Rich Hill vs. Max Scherzer, in Washington.
Clayton Kershaw as human and the Dodgers’ bullpen imploded, but Los Angeles still forced a Game 5.
It may seem crazy, but there might be an argument to be made for a catcher–yes, a catcher!–deserving Cy Young votes.
Washington grabbed a 2-1 series lead as the two managers handled Game 3 much differently.
Washington evened the NLDS at 1-1 thanks to Los Angeles repeatedly failing with the bases loaded.
Clayton Kershaw vs. Max Scherzer didn’t quite live up to the hype.
Clayton Kershaw vs. Max Scherzer in Washington and Johnny Cueto vs. Jon Lester in Chicago.
The battle of the best rookies in the NL kicks off in DC.
Brian Wilson signs to be the Dodgers’ second-best reliever.
After avoiding placing him on the 40-man roster all season, The Dodgers finally turn to De Leon to address a hole in the rotation.
The Dodgers’ rookie had sky-high expecations entering the season, and has surpassed them.
Chooch is switching coasts, Desmond Jennings is moving on, David Freese is staying put, and Scrabble goes to Washington.
The Dodgers trade from a deep pool of young pitching to get 36-year-old sorta-like-an-ace Rich Hill, along with right fielder Josh Reddick.
The world’s been terrible, but the Seagers have been joy.
Money still buys success, but the league’s payroll disparities appear to be shrinking. This is good.
June in Clayton Kershaw’s Zone 12 pitching.