Why Dodgers are pushing Shohei Ohtani's next pitching start to later in the NLCS

Why Dodgers are pushing Shohei Ohtani's next pitching start to later in the NLCS

Entering this weeks National League Championship Series, the Dodgers pitching plan seemed simple.

After Yoshinobu Yamamoto and Tyler Glasnow started the final two games of the teams NL Division Series victory over the Philadelphia Phillies, Shohei Ohtani and Blake Snell were next in line for Games 1 and 2 of the NLCS against the Milwaukee Brewers.

All the Dodgers needed to do was slot Snell in for Game 1 on Monday, making him an option to pitch again on four days rest in Game 5. Then, they could have Ohtani go in Game 2 on Tuesday, allowing him to pitch before Wednesdays scheduled off-day (which has been the teams preference for the two-way star) and be available for another start if the series returns to Milwaukee for Games 6 and 7.

On Sunday, however, manager Dave Roberts announced a different plan.

Snell will indeed go in Game 1, trying to build upon the 1.38 ERA he posted in his first two outings this postseason.

But instead of Ohtani in Game 2, it will be Yamamoto who gets the ball pushing Ohtanis next pitching appearance to sometime later this series, Roberts said.

We just dont know which day, Roberts said of when Ohtani will get the ball. But hell pitch at some point.

That alignment came as a surprise, but also had benefits from the Dodgers perspective.

Unlike Ohtani, who has gotten at least six days off between every one of his pitching outings since the start of July, Yamamoto has routinely pitched on five days rest this season. By starting him in Game 2, he can stay on that same schedule to pitch a potential Game 6 something the Dodgers would have been less comfortable having Ohtani do.

By pushing Ohtani back to at least Game 3, of course, the Dodgers will sacrifice their ability to get him two starts in this series. However, even if he pitches in one of the Dodgers home games later this week, Ohtani could come out of the bullpen in a potential Game 7; the kind of relief opportunity the team had hinted at for weeks down the stretch this season.

Read more: Nine concerns the Dodgers should have about facing the Brewers in the NLCS

Because Ohtani will make just one pitching start in the NLCS, Roberts said its not as imperative that it come before an off-day, either.

You have two other guys that potentially can pitch on regular rest, Roberts said. So [its about] how do you get your best pitchers the most innings in a potential seven-game series?

Outside of pitching considerations, however, theres another reason delaying Ohtanis next pitching outing could also make sense.

In the NLDS, Ohtani went one for 18 at the plate with nine strikeouts. He looked particularly out of sorts in Game 1, when he struck out four times in what was his first career playoff game both hitting and pitching.

Coming out of the series, Roberts emphasized the need for Ohtani to recalibrate at the plate, noting that the team was not gonna win the World Series with that sort of performance from its biggest star.

Read more: How Roki Sasaki’s transformation from injured starter to closer saved the Dodgers’ season

And while Roberts insisted on Sunday that Ohtanis offensive slump had no bearing on the team shuffling its rotation, giving Ohtani two games at the start of the NLCS to solely focus on hitting certainly wont hurt his efforts to straighten out his swing.

I expect a different output from Shohei on the offensive side this series, Roberts said.

For at the least the next couple days, that will be his only objective.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

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