Celtics sale finalized as Bill Chisholm becomes owner of NBA's most-decorated franchise

Celtics sale finalized as Bill Chisholm becomes owner of NBA's most-decorated franchise originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The sale of the Boston Celtics was finalized on Tuesday, with private equity mogul Bill Chisholm taking over control of the NBA’s most-decorated franchise from a group led by Wyc Grousbeck that had owned them for more than two decades.

The team was put on the market last summer, soon after it won its record 18th NBA championship. Chisholm won the bidding in March with an offer that valued the franchise at more than $6.1 billion — a record price paid for an American professional sports team.

The NBA approved the deal unanimously last week, and the money changed hands on Tuesday.

Chisholm takes ownership of at least 51% of the team, with full control coming by 2028 at a price that could bring the total value to $7.3 billion. That’s the highest price ever paid for a team in the four major North American sports, though a piece of the Los Angeles Lakers changed hands this summer at a price that would value the entire franchise at $10 billion.

Grousbeck led a group that bought the Celtics in 2002 for $360 million. Under their ownership, the Celtics won two NBA titles, lost in the finals two other times and made the playoffs in 20 of 23 seasons.

In a press release issued Tuesday, the Celtics said Chisholm will serve as govenror, and Grousbeck and Aditya Mittal will serve as alternate governors. Grousbeck will be a co-owner and CEO, running day-to-day operations with Chisholm and the existing basketball and business managemetn teams.

Chisholm’s investor group is led by co-owners and members of the managing board of the Celtics, which include Grousbeck, Mittal, Bruce Beal, Andrew Bialecki, Dom Ferrante, Rob Hale, Mario Ho, and Ian Loring.  Global investment firm Sixth Street is also part of the investment group.

“This truly is a dream come true for me and my family,” Chisholm said in a statement. “I feel so fortunate to be here as part of this new investor group, who are accomplished, driven people who care deeply about the Celtics and the Boston community. On behalf of our group, I am thrilled to partner with Wyc, Brad Stevens and Rich Gotham to move this outstanding organization forward. We are committed to building on the legacy of the Celtics and raising banners, and I can’t wait for the team to get back out there this fall.” 

“The Celtics have been my life’s work for the past 23 years. This incredible ride is now continuing,” added Grousbeck. “I am fired up to be shoulder to shoulder with Bill as we pull every lever to go after another banner. There is nothing better than winning.”

Celtics sale finalized as Bill Chisholm becomes owner of NBA's most-decorated franchise

Celtics sale finalized as Bill Chisholm becomes owner of NBA's most-decorated franchise originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The sale of the Boston Celtics was finalized on Tuesday, with private equity mogul Bill Chisholm taking over control of the NBA’s most-decorated franchise from a group led by Wyc Grousbeck that had owned them for more than two decades.

The team was put on the market last summer, soon after it won its record 18th NBA championship. Chisholm won the bidding in March with an offer that valued the franchise at more than $6.1 billion — a record price paid for an American professional sports team.

The NBA approved the deal unanimously last week, and the money changed hands on Tuesday.

Chisholm takes ownership of at least 51% of the team, with full control coming by 2028 at a price that could bring the total value to $7.3 billion. That’s the highest price ever paid for a team in the four major North American sports, though a piece of the Los Angeles Lakers changed hands this summer at a price that would value the entire franchise at $10 billion.

Grousbeck led a group that bought the Celtics in 2002 for $360 million. Under their ownership, the Celtics won two NBA titles, lost in the finals two other times and made the playoffs in 20 of 23 seasons.

In a press release issued Tuesday, the Celtics said Chisholm will serve as govenror, and Grousbeck and Aditya Mittal will serve as alternate governors. Grousbeck will be a co-owner and CEO, running day-to-day operations with Chisholm and the existing basketball and business managemetn teams.

Chisholm’s investor group is led by co-owners and members of the managing board of the Celtics, which include Grousbeck, Mittal, Bruce Beal, Andrew Bialecki, Dom Ferrante, Rob Hale, Mario Ho, and Ian Loring.  Global investment firm Sixth Street is also part of the investment group.

