1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E LOB
LAD 0 2 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 5 11 1 10
MIL 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 1 4

Box Score

MIL AB R H RBI BB SO BA
RF Chourio 4 1 1 1 0 1 .320
2B Turang 4 0 1 0 0 1 .143
C Contreras, Wm 4 0 0 0 0 0 .222
DH Yelich 4 0 0 0 0 1 .192
1B Vaughn 4 0 0 0 0 1 .190
CF Frelick 3 0 1 0 0 0 .217
3B Durbin 3 0 0 0 0 2 .227
LF Bauers 3 0 0 0 0 0 .375
SS Ortiz, J 1 0 0 0 1 0 .125
PH Collins 1 0 0 0 0 1 .000
SS Monasterio 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
MIL IP H R ER BB SO P-S ERA
Peralta, F 5.2 5 3 3 1 4 97-60 4.70
Uribe 0.2 2 1 1 0 1 11-10 3.86
Ashby 0.2 1 0 0 0 1 18-13 4.26
Myers 0.2 2 1 1 2 0 27-16 13.50
Gasser 0.2 1 0 0 1 2 14-9 6.75
Anderson, G 0.2 0 0 0 0 0 2-1 0.00
LAD AB R H RBI BB SO BA
DH Ohtani 5 0 1 1 0 3 .147
SS Betts 3 0 0 0 1 0 .303
1B Freeman, F 5 0 1 0 0 1 .242
C Smith, W 4 1 1 0 1 1 .238
3B Muncy 4 1 1 1 1 1 .273
RF Hernández, T 5 1 2 1 0 0 .294
CF Dean 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
2B Edman 4 0 2 1 0 1 .296
LF Hernández, K 3 2 2 0 1 1 .379
RF Pages, A 2 0 1 1 0 0 .069
LAD IP H R ER BB SO P-S ERA
Yamamoto 9.0 3 1 1 1 7 111-81 1.83

Scoring Plays

Inning Event Score
B1 Jackson Chourio homers (2) on a fly ball to right center field. 1-0
T2 Teoscar Hernández homers (4) on a fly ball to left field. 1-1
T2 Andy Pages doubles (1) on a line drive to right fielder Jackson Chourio. Enrique Hernández scores. 1-2
T6 Max Muncy homers (1) on a fly ball to center field. 1-3
T7 Shohei Ohtani singles on a ground ball to right fielder Jackson Chourio. Enrique Hernández scores. 1-4
T8 Tommy Edman singles on a ground ball to right fielder Jackson Chourio. Will Smith scores. Max Muncy to 3rd. 1-5

Highlights

Description Length
Probable pitchers for Dodgers at Brewers – October 14, 2025 0:06
Yoshinobu Yamamoto against the Brewers 0:08
Freddy Peralta against the Dodgers 0:09
Bullpen availability for Milwaukee, October 14 vs Dodgers 0:08
Bullpen availability for Los Angeles, October 14 vs Brewers 0:08
Bench availability for Los Angeles, October 14 vs Brewers 0:08
Fielding alignment for Los Angeles, October 14 vs Brewers 0:11
Fielding alignment for Milwaukee, October 14 vs Dodgers 0:11
Bench availability for Milwaukee, October 14 vs Dodgers 0:08
Starting lineups for Dodgers at Brewers – October 14, 2025 0:10
The distance behind Jackson Chourio's home run 0:13
Jackson Chourio's home run through bat tracking data 0:11
Teoscar Hernández: Home Run Statcast Analysis 0:12
Visualizing Teoscar Hernández's swing using bat tracking technology 0:11
Breaking down Freddy Peralta's pitches 0:04
Measuring the stats on Max Muncy's home run 0:13
Freddy Peralta's outing against the Dodgers 0:24
An animated look at Max Muncy's home run 0:11
Jackson Chourio's leadoff home run 0:29
Teoscar Hernández's solo homer 0:29
Field view: Teoscar Hernández's solo home run 0:30
Andy Pages' RBI double 0:30
Max Muncy's solo homer 0:26
Field View: Max Muncy's solo home run 0:28
Shohei Ohtani's RBI single 0:29
Tommy Edman's RBI single 0:27
Yoshinobu Yamamoto strikes out Isaac Collins 0:06

Decisions

Winning Pitcher Losing Pitcher Save
Yamamoto (2-1, 1.83 ERA) Peralta, F (1-2, 4.70 ERA)

Game ended at 11:03 PM.

