ST. LOUIS — The Dodgers’ offense isn’t quite fixed.
But for one day, at least, it looked less broken than before.
For the first time in almost a week, the Dodgers scored first Sunday, tagged an opposing starter with at least three runs … and, oh yeah, actually won a game, too, beating the Cardinals 4-1 to snap a four-game losing streak and avoid a series sweep at Busch Stadium.
“We didn’t break out today,” manager Dave Roberts said. “But we scored more than they did. So that’s good.”
Indeed, this was no tour de force.
For the sixth straight game, the Dodgers (21-13) failed to hit a home run. For a second consecutive day, they also bounced into four double plays. In their last 12 games, they’ve now failed to eclipse five runs nine times.
But behind another uniquely dominant start from left-hander Justin Wrobleski — who pitched six scoreless innings, despite not striking out a batter, to lower his ERA to 1.25 –– the Dodgers’ slumping lineup found a way to do just enough.
Most of their scoring came against a familiar face in Dustin May, the homegrown Dodgers right-hander who signed in St. Louis as a free agent this offseason after being traded by the club at last year’s deadline.
In the second inning, they got on the board via doubles from Kyle Tucker and Andy Pages, who capitalized on an 0-2 mistake by lofting a hanging curveball to left for the day’s opening run. Hyeseong Kim then followed with an RBI single to make it 2-0.
In the fifth, Kim got another rally started, legging out an infield single to lead off the inning before scoring on a two-out knock from Freddie Freeman, who also came through in an 0-2 count.
In the ninth, Alex Call added some insurance with a pinch-hit RBI single off the bench.
“Overall,” Freeman said, “better quality of baseball from us today.”
A big reason for that was Wrobleski, who became the first Dodgers pitcher since Mike Morgan in 1991 to throw six shutout innings without striking out a batter.
“I’m out there trying to get outs,” Wrobleski said. “However I get them, that’s great.”
The bullpen also came through, with Will Klein, Blake Treinen and (in his latest appearance filling in at closer in the ninth inning) Tanner Scott navigating the final three innings to bring the Dodgers’ losing streak to an end.
What it means
Roberts described Sunday as a “gut check” moment for his club, noting that “it’s certainly not a must-win, but this is a game that we need to find a way to win.”
Presciently, that’s how the afternoon played out.
The Dodgers still aren’t slugging the ball, now mired in their longest home run drought since 2014. Their biggest bats aren’t producing, either, with a top four of Freeman, Tucker, Shohei Ohtani and Teoscar Hernández going a combined 4-for-17 with two walks Sunday.
But, the Dodgers did enough little things to win, from their 4-for-10 mark with runners in scoring position to a run-saving throw from catcher Dalton Rushing in the second inning when the Cardinals tried a double steal.
“You just have to bow your neck and find a way to win,” Roberts said. “Doesn’t matter how good or bad it looks, we needed a win today.”
Who’s hot
Wrobleski, who turned in a very Wrobleski-esque start.
As usual, the left-hander filled up the strike zone (58 strikes in 83 pitches) and hardly seemed to care about generating swing and miss (he only got four whiffs on 44 swings). Instead, he pitched to contact and worked around traffic, scattering six hits (all singles) and a walk even without a single punchout.
Since 2017, the only other MLB starter to go six scoreless without a strikeout was José Quintana in 2024. That seems fitting, with Wrobleski adopting a style similar to Quintana’s crafty left-handed arsenal –– and using it to put up stunning early-season results.
In five starts since moving into the rotation, Wrobleski has allowed just two runs in 32 innings. He only has 13 total strikeouts in that span but has still managed a 5-0 record with a minuscule 0.56 ERA.
“I think the strikeouts will come,” he said. “I struck out people last year. That’s not something that’s a crazy worry for me. I’m never going to give back six zeroes. However I need to do it, I’ll do it and hopefully keep rolling.”
That could be crucial for the 25-year-old’s future role, as Blake Snell nears a return from injury (he pitched four innings in a rehab start with Triple-A Oklahoma City on Sunday). While the Dodgers haven’t ruled out moving Wrobleski back to the bullpen as a multi-inning reliever, his performances lately are making that seem borderline impossible. Sunday was just the latest example.
Who’s not
Speaking of upcoming roster decisions, Mookie Betts is expected to return from his oblique strain in the next few weeks.
That means someone from the current lineup will get squeezed out. And lately, Alex Freeland is looking like the likeliest candidate.
Freeland went 0-for-3 as the No. 9 hitter on Sunday and is now just 3-for-his-last-15 after collecting six hits the week prior. Overall this season, he is batting .232 with a .606 OPS.
Up next
The Dodgers will travel to Houston and open a three-game series with the Astros on Monday night. Yoshinobu Yamamoto (2-2, 2.87 ERA) will be on the mound.