“This truly is a dream come true for me and my family,” Chisholm said in a statement. “I feel so fortunate to be here as part of this new investor group, who are accomplished, driven people who care deeply about the Celtics and the Boston community. On behalf of our group, I am thrilled to partner with Wyc, Brad Stevens and Rich Gotham to move this outstanding organization forward. We are committed to building on the legacy of the Celtics and raising banners, and I can’t wait for the team to get back out there this fall.” 

“The Celtics have been my life’s work for the past 23 years. This incredible ride is now continuing,” added Grousbeck. “I am fired up to be shoulder to shoulder with Bill as we pull every lever to go after another banner. There is nothing better than winning.”

Why Steph Curry labels Warriors' 2025-26 schedule ‘interesting and different'

Why Steph Curry labels Warriors' 2025-26 schedule ‘interesting and different' originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Steph Curry is a few months away from beginning his 17th 82-game NBA gauntlet, and the 37-year-old Warriors star has a routine when the league unveils the schedule.

“You take a good amount of time just seeing the flow of the whole year,” Curry told NBC Sports Bay Area’s Dalton Johnson on Friday at the ninth annual “Curry Camp” in Menlo Park. “I mean, there are certain cities I love to go to. You look at New York. You look at Charlotte for me. Toronto. Mostly where family is and you try to know when you’re going to have some planning to know when you’re going to be there. Long road trips. That type of stuff. But you don’t get too deep into it.”

The NBA released the full 2025-26 NBA schedule on Thursday, and it will be a grind for Curry and the Warriors.

Golden State has 15 back-to-backs, including a staggering five within the first 17 games of the 2025-26 NBA season. It also features two six-game road trips, one in November and the other in March, which includes one of Curry’s circled matchups.

The Warriors open that late-season trip against the New York Knicks on March 15 at Madison Square Garden.

Curry actually will kill three birds with one stone at the end of December, when the Warriors go on a three-game road trip to Toronto, Brooklyn and Charlotte.

The four-time NBA champion gets to ring in 2026 in his hometown, as the game against the Hornets at Spectrum Center is at 10 a.m. PT on Dec. 31.

But the difficulty of the Warriors’ schedule isn’t lost on Curry.

“Very interesting and different schedule than what we’re used to, just from the patterns of what I’ve noticed over the last 16 years,” Curry told Johnson. “But everybody’s got to play 82 and we hope to be able to get through it.”

Curry and the Warriors tip off the new season against LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers on Oct. 21 at Crypto.com Arena.

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Padres manager sounds off on controversial fan interference call vs. Giants

Padres manager sounds off on controversial fan interference call vs. Giants originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Padres were on the wrong end of a controversial call that impacted their one-run 4-3 loss to the Giants on Monday at Petco Park.

San Francisco led 4-0 with no outs in the bottom of the second inning when San Diego shortstop Xander Bogaerts hit what initially was ruled a solo home run that bounced off the outstretched glove of Giants outfielder Heliot Ramos in left field, before the call eventually was overturned and ruled an out.

Padres manager Mike Shildt, after a lengthy review, expressed his frustration with the call and was ejected from the game.

Shildt, speaking to reporters after the game, expressed his displeasure with the review process, and he believes that if the play took that long to review, the call was not clear enough to overturn and should have remained a home run.

“If it’s so clear, how come it takes two minutes and 40 seconds to figure out, if it’s that clear?” Shildt questioned postgame. “Why are we sitting there for two minutes and 40 seconds? We have 15 seconds to review a call in the first place. We have two minutes and 40 seconds to sit there, what are you looking for? If it’s that clear, then overturn it early. If it’s not, then it’s a home run.

“So we call our reply guys and are like, ‘How are you feeling about it?’ [And they said] ‘zero chance.’ But, listen, that’s just really disappointing that we go that long and have to come up with a conclusion that’s not conclusive to overturn a home run that ends up costing us an opportunity to win a baseball game.”

The Padres went on to score three runs after the controversial play, and ended up losing to the Giants by one.

San Francisco, which has had no shortage of bad luck in recent weeks, will take it.