25 comments
  1. Yamamoto with a performance for the ages. And to think some people thought he’d be a bust in MLB.

  2. I’m starting to think the Dodgers may have just been in a funk when the Brewers played them in the regular season. Probably need at least 2 more games to confirm that notion.

  3. As dangerous as the Dodgers look, it’s remarkable that there’s still so much room for improvement from the bats in the postseason.

    If Ohtani gets hot at the plate and the rest of the lineup maintains the level, it’s hard to see what could stop them.

  4. Kind of a meta subject but the mythologizing of everything after it happens in sports needs to tone down. Dodgers had similar odds to Blue Jays to win the WS going into the playoffs and the results don’t change that. No one can confidently predict the playoffs.

    Tons of people are catastrophizing about the sport being broken because the Dodgers are on a run. This is the best I’ve ever seen them in the playoffs and they’ve had tons of great teams over the past 15ish years.

    Idk where I’m going with this exactly but you can use baseball as a hobby to sharpen your mind and learn about statistics and how to use them. Or you can overreact to whatever most recent thing happens or recent small samples and try to make a crazy narrative about those things all the time.

    Watching Snell and Yamamoto pitch has been all time and it’s such a priveledge to watch something like this. Watch out for Glasnow.

    Edit: the irony of the liteshadow comment is painful

  5. Don’t think it’s really an excuse, but if you were to ask someone unfamiliar with the current MLB what a matchup between these two payrolls looked like, it’d probably be pretty close to that. Dodgers are just overwhelming the Brewers right now, impressively so.

    Brewers recent play is also another stark reminder of how difficult it is to win via small ball in the playoffs. Outside of the 9 run blitzkrieg they had in the first two innings of the NLDS, they’ve only scored 20% of their runs through small ball. The other 80% is almost exclusively via homers, most of them solo shots.

  6. These Brewers — much like the Rays of a few years ago — are a really interesting thought experiment in playoff vs. regular season team building

    Over 162 games, a lineup full of 105-115 OPS+ guys can create a true “the whole is greater than the sum of its parts” feeling. The grind of the regular season means there’s massive value in having a lineup full of talented players who can match up with anyone.

    But I think we’re seeing how, in the playoffs, that same recipe can become less than the sum of its parts. The 6 hole hitter is no longer just the 6 hole hitter on a weekday getaway game, he’s now someone who an entire scouting department has crafted a plan of attack against.

  7. The Brewers can’t hit the Dodgers at all, but at least if they had some good power bats they’d gave a chance to run into a few pitches for HRs.

    The Brewers finished the regular season 22nd in HRs. 13 of the last 20 World Series participants have been in the top 10 (and 9 of those teams have been top 5), another 5 have been in the 11-20 range, and only 2 have been 21st or worse. If the Dodgers and Mariners hold on to win their series, 14 of the last 20 will be in the top 10, and 11 of 20 in the top 5.

    The game has evolved to the point where you can’t win at the highest level without power

  8. Yamagoato did something id never thought id see in the post-Dusty Baker blowing up Mark Priors arm world, he was outstanding

    Thank god Dave didn’t Dave it up and take him out

  9. listening to the talking baseball/baseball today and the game thread comments, the brewers were really unprepared yesterday. great game plan by the dodgers and Yamamoto.

  10. “Just gotta wait for the bullpen. Just gotta wait for the bullpen” yeah that’s not gonna work when they don’t have to go tot he bullpen is it?

  11. People making sweeping generalizations of teams based off of only a few games will never not drive me insane

  12. Glasnow is due for him own gem with the Dodgers. He’s been mostly injury riddled so far but has shown flashes of brilliance. He grew up about an hour away from Dodger stadium too.

  13. God I genuinely think brewer fans may be the most pathetic in the league. Those full time losers are over in their sub now crying about the salary and CBA. The dodger’s haven’t beaten the brewers in 8 games preceding this series but NOW they’re blaming the CBA and salary. Your team failed now own it.

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