From the surface, the Dodgers know the straightforward narrative to their season.
About how, after starting the marketing campaign with the very best expectations possible, they spent a lot of the 12 months failing to dwell as much as the hype.
How, throughout what was already a dismal second-half droop, they appeared to succeed in all-time low once they squandered a no-hitter and three-run lead in a surprising ninth-inning loss in Baltimore final month.
How, within the six weeks since, they’ve seemed like a rejuvenated and refocused membership, following that nightmarish defeat with a 15-5 end to the common season and torrid march by October — going 9-1 en path to a Nationwide League pennant and return journey to the World Collection, which can start with Recreation 1 on Friday evening.
In hindsight, nevertheless, the Dodgers additionally insist the story isn’t that straightforward.
The peaks and valleys of this season, they felt, had been by no means as excessive as they appeared.
“Obviously, the season went the way it went,” veteran third baseman Max Muncy mentioned of a 93-win marketing campaign that, regardless of together with one other NL West title, certified as a disappointment in comparison with their preseason prognostications. “It’s a long season. It’s a lot of games. We dealt with a lot.”
However, Muncy added as beer and glowing wine had been sprayed throughout him within the Dodgers clubhouse Friday evening, in celebration of the group’s fifth Fall Traditional journey within the final 9 seasons: “We always knew what we had in the clubhouse. We always knew what we had on the field. Now, you’re starting to see it.”
This, certainly, was all the time the plan. One which, even of their worst moments, they believed would occur all alongside.
Final fall, the Dodgers’ run to a World Collection championship really did really feel shocking. Their beginning rotation was ravaged. Freddie Freeman entered the playoffs with ankle and rib accidents. And there have been real October doubts to beat, after upset first-round eliminations the 2 earlier years.
That group additionally had identifiable turning factors, from a belief-instilling clubhouse assembly referred to as by supervisor Dave Roberts in mid-September, to an NL Division Collection comeback towards the San Diego Padres that catapulted them by the rest of the playoffs.
Once they lastly reached the mountaintop, led by a hobbled Freeman and heroic performances from an overachieving bullpen, it was an accomplishment of dedication and perseverance; a triumph that, even internally, not everybody all the time noticed coming.
This 12 months, in contrast, the Dodgers considered their path otherwise.
On paper, the defining level of the season seemed to be that Sept. 6 loss to the Orioles — a day that started with one other clubhouse assembly from Roberts, who gathered his group amid a surprising 22-31 droop that stretched to early July; then resulted in disastrous style, when Yoshinobu Yamamoto misplaced a no-hit bid with two outs within the ninth, earlier than a withering bullpen imploded to lose the sport in a walk-off meltdown.
“Losing that game, to a team that’s not even in playoff contention, you started thinking, ‘What’s wrong with us?’” infielder Miguel Rojas recalled.
However trying again final week, a number of different teammates mentioned, the Dodgers by no means absolutely felt the panic that was swirling round them.
As an alternative, they trusted the expertise of their record-setting $415 million roster to finally rise to floor. They banked on getting wholesome, then finally turning the ship.
“We’ve been there before,” Freeman mentioned. “We knew we were OK.”
“At some point, we were gonna start clicking,” Muncy added. “[We just needed] guys coming back and getting healthy.”
Early within the season, in spite of everything, the Dodgers had been wholesome and clicking. Their 8-0 begin was higher than any defending champion in MLB historical past. Their 29-15 report by mid-Might had them on a 107-win tempo.
“You look at the start of the season, when we had everybody, we were playing really good,” Muncy mentioned. “If our team was our team the whole year, maybe we would’ve lived up to those expectations.”
The Dodgers, in fact, didn’t have their full group for a lot of the following three months, once they performed precisely .500 baseball (49-49) from Might 16 by that Sept. 6 loss in Baltimore.
On the mound, the rotation was battered by accidents to Blake Snell, Tyler Glasnow, Roki Sasaki and Tony Gonsolin. That put added pressure (and innings) on a bullpen nonetheless feeling the affects-effects of the earlier October.
The lineup additionally handled its personal damage issues. Freeman began the 12 months nonetheless nursing his ankle, which required surgical procedure over the offseason. Mookie Betts was behind the eight ball from the beginning following a spring-training abdomen virus. In the summertime, Tommy Edman, Teoscar Hernández and Kiké Hernández every missed time, then returned taking part in lower than 100%. Muncy was out and in of motion in the course of the second half, too, struggling a knee damage in July and indirect pressure in August.