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Warriors star Steph Curry racing against time for fifth NBA championship ring

Warriors star Steph Curry racing against time for fifth NBA championship ring originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

MENLO PARK, Calif. – Every step Steph Curry takes running up and around the trails of Edgewood Park in San Mateo County, the same place Jerry Rice famously would sprint what simply became known as “The Hill,” is a race against time that inches him closer to the finish line while chasing another championship. 

A fifth ring. A chance. More individual accolades can, and will, come for Curry. They’re also happenstance along the process of another chase he’s practically addicted to. 

Like running through sand dunes a couple years ago, Curry calls the workout his and performance coach Carl Bergstrom’s latest way to “find new challenges.” 

Motivation is a funny thing for someone who has everything and has accomplished everything in that person’s respective field. Motivation also always has been a part of Curry. The son of a NBA player, also the string bean of a prospect only offered a walk-on by the alma mater of his father. The small-school superstar who was still overlooked in many ways going into the pros. Early ankle injuries proved doubters right, at times. 

Greatness at its truest form is undeniable. It’s inevitable, and it’s never really satisfied. 

“I would think that there’s not enough external motivators to bring the drive that I need to do what I do, and have the gratitude to be able to do what I do,” Steph Curry told NBC Sports Bay Area in an exclusive interview. “It all comes from just a drive and a spirit and a wisdom of knowing what I need to do to prepare my body and challenge myself. But I still love it. 

“It’s funny, it’s my job, right. It’s what I get to do, and the work that I put into it, whether you see it on social media or not, it’s all a part of the process.” 

Curry and the Warriors began the process of looking ahead frustratingly earlier than they expected. The process might as well have begun the moment Curry strained his hamstring during Game 1 of the Western Conference semifinals in Minnesota. The Warriors held on to win that first game but couldn’t win a single one with Curry injured. When the light goes out on their sun, the Warriors cannot operate without their brightest star they still orbit around. 

The only difference in how Curry attacked this offseason was understanding he needed to let himself first fully heal and recover. There wasn’t prep for the Olympics and going for gold like he did last year. He was more so back into his usual routine of being at the American Century Championship golf tournament in South Lake Tahoe, back to hosting his ninth annual Curry Camp and back to finding more ways to push his peak and test himself in extending what his limits really are. 

Every accolade Curry could have imagined already is in his possession. The two MVPs have a space somewhere, as do his two All-Star Game MVPs, Western Conference Finals MVP, Finals MVP and his four championship rings. 

There always will be space for more next to his rings. That’s the chase of a competitor who’s never full, whose appetite for greatness never goes away. Who knows the many hurdles that are in his way whether it’s this season or however long he has left, starting first with making it through an 82-game season as healthy as possible before staring down another marathon of the playoffs. 

The grind is a war of attrition, as Curry calls it, in the sense of injuries and timing being everything.

“So many unpredictable things that happen during a year,” Curry said. “Can you get your identity and your style of play and your team committed to that? Last year, we were chasing a little towards the end of the year to try and get out of the play-in. Then from there, we gave it a great run in the playoffs, just didn’t work out. 

“Just trying to be in a position where we’re somewhere in the top of the Western Conference throughout the vibe and not have to be on the gas pedal all the way down the stretch, and hopefully we’re all healthy come April.” 

Hanging a fifth banner would give Curry more championship rings than superstars like LeBron James and Shaquille O’Neal, and also one more than his former Splash Brother Klay Thompson. He’d be in the same club as Magic Johnson, Kobe Bryant, Tim Duncan and even his coach, Steve Kerr. Curry would be knocking on the VIP door that Michael Jordan gets to puff his cigars in. 

Pictures of Curry’s hand filled with a ring on each finger can already be imagined. Iconic. It’s not what he sees when he closes his eyes. The process is, where everything begins and ends to even have a chance. 

“No, that just means you’re winning,” Curry says in response to there being extra significance to a fifth ring. “That’s the thing, even with one through four. One, just getting through the hump and becoming a champ, it’s all really about the process that leads to it. All the narratives, all the cool celebrations and stuff like that, they take care of itself. 

“You can’t chase that stuff. It’s the process that you commit to. It sounds so boring and dull, but it is the only way you get to where you want to go. And I think I’m old enough and wise enough now to stay on that journey of just being in the moment.”

