7-1 record, 1.56 ERA and 0.65 WHIP for the season, with 105 strikeouts and just five walks in 86.2 innings (11 starts). He’s gone at least seven innings in every outing and has recorded double-digit strikeouts in seven of his last eight.

During his most recent start, against the New York Mets on Sunday, Kershaw became the first pitcher since 1900 to have five or fewer walks at the time he recorded his 100th strikeout in a season, per Elias Sports Bureau (via SportsCenter on Twitter). 

He also set a record for the most strikeouts (65) in a month featuring five or fewer walks and became just the fourth pitcher to record both a sub-1.00 ERA and 65-plus strikeouts in a calendar month, joining Randy Johnson (June 1997), Roger Clemens (August 1998) and Pedro Martinez (September 1999), per Elias (via ESPN.com).

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Clayton Kershaw Teasing Another MVP-Cy Young Season After Dominant May

There were no beanballs, no ejections and no Chase Utley fireworks in Sunday night’s tussle between the Los Angeles Dodgers and New York Mets.

But there was Clayton Kershaw, and lately that means flat-out greatness.

Well, OK, not just lately. Kershaw has been great for years now to the point where it’s possible to take him for granted.

But over his past several starts, he’s elevated his game to yet another level and put himself on track to claim another National League Cy Young Award and, yep, MVP trophy.

The Mets were merely the latest unlucky victims.

For 7.2 innings, the Dodgers left-hander carved New York’s lineup into neat little pieces, striking out 10 with no walks and allowing two earned runs on four hits.

He surrendered a solo home run to Asdrubal Cabrera in the sixth. A second run was charged to his record when left-hander Adam Liberatore coughed up a Curtis Granderson RBI triple in the eighth, plating Kevin Plawecki, who had singled off Kershaw to lead off the inning.

The Dodgers, however, answered back with two runs in the top of the ninth on a bases-loaded Adrian Gonzalez single and went on to a 4-2 victory.

Kershaw didn’t get the win, but his record still sits at a perfect 5-0 for the month of May. During that span, he’s struck out 65 in 49.2 innings while surrendering two walks and five earned runs.

To say he’s a shoo-in for Pitcher of the Month honors is beyond an understatement. ESPN.com’s Doug Padilla was already asking if Kershaw had put together the best month ever before Sunday’s gem.

On Saturday, the story was Mets right-hander Noah Syndergaard throwing a blazing fastball behind Utley in the third inning and getting tossed, then Utley launching a pair of home runs.

That, in turn, exhumed memories of Utley’s takeout slide in last year’s National League Division Series between New York and Los Angeles, which ended Mets shortstop Ruben Tejada’s season and ultimately led to an MLB rule change.

Any simmering ill will was pushed to the back burner as Kershaw took the hill opposite veteran Bartolo Colon, who yielded a pair of runs in six innings. Neither pitcher showed any hint of throwing at anyone. Cooler heads prevailed.

So did Kershaw and the Dodgers.

Eventually, he’s going to lose again. He’s not invincible, despite recent results to the contrary.

But on a flawed Los Angeles team that ranks in the bottom third in baseball in OPS and has question marks in the bullpen that bubbled up again Sunday, he’s been nothing short of a savior.

Even after taking two straight from the Mets, the Dodgers still trail the archrival San Francisco Giants by 4.5 games in the NL West. Where would they be without Kershaw?

The Chavez Ravine faithful are no doubt shuddering at the thought.

Which brings us back to talk of another MVP Award. Kershaw claimed the prize in 2014 when he posted a 1.77 ERA with 239 strikeouts in 198.1 innings.

This year, his ERA sits at 1.56, and he’s already compiled 105 strikeouts in 86.2 frames with just five walks, which inspired the following tongue-in-cheek response from former player and current ESPN analyst Doug Glanville:

Reigning NL MVP Bryce Harper is mired in a slump that has lowered his average to .245, though the 23-year-old is always a threat to go off.

Heck, with so much season left, there’s time for any number of top talents to vault into the MVP conversation.

Right now, Kershaw‘s chief competition for the award might be Mets left fielder Yoenis Cespedes, who leads the Senior Circuit in home runs and slugging percentage.

On Sunday against Kershaw, Cespedes went 0-for-3 with two strikeouts. It’s only one game, obviously, and Cespedes remains a force. But it felt like a message was delivered.

Again, this transcendence is nothing new for Kershaw, as MLB.com’s Michael Clair outlined:

Over the last three seasons, Kershaw has posted a 188 ERA+, a statistic that normalizes performance and compares it to the league average (which is 100). [Justin] Verlander’s best season: 172. [Tim] Lincecum’s: 171. [Felix] Hernandez: 174. That means Kershaw has been better, on average, over the past three years than any one of those guys was in his very best season.

