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LOOKING FOR SOME CROOKED NUMBERS
Los Angeles Times
|September 13, 2025
After a dismal stretch of scoring, the Dodgers are renewing their focus in the batter's box in the hopes of kick-starting production as October nears
SHOHEI OHTANI is back in form offensively but he recently said that, as a team, "we're a little too eager, and putting too much pressure on ourselves" at the plate.
To Andrew Friedman, something like this was a virtual impossibility.
"If you had said that we would have a six-week stretch where our offense would rank 30th in baseball, I would have said there was a zero percent chance," the Dodgers' president of baseball operations said last month.
"I would have been wrong," he quickly added.
Over a five-week stretch from July 4 to Aug. 4, the Dodgers inexplicably ranked 30th (out of 30 clubs) in scoring. And though they've been slightly better in the five weeks since, questions about their supposed juggernaut lineup still abound.
In the first half of the season, the Dodgers boasted the best offense in the majors, leading the majors in scoring (5.61 runs per game), batting average (.262), OPS (.796) and hitting with runners in scoring position (.300) and went 56-32 over their first 88 games.
Since then, however, everything has flipped.
It started with a July slump that was as stunning as it was unforeseen, with the Dodgers averaging just 3.36 runs in a 25-game stretch commencing with Independence Day. Since then, there have been only marginal improvements, with the Dodgers entering Friday ranked 24th in scoring (4.21 runs per game), 25th in batting average (.237), 18th in OPS (.718) and 22nd in hitting with runners in scoring position (.245) over their last 58 games — a stretch in which they’ve gone 26-32.
“Not scoring runs,” first baseman Freddie Freeman said last week, “it’s just not who we are.”
On the surface, the root causes seemed rather obvious. Much of their lineup was either on the injured list or scuffling in the wake of previous, nagging injuries. Healthy superstars were grinding through flaws with their swings. What little depth they had failed to compensate.
This story is from the September 13, 2025 edition of Los Angeles Times.
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