Yet at the moment, the Warriors are the only team in the NBA to not make a move seven weeks into the offseason. Everything has been held up because of Jonathan Kuminga’s restricted free agency, a player who will be 14 years younger than Curry when the season begins and still is built by upside and potential. The Warriors are adamant on having a team option on the second year of a two-year, $45 million contract they have offered Kuminga while he holds steady to requesting a player option for the second year, sources say. 

The longer the situation drags out, the messier it’s going to be. Kuminga taking the one-year, $7.9 million qualifying offer that wouldn’t allow the Warriors to trade him for the entire season is “very real,” per sources, especially if this gets into September. 

Curry keeps out of the way as the Western Conference continues to load up, admitting some frustrations to the unknown as he also knows plenty behind closed doors and continues to lean on the foundation people like himself, Kerr and Draymond Green have built within the Warriors for more than a decade together. 

“It’s a combination of all of it,” he said. “There is obviously stuff that I know and talking about that isn’t necessarily public, and that’s the way it’s supposed to be. The way our organization is run, me, Draymond, Jimmy [Butler] are trying to make sure we’re prepared individually and collectively to lead our team to where we’re supposed to go. 

“All that stuff will take care of itself. It’s the front office’s job to bring the best team back. When September 29th – whatever it is – comes around and we’re suiting up for practice, we’ll be ready.”

The Warriors made their big move months ago, acquiring Butler from the Miami Heat at the February trade deadline. They went 22-5 in the regular season when Curry and Butler played together, and the two scored a combined 75 points to beat the Memphis Grizzlies in the play-in tournament. 

They also still couldn’t evade the play-in tournament. A five-game series was right there in front of the Warriors against the No. 2-seeded Houston Rockets. An extra two games were required, leading to the Warriors losing in the second round, mostly because of Curry’s injury.

It wasn’t just the hamstring that Curry dealt with. He also dealt with issues to his knees, hip, ankle, pelvis and right thumb throughout a season he was named All-NBA for the 11th consecutive time. Butler missed Game 3 of the first round because of a pelvic contusion from a hard fall that held him out for almost all of Game 2. Injuries even affected younger players like Brandin Podziemski and Moses Moody in the playoffs. 

Those two aren’t 37 years old like Curry, going into Year 17, will be when the season starts. Butler is entering Year 16 at 36, and Green, 35, is prepping for his 14th season. Curry believes having Butler for a full training camp and an entire season from the jump is a “great advantage” that should help the Warriors not be in playoff mode come January or February again. He also has heard those same numbers repeatedly presented as more obstacles in his way. 

“We just got a lot of kids running around. That’s really the only difference,” Curry jokes.

He’s still years away from entering the Robert Parrish zone as the oldest champion in NBA history. Parrish was 43 as a member of the 1996-97 champion Chicago Bulls, a season in which he also averaged 3.7 points per game. Duncan recently had turned 38 when he won his fifth and final ring, averaging 15.1 points and 9.7 rebounds per game in his 17th season.

The oldest champion to average at least 20 points per game for a season was Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in the 1984-85 season. In his age-37 season, the same that Curry is coming into, Kareem put up 22 points per game on his way to winning his fourth of six championships. Curry averaged 24.5 points last season. It was his lowest since averaging 23.8 points in his first MVP season a decade earlier.

“With age comes wisdom,” Curry concludes. “Obviously we know we have to prepare ourselves. There’s no guarantees, again, that you can stay healthy. Every champion, at the end of the day, has everything go right. We’re trying to be in that conversation. Trying to be well prepared for another run. 

“We’ll take the ageism and all that stuff on the chin and keep it moving.”

The crown remains heavy for the Petty King. Curry runs his own race, keeping pace of the process with every step. Time isn’t on his side, nor is history. Chasing cloaked ghosts with a clear vision ignores obstructions and breaks down barriers along his way. 

History is perception baked in reality. He knows the facts, he sees and hears all. Curry will keep re-writing his own pages with a little help from his friends, pushing himself and the game to new heights on a never-ending chase for more.

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Russell Martin in need of Champions League lift to silence Rangers grumbles

Manager faces a tricky task against Club Brugge and can not afford background music to become any more discordant

Rangers supporters are entitled to feel conflicted over the prospect of Champions League participation. The kudos and finance that come with involvement against Europe’s elite would be welcome. There must also be an awareness, however, that it may be a chastening experience.

