Another Shohei Ohtani start goes down on Saturday. OK, it’s happening, everybody stay calm! We reserve the right to react like this each time Ohtani pitches, because menacing MVP batsmen are not supposed to also throw 100 MPH.
How to watch Los Angeles Dodgers at Kansas City Royals
Venue: Kauffman Stadium — Kansas City, Mo.
Time: 4:10 p.m. ET, Saturday
TV: MLB.TV (national), SNLA and FDSNKC (regional)
Streaming: Fubo (try for free, in-market KC)
Watching in person? Get tickets on StubHub.
The reigning MVP leads the National League in runs, homers, OPS and offensive WAR. He’ll also be his team’s opener on Saturday, taking the hill for his first road start as a Dodger. In two innings of work this year, Ohtani has allowed one run on two hits.
Start No. 1 started shakily. Facing division rival San Diego, the right-hander allowed immediate singles to Padres stars Fernando Tatís Jr. and Luis Arráez. He threw a wild pitch and watched Tatís score on a sac fly. He settled down and limited the damage, but the rust was evident. Start No. 2 was far stronger: a scoreless inning against the Washington Nationals, with two Ks on 12 strikes in 18 pitches.
He now goes against a middling Kansas City offense. The Royals enter the day as losers of six straight games, including a 5-4 loss to the Dodgers on Friday night. They rank a dismal 29th in the league in home runs and 27th in on-base percentage. Bobby Witt Jr. is still shining in his age-25 season, leading MLB in doubles and on pace for 40 steals. The shortstop is batting .277 — a respectable mark, though nowhere near last year’s robust .332. Elsewhere, third baseman Maikel Garcia tops the lineup in all three slashing lines, and first baseman Vinnie Pasquantino has some pop in his swing. That’s about it. Remarkably, zero Royals are projected to reach 100 RBIs this season.
Ohtani will be opposed by Seth Lugo (4-5, 2.93 ERA). He’s in the 85 percentile for breaking ball run value, but is at the back of the pack for velocity and whiff rate. Los Angeles’ Freddie Freeman is 5-for-16 lifetime against Lugo, and Mookie Betts is 3-for-7.
Great hitting and pitching performances, from the NYT archive
“Though too late to be of much practical benefit to the Yankee cause this year, Babe Ruth today stepped to the pitching mound for the first time in a decade, and in the season’s closing game with the Boston Red Sox, demonstrated to 12,000 visibly and audibly impressed fans that the mighty left arm which made him a World Series factor for the Red Sox in 1916 and 1918 still retains something of its power.” — William E. Brandt
“Gibson, who was wearing a red jacket and sipping an orange drink while sitting in the unhappy St. Louis Cardinals’ dressing room this afternoon, said: ‘Rest is something that’s not too important at this stage. You’ll find a little extra- somewhere.’ The 31-year-old pitcher from Omaha, who already had won two games in the World Series, suddenly found himself in the position of having to win No. 3 to prevent the Boston Red Sox from ending their incredible adventures as world champions.”
In that Game 7 start, Gibson threw a complete game with 10 strikeouts … and belted a homer in the fifth inning.
“See Mike Hampton pitch. See Mike Hampton bat. See Mike Hampton field. See Mike Hampton sweat in the dugout before the Mets complete a 3-2 victory over the Cincinnati Reds. Just seeing Hampton in a Mets uniform should be enough for Shea Stadium fans because he offered no objections to the trade that brought him to New York. Not that he had a choice when the deal was made with Houston last winter, but the good guys get credit no matter what the circumstances.”
Best player to hit a home run for both teams: Kirk Gibson
Best player to win a start for both teams: Zack Greinke
Royals wins over/under
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(Photo of Shohei Ohtani: Harry How / Getty Images)