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With this staff, Dodgers don't need to overthink pitching strategy

Los Angeles Times

|

October 27, 2025

There might be no greater reminder of how far the Dodgers have come than the opposing pitcher on Monday.

- BILL SHAIKIN

With this staff, Dodgers don't need to overthink pitching strategy

TYLER GLASNOW is part of a top-flight rotation that puts the Dodgers in good position to win when a starter goes at least six innings in a simpler plan than the past.

When the World Series returns to Dodger Stadium for Game 3, the starting pitcher for the Toronto Blue Jays is scheduled to be Max Scherzer.

You may remember his brief tenure with the Dodgers four years ago, which ended with an elimination game in which Scherzer said he could not pitch. The Dodgers lost, the last domino in a cascade triggered by a front office that miscast its humans as widgets in a search for even the tiniest of edges.

Don't just take my word for it. This was the word from Hall of Famer Pedro Martinez at the time: “Dodgers analytics dept really misused probably the best rotation in all of baseball. ... They need to figure out a way to let starters be who they really are and let them pitch how they are used to.”

In the 2021 postseason, by choice, the Dodgers used an opener three times, a 20-game winner as a middle reliever, and a Hall of Fame starter as a closer. There would be no parade.

In the 2024 postseason, and not by choice, the Dodgers ran four bullpen games. There would be a parade.

In 2025, the Dodgers are simply throwing out a topflight starting pitcher in every game. Presumably, there is nothing for the front office to overthink here.

Just sit back and enjoy the show — on Saturday, Yoshinobu Yamamoto’s second straight complete game show. This must be less stressful, at least.

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