Rangers’ last involvement in the competition proper ended with them on zero points and a minus-20 goal difference at the end of the group stage. That squad, from the 2022-23 campaign, was stronger than the wholly unconvincing class of 2025.

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Penguins Prospects Beyond McGroarty, Koivunen Eye NHL Roster Spots

Pittsburgh Penguins training camp is about a month away, and there are a lot of storylines to watch going into it. 

The defense is a significant question mark heading into the season since nobody knows how the left side is going to shake out. The Penguins have options on that side, but the players will have to jockey for playing time once camp starts. 

There will also be a battle for the third pairing spot on the right side of the defense, something I wrote about yesterday when I examined the right side of the defense as a whole. The backup goaltender spot will even be up for grabs after the Penguins traded for Arturs Silovs in July. He will compete with Joel Blomqvist, who made his NHL debut last season but struggled during his second stint later in the year. 

Rutger McGroarty and Ville Koivunen both made their NHL debuts last season and got to show what they can do in a top-six role, especially down the stretch. McGroarty made the team out of camp, but after two games, it was clear he wasn't ready, which led to him being sent down to the AHL for most of the year before being brought up in late-March with Koivunen. 

They will be gunning for full-time spots when camp starts, but what about the other young players in the system? Let's take a look at a few of those players who will try to make the NHL roster this year. 

Oct 5, 2021; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Penguins goaltender Casey DeSmith (1) makes a save against Buffalo Sabres center Dylan Cozens (24) as Pens forward Filip Hallander (left) commits a holding penalty during the second period at PPG Paints Arena. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

Filip Hallander

Hallander spent the last two seasons in the Swedish Hockey League (SHL) before the Penguins signed him to a two-year deal at the end of April. He got picked by the Penguins in the second round of the 2018 NHL Draft and made his NHL debut with the Penguins during the 2021-22 season before going to Sweden in 2023.

He turned into a different player in Sweden, finishing the 2024-25 season with 26 goals and 53 points in 51 games. His 26 goals and 53 points ranked second in the SHL during the year. He has really worked on his playmaking and goalscoring ability and will try to bring both of those to camp and the preseason. 

Even though there are a lot of forwards still on the roster, the Penguins won't hesitate to make room for Hallander if he shows enough in September. 

Tristan Broz

Broz made his professional debut with the WBS Penguins last year and didn't look out of place, compiling 19 goals and 37 points in 59 games. He also had one goal and three points in two playoff games before the baby Penguins got eliminated. 

Before that, he helped the University of Denver win the national title during the 2023-24 season and score the game-winning goal to send Denver to the National Championship Game. 

He's down the pecking order at forward, but will have the opportunity to show the new coaching staff what he can do. Even if he doesn't make the opening night roster, there's still a world where he makes his debut during the season, especially if he is performing well in WBS. 

Report: New Ownership Group In Mix To Purchase PenguinsReport: New Ownership Group In Mix To Purchase PenguinsOver the past several months, there have been whispers that Fenway Sports Group (FSG) - current majority owners of the Pittsburgh Penguins - are looking to sell at least a minority stake in the team.

Harrison Brunicke

Outside of McGroarty and Koivunen, Brunicke is going to be the prospect that a lot of fans have their eyes on next month. He wants to take the next step in his career and make the NHL team out of camp after coming so close last year. He got to the end of camp before he was one of the Penguins' final cuts.

Brunicke spent the year with his WHL team, the Kamloops Blazers, and finished with five goals and 30 points in 41 games before making his WBS Penguins debut at the end of the year. He had two assists in 10 regular-season games before finishing the playoffs with a goal and an assist. 

WBS Penguins head coach Kirk MacDonald was super impressed with Brunicke's small sample size when he spoke about it during development camp last month. 

"Huge. Honestly, it was. Credit to him, he figured it out quick,” MacDonald said. “Came in initially and in junior habits, where you can just skate by people and hold on to the puck for a long time; I thought he did a really good job. Last couple of regular season games and the playoff stint, he was moving pucks quick, jumping into the rush, the goal he scored in the playoffs was outstanding.”