We’re nearing the point when it will be time to talk about Kershaw not merely as one of the best pitchers of his generation but one of the best of all time. 

It will become even more unavoidable if Kershaw wins another MVP. Ten pitchers in MLB history, including Kershaw, have taken home an MVP and Cy Young in the same season. No one has done it twice.

“I wish we had 25 of him,” Dodgers skipper Dave Roberts said of his ace, per Padilla.

That’s understandable, especially given the Dodgers’ shortcomings. It’s also an impossibility.

Baseball is a game of surprise and uncertainty, but this much we know unequivocally: There’s only one Clayton Kershaw.

 

All statistics current as of May 30 and courtesy of MLB.com and Baseball-Reference.com.

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Kershaw Earns 3rd Shutout in May, Could Be Headed for 4th NL Cy Young Award

Following Monday’s outing against the Cincinnati Reds, Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw had thrown as many shutouts (3) in the month of May as the rest of MLB combined, per ESPN Stats & Info

Of course, this isn’t the only gaudy statistic Kershaw has churned out lately.

Not only is the man undefeated in May (5-0), but he also flaunts a 0.64 ERA with 55 strikeouts compared to only two walks.

For the season, Kershaw boasts a 7-1 record, 1.48 ERA and 19.0 strikeout-to-walk ratio.

Compare this to last season when Kershaw sported a 2-3 record, 4.32 ERA and 4.6 K/BB ratio on May 23.

Remarkably, following that relatively poor start, he went on to finish third in NL Cy Young voting, as he was his usual dominant self for the rest of the season.

Now, a fourth Cy Young Award may be in the cards, even with last year’s winner—Chicago Cubs pitcher Jake Arrieta—off to a dominant start of his own.

Arrieta owns an 8-0 record and 1.29 ERA, but his 63-20 K/BB ratio isn’t nearly as impressive as Kershaw‘s insane 95-5 mark.

Should Kershaw corral a fourth Cy Young, he would tie Greg Maddux and Steve Carlton for the third most in MLB history, behind only Randy Johnson (5) and Roger Clemens (7).

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Clayton Kershaw vs. Mike Trout Is What Makes MLB Interleague Worth It

Many will say interleague play in Major League Baseball has lost its luster, but it still has at least one gift to give every year.

It’s an annual showdown of epic proportions, and the time has come for it to be renewed in 2016: Clayton Kershaw vs. Mike Trout.

Their matchup gets top billing for Tuesday night’s tilt between the Los Angeles Angels and Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium. And on paper, the fourth meeting between Kershaw and Trout is just as worthy of a Mr. Burns “Excellent…” as the first three.

Kershaw is reveling in his usual Kershaw-ian dominance. The three-time Cy Young winner’s 1.74 ERA isn’t the best in the league, but nobody comes close to his 77-4 strikeout-to-walk ratio. Under these circumstances, Vin Scully is forgiven for mistaking the 28-year-old southpaw for Sandy Koufax.

With a .962 OPS and eight home runs, Trout is also abiding by his reputation. Even when Bryce Harper was challenging Trout for the “Best Player in Baseball” crown, Neil Paine of FiveThirtyEight wrote that Trout still ruled. And with teams now basically refusing to let Harper tap into his immense talent, Trout’s position atop the “Best Player in Baseball” throne looks even safer.

There was little doubt Trout was the best when he and Kershaw first met in 2014. Trout was on his way to his first American League MVP after arguably getting robbed in 2012 and 2013, and he added to his legend by singling and doubling in his first two at-bats against Kershaw.

“It’s always fun, going against the best,” Trout said of Kershaw afterward, per Lyle Spencer of MLB.com. “He’s a good person, and he battles out there. He’s a competitor. I love battling guys like that.”

But in their meetings since then, what Trout has had can’t be described as “fun.”

In seven of the last nine regular-season plate appearances Trout has against Kershaw, the 24-year-old center fielder has gone hitless and struck out three times. One of those punch-outs involved Kershaw’s famed Uncle Charlie turning Trout into a statue in their first meeting of 2015:

Modern times being what they are, narratives must flow like spice on the planet Dune. In this case, 2014 brought the “what will happen?!” appeal of the first-ever meeting between the sport’s best pitcher and best player. In 2015, it was the first time two reigning MVPs had ever faced off. Now in 2016, Trout has a score to settle.

How will that pan out? We’ll find out Tuesday night.

