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Kershaw adored by fans in ace's final regular-season start at Dodger Stadium
Los Angeles Times
|September 21, 2025
Clayton Kershaw blew a kiss to his family, pounded a fist in his glove, then made the familiar trot from the Dodgers' dugout to the Chavez Ravine mound.
A NIGHT OF EMOTION reached a peak when Clayton Kershaw tipped his cap to the crowd upon exiting perhaps his final home start.
This time, however, he did it alone.
In what was his final regular-season start at Dodger Stadium, coming one day after he announced that he would retire at the end of this year, Kershaw took the field while the rest of his teammates stayed back and applauded.
On a night of appreciation for his 18-year career, the moment belonged to him and an adoring fan base that has watched his every step.
The first time Kershaw pitched at Dodger Stadium, he was a much-hyped and highly anticipated 20-year-old prospect. His talent immense. His Hall of Fame future in front of him.
When he did it for potentially the last time on Friday night, he was a much-beloved and long-admired 37-year-old veteran. Hardened by the failures that once defined his baseball mortality. Celebrated for the way he had learned to overcome them.
Few athletes in modern sport play for one team, for so long. Fewer still experience the emotional extremes Kershaw was put through, or manage still to weather the storm.
When Kershaw was asked about Dodgers fans during his retirement news conference Thursday, that's the dynamic he quickly pointed to.
"It hasn't been a smooth ride," he said. "We've had our ups and downs for sure."
Between boundless cheers and intermittent boos, historic milestones and horrifying heartbreaks, triumphant summers and torturous falls.
In regular-season play, baseball has maybe never seen a more accomplished pitcher. Kershaw's 2.54 ERA is the lowest in the live-ball era among those with 100 starts. He is one of the 20 members of MLB's 3,000 strikeout club. He is one of four pitchers to win three Cy Youngs and an MVP award.
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