“I thought his ability to kill plays, again, the less he does in certain areas, the more he accomplishes. I mean that by just making a really good first pass and then activating and jumping in the rush. We want our D to be aggressive and try to create offense, but it doesn’t mean necessarily having to skate through everybody. I think once he kinda recognized that, he was a little more patient with his game. The offense came to him. He did a great job.”

A nine-game trial could be in the cards for Brunicke if he picks up from where he left off at the end of the year. 


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Coming off sweep, Dodgers can't stop Rockies from rallying to walk-off win

DENVER, CO - AUGUST 18: Warming Bernabel #25 of the Colorado Rockies is doused.
Colorado's Warming Bernabel is doused in ice water as he celebrates with teammates following his walk-off single in the ninth inning of a 4-3 win over the Dodgers at Coors Field. (Justin Edmonds / Getty Images)

It’s a quirk of the schedule that has the Dodgers playing four games with the last-place Rockies in between two crucial series with the archrival Padres.

Colorado has the worst record in baseball and will finish last in the division for a fourth straight year. The Padres are the last team standing between the Dodgers and their 12th division title in 13 seasons. The Dodgers swept them last weekend at home and will play them again next weekend in San Diego.

Yet Dodgers manager Dave Roberts insisted there would be no overlooking the lowly Rockies and no looking ahead to the Padres’ series.

“Where we're at, mid-to-late August, all these games matter,” he said before Monday’s game. “So I don't expect a letdown.”

“We've got work to do here,” he continued. “We are in control of things, but we've got to focus on right now.”

Read more:Doing away with traditional leagues could be in MLB's not-too-distant future, Rob Manfred says

That focus was at best a little fuzzy in the series opener, with the Dodgers twice blowing leads in a 4-3 loss at Coors Field. The winning run scored with one out in the ninth inning when Warming Bernabel singled off reliever Justin Wrobleski (4-5) to drive in Ezequiel Tovar.

Tovar was on second after a gift double dropped between second baseman Alex Freeland and right fielder Teoscar Hernández with one out in the ninth. Three pitches later Bernabel bounced a single up the middle and Tovar bounced home with the winning run.

The victory was the Rockies’ first in seven games against the Dodgers this season and first in 11 games dating to last year, which came as a disappointment to the hundreds of fans who came out in crisp white Dodgers jerseys to see Shohei Ohtani play. And Ohtani, who came into the series hitting .391 with six homers, 17 RBIs and 17 runs in 17 games at Coors Field, didn’t disappoint, singling on the second pitch of the game from left-hander Kyle Freeland.

Dodgers relief pitcher Justin Wrobleski delivers during the ninth inning against the Rockies on Monday.
Dodgers relief pitcher Justin Wrobleski delivers during the ninth inning against the Rockies on Monday. (David Zalubowski / Associated Press)

He knocked in his team’s second run on another single in the second inning, spinning Freeland around with a wicked shot back through the box. The Dodgers’ first run had scored two pitches earlier on a Dalton Rushing sacrifice fly that Mickey Moniak caught with a leap at the wall in right-center.

The Rockies got both runs back off Yoshinobu Yamamoto in the third. After retiring the first six batters, Yamamoto, pitching a day after his 27th birthday, walked third baseman Kyle Karros, the son of former Dodger star Eric Karros. Brenton Doyle followed with a single and continued to second on a throw to third that was too late to get Karros. Ryan Ritter then drove in both runners with a soft liner to right.

Freeland lasted just four innings, leaving with what appeared to be a blister on his left hand after giving up six hits and a walk but stranding four runners. Two innings later the Dodgers went ahead against reliever Jaden Hill, with Freddie Freeman opening the sixth with a walk, stealing second and scoring on a two-out double from pinch-hitter Alex Freeland.

Read more:Plaschke: Sweep Diego! Dodgers dominate stumbling Padres and prove they're better

Yamamoto, who matched a season high with seven innings pitched, failed to hold the lead again when Tovar evened the score with a solo homer one out into his last inning of work.

Roberts then turned the game over to his bullpen, which has rarely proved a wise decision. After Edgardo Henriquez worked a perfect eighth, the Rockies walked it off after just three batters.

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.