In the meantime, the only thing to do is recognize just how darn cool it is that we find ourselves breathing heavy in anticipation once again.

Interleague play’s faults are extensive. It makes scheduling a nightmare. For every cool regional matchupi.e., New York’s Subway Series, Chicago’s Windy City Showdown or, yes, Southern California’s Freeway Series—there are always random matchups that nobody cares about. And now that interleague play is a yearlong presence, having to switch between American League rules and National League rules has gone from cool novelty to frequent frustration.

Kershaw vs. Trout matchups, however, are to interleague play what marshmallows are to a bowl of Lucky Charms: tasty morsels good enough to make the whole thing worth it.

The essential gimmick of interleague play is creating matchups that would otherwise have a hard time coming to fruition. The Kershaw vs. Trout rivalry is a reminder that this is just as true on a player vs. player level as it is on the team vs. team level. Without interleague play, meaningful matchups between them could only happen in the All-Star Game or the World Series.

In the many years before interleague play arrived in 1997, that arrangement limited or prevented dream pitcher vs. hitter matchups. Ty Cobb never faced Christy Mathewson. Babe Ruth never faced Dazzy Vance. Ted Williams faced Warren Spahn only five times—all in All-Star Games. Mickey Mantle faced Sandy Koufax only eight times—all in the World Series. Bob Gibson and Carl Yastrzemski butted heads 13 times in 1967 between the All-Star Game and the World Series, but only three more times after that.

Kershaw and Trout have already squared off more than Mantle and Koufax ever did and are going to do battle many more times than Yaz and Gibson in the long run. Without interleague play, the chance of this happening would be somewhere between slim and none.

With Trout’s Angels badly damaged by injuries and one bad contract, it’s unlikely he and Kershaw will be meeting in the World Series anytime soon. And though they’ve already met twice in All-Star Games, the need for All-Star managers to make substitutions about as frequently as Aroldis Chapman fires 100 mph fastballs means that number might not climb much higher.

Of course, you can argue that Trout and Kershaw only meeting in the All-Star Game or the World Series would be appropriate, as those are the only baseball stages with spotlights big enough for the two of them. Instead, being able to count on them facing each other year after year thanks to interleague play arguably diminishes the grandeur of it. Less is more, et cetera.

But if you’ll permit me to yell from my porch at any ungrateful so-and-sos out there, there are exceptions to the ol’ “too much of a good thing” rule. If ever there was an appropriate embodiment of this notion, it’s Kershaw vs. Trout showdowns.

Going back to 2012, Kershaw has been baseball’s best pitcher and Trout has been baseball’s best position player. To this extent, there’s no better matchup of modern-day titans than this one. This is baseball’s answer to Iron Man vs. Captain America.

But really, what’s recent baseball history when compared to all of baseball history? Trout might be the best young player baseball has ever seen. Kershaw is one of the best young pitchers baseball has ever seen.

As such, even calling their rivalry a once-in-a-generation thing feels like selling it short. Theirs is the kind of rivalry that all generations wish for. That today’s generation actually has one is worth celebrating.

Let us not take neither the latest Kershaw vs. Trout showdown nor any more to come for granted. Rather, let us take as much as we can get and ask for more.

For that, interleague play will keep delivering. It’s not good for much, but at least it’s good for that.

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted/linked.

Follow zachrymer on Twitter 

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Clayton Kershaw Sets Dodgers Record with 5 Straight Starts of Double-Digit Ks

Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw continued to be in top form, posting his fifth straight start with at least 10 strikeouts in a 5-0 win over the New York Mets on Thursday.

Kershaw is the first Dodgers pitcher since 1913 to put together such a strikeout streak, per MLB Stat of the Day:

That means Kershaw has accomplished something even Don Drysdale, Sandy Koufax and Orel Hershiser couldn’t do.

The three-time Cy Young Award winner and 2014 National League MVP could add to his trophy case at the end of the year, as the Dodgers’ ace (4-1) is having a phenomenal 2016 campaign, which MLB.com’s Mike Petriello pointed out:

ESPN Stats & Info added another stat to highlight Kershaw’s dominance:

If Chicago Cubs ace Jake Arrieta was not also dominating this season, Kershaw would be the runaway favorite for another Cy Young honor. Arrieta is 6-0 with a microscopic 1.13 ERA.

If both pitchers keep up their play throughout the season, Arrieta may get a slight edge since the Cubs appear likely to finish with one of the best records in baseball. Regardless, Kershaw is still a generational talent whom fans should appreciate as a future first-ballot Hall of Famer.

 

All statistics courtesy of Baseball-Reference.

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