Looking back, Muncy famous, it was a dynamic that the Dodgers (who’ve MLB’s oldest common lineup age at 30.7 years previous, and had been coming off a bodily taxing postseason run the earlier 12 months) all the time figured to grapple with.
“The reality of it is — and we all know this, everyone up top knows it — our team wasn’t going to make it through the full season without breaking at some point,” he mentioned. “So it was just, how do you weather those [low] moments?”
Downside was, they didn’t all the time do this nicely, both.
For a lot of July and August, the Dodgers had one of many lowest-scoring offenses in baseball, affected by an occassional lack of focus and depth some folks within the group later attributed to a World Collection hangover.
Their defective bullpen solely made issues worse, contributing to a 5-20 report in video games determined by two runs or much less from early July to early September.
When Roberts referred to as for his pregame clubhouse assembly that day in Baltimore, it was solely the newest in a string of speeches he’d delivered to completely different teams of gamers on the group in prior weeks. By that time, efforts to snap out of the second-half malaise had been ongoing for some time.
“We’re doing everything in our power, having closed meetings, doing everything that we can, to try to right the ship,” Shohei Ohtani mentioned by an interpreter on the evening the Dodgers fell to second place within the division after being swept by the Angels in August. “We just have to do a better job.”
“There’s no sugarcoating this,” Freeman echoed a couple of weeks later, when one other confounding sweep to the Pittsburgh Pirates in early September was adopted by one other walk-off loss to the Orioles in group’s series-opener in Baltimore. “We need to figure this out, and figure this out quick.”
That, nevertheless, is the place the 2025 Dodgers differed from the earlier 12 months’s group.
Even at their lowest, they didn’t really feel hopeless.
As soon as they received wholesome once more, they believed higher play would observe.
“Everyone was like, ‘We’re going to hit. We’re going to pitch well out of the bullpen. It’s just going to happen,’” Freeman mentioned. “We’ll figure it out. We’ll get there.”
The primary driver of the turnaround since was the pitching. Snell and Glasnow had already returned from their accidents by September, however didn’t discover a rhythm till the ultimate weeks of the 12 months. Yamamoto additionally received scorching, giving up only one run in his three begins after the close to no-hitter. Emmet Sheehan and Clayton Kershaw, who had been out firstly of the 12 months recovering from surgical procedures, flourished to present the rotation added depth.
Ohtani (whereas posting MVP numbers offensively) additionally constructed his approach as much as a full starter’s workload, after beforehand being restricted to brief outings coming off his second profession Tommy John surgical procedure.
Sasaki, in the meantime, made a late-season return within the bullpen, giving that group an anchor it had beforehand been lacking.
“We started winning because our starting pitching was just so good,” Freeman mentioned, after the group produced a 2.07 ERA in September and 1.40 mark within the first three rounds of the playoffs.
“As an offense, when you see your starting pitcher just throwing zeros over and over and over again, it’s like, ‘C’mon, just get one, get two, get three.’”
That type of constant manufacturing certainly started to re-emerge, too.
There was higher well being and improved particular person performances, particularly from Ohtani, Betts and Freeman (who mixed for 22 house runs and 54 RBIs in the course of the Dodgers’ resurgence in September). There was renewed emphasis from the teaching employees on high quality at-bats and group offense (serving to the Dodgers common 5.6 runs per sport over their remaining 20 contests).
There was additionally elevated accountability the gamers positioned on each other, difficult themselves to raise their sport the nearer they received to postseason baseball.
“We always knew we were going to be a really, really good team in October,” Muncy mentioned. “Once you get to October, it’s, ‘Alright, it’s game time.’ That’s how we’re taking it.”
That mindset has continued to manifest within the playoffs, the place lots of the Dodgers’ largest moments — from the wheel play they turned in Philadelphia, to the 11-inning marathon that despatched them to the NLCS, to the string of low-scoring victories they pulled out towards the Milwaukee Brewers — have been borne of veteran poise and a battle-tested composure.
“It’s an advantage to having such a veteran group,” Kiké Hernández mentioned. “We’ve played in a lot of big games together.”
And now, they’ll achieve this once more in one more World Collection look, taking part in the type of baseball similar to they anticipated all alongside.
“Showing up to spring this year, it was, ‘Hey, we need to repeat,’” Muncy recalled. “It wasn’t like we wanted to repeat. It was like, ‘Hey, we need to’ … Because that’s just how good we are.”