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Tried to rest, now asked to try his best
Los Angeles Times
|October 09, 2025
Sasaki becomes Dodgers' primary relief option, with help, after others falter
ROBERT GAUTHIER Los Angeles Times ROKI SASAKI has picked up saves in the Dodgers' first two games against the Phillies in their NL Division Series.
Dodgers manager Dave Roberts was trying to play the long game Monday night.
Which is why, when his team entered the ninth inning with a three-run lead in Game 2 of the National League Division Series, he gave the save opportunity to Blake Treinen instead of Roki Sasaki.
If all things had been equal, it’s likely that Roberts would have turned to Sasaki to start the inning. In just two weeks since returning from a shoulder injury and being moved to the bullpen, the converted rookie starter has become the club’s most dominant relief option.
But, for as much of a revelation as the 23-year-old right-hander had been in that time — posting four scoreless outings with a 100-mph fastball and unhittable splitter — the team remained conscientious about managing Sasaki’s workload, which included one appearance in Game 2 of the wild card series, then another in Game 1 of the NLDS just days prior.
Thus, with Roberts feeling confident enough in Treinen (the veteran right-hander coming off a career-worst season but also some recently improved outings) to protect a three-run cushion that felt relatively comfortable, he left Sasaki sitting in the bullpen despite the save situation.
He tried to take advantage of an opportunity to give his ace reliever rest.
"He hasn't gone two out of three [days] much at all," Roberts said after the game. "So I didn't want to just kind of preemptively put him in there. I felt good with who we had."
That plan, of course, almost backfired in disastrous fashion. Treinen gave up two runs without retiring a batter. Alex Vesia needed his defense to turn a wheel play ona Bryson Stott bunt to limit the damage from there. And in the end, Sasaki entered the game anyway to record the final out.
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