Kansas State avoided becoming the first ranked team to lose two games in August in the history of the poll, and also dodged its first 0-2 start since coaching great Bill Snyder’s first season in 1989.
Mistake-prone Dodgers fail Tyler Glasnow in loss to Arizona: 'We beat ourselves'
The Dodgers have won 71 games since Tyler Glasnow earned his last victory.
That was March 31, 152 days ago. The season was six games old then. No other pitcher with at least 13 major league starts has gone longer without a win this season.
Yet Glasnow was never deserving of a better fate than he was Saturday, when he took a no-hitter into the sixth inning and a shutout into the seventh, only to wind up with the loss when the Dodgers fell 6-1 to the Arizona Diamondbacks.
With the Padres beating the Minnesota Twins, the Dodgers’ lead in the National League West is back at one game.
It’s not as if Glasnow has pitched poorly. In one start he didn’t yield a run and in four others he gave up just one.
Read more:Hernández: Everyone can stop wondering. Mookie Betts isn't moving back to right field
He didn’t get the win in any of those games — and that’s starting to get old.
“I know our team will will come back and play better,” said Glasnow, easily the best pitcher in baseball with a 1-3 record. “But it's frustrating right now.”
In four of his first 13 starts, the Dodgers (77-59) didn’t score a run behind him. So while his 2.45 earned-run average and six earned runs given up in four July appearances led the team’s starters, all he had was a loss and three no decisions to show for it.
He was almost as good in August — when his record was 0-2.
“He can only do what he can do,” manager Dave Roberts said. “So, yeah, if you're not scoring runs, it certainly decreases your margin. But the pitcher's got to do what he's got to do. The defense has got to do what they've got to do, and then the offense has got to do what they’ve got to do.”
Only one of those three things happened Saturday, when Glasnow retired the first 10 batters on just 39 pitches, striking out four.
The spell was broken with one out in the fourth when Glasnow hit Ketel Marte with a 1-1 pitch. He escaped the inning without further damage and with the no-hitter intact.
“I was aware of it, yeah,” he said of the no-hitter.
Arizona’s Eduardo Rodriguez (6-8) was nearly as stingy, however, giving up just two hits through four innings, although he did walk two.
Rodriguez, who started the night with a 5.67 ERA, is the fourth starter with an ERA over 5.00 the Dodgers have faced in their past eight games. They have lost all four games, scoring one run in 24 innings combined against the four pitchers.
“Every day I write the lineup down and I feel good about the guys that we're running out there. And you know it comes to having a plan and when you have an opportunity to take advantage, you have to do your job,” Roberts said.
“I still feel like our guys are better but all that matters is how you perform.”
The Dodgers nearly got to Rodriguez in the fifth inning when Kiké Hernández led off with a hard grounder that got by third baseman Blaze Alexander for a single. Miguel Rojas then sent him to third with a double and Shohei Ohtani followed with what should have been a sacrifice fly to left.
The throw from Lourdes Gurriel Jr. was off line but when Hernández didn’t slide, catcher Gabriel Moreno was able to retrieve the ball and tag the runner to complete the double play. After a long review, the call by plate umpire Dan Bellino was affirmed.
Hernández, who had his back to Gurriel, said he looked for on-deck hitter Mookie Betts for help, but Betts was out of position.
“I didn't see Mookie, and I didn't slide,” he said. “I was out. I thought I was safe.”
That was just one of a number of sloppy mistakes made by the Dodgers, who had two runners thrown out on the bases and made two fielding errors.
“Tonight, there was a lot of things that I'm not going to get into that just lends itself to really uncharacteristic lack of focus,” a visibly frustrated Roberts said. “There were some things, whether it's an at-bat here or there, whether it's a play here or there, that [were] just mistakes and execution that just can't happen.
“We gave it away. We beat ourselves. So, yeah, this is this a tough one. I just really can't excuse it.”
Glasnow, meanwhile, lost his no-hitter on Ildemaro Vargas’ infield single in the sixth and his shutout on Corbin Carroll’s home run in the seventh — after which his night spiraled out of control.
Gurriel followed with a sinking liner to center that Andy Pages kicked away for a double and when Teoscar Hernández was unable to squeeze Alexander’s long drive at the wall in right-center, which went for another double, the Diamondbacks (68-69) had runners on second and third with no outs.
Moreno drove Gurriel in on a fly ball to center and Alexander followed him home when Pages’ throw from center skipped away from Kiké Hernández at third to make it 3-0.
Glasnow, who didn’t come out for the eighth, threw 100 pitches in a season-high seven innings, striking out six. The Dodgers got him a run — the first they’ve scored for him in two starts and 11 innings — thanks to an RBI single by Betts. But Smith flew out to center to end the inning.
The Dodgers were one for eight with runners in scoring position Saturday, leaving eight runners on base.
Arizona then put the game away in the ninth, reaching reliever Kirby Yates for three runs on a single, a two-out walk and Vargas’ second homer of the season, a 423-foot bomb to right-center.
“This is a great opportunity that we have, and you’ve got to embrace it,” Roberts said. “You’ve got to want to get out there. You’ve got to have fun competing. And it just seems like the last couple nights, at some points it was an unrecognizable ballclub.
“We’ve got to play better. We do.”
Etc.
Monday is the Dodgers’ second off day in less than a week so manager Dave Roberts plans to skip Emmet Sheehan’s spot in the rotation. Sheehan shut out the Reds on two hits in a career-best seven innings in his last outing. The right-hander could pitch out of the bullpen Sunday, but Roberts will open the team’s six-game road trip to Pittsburgh and Baltimore with Clayton Kershaw and Shohei Ohtani.
Reliever Michael Kopech, who has spent most of the season on the injured list with knee and shoulder issues, will accompany the team on its East Coast road trip and could be activated Tuesday. Brock Stewart, sidelined since Aug. 12 with shoulder inflammation, has resumed throwing after getting a cortisone shot.
Kyle Hurt, who pitched in four games over the past two seasons before undergoing surgery to repair a ligament in his right elbow last July, faced live hitters in a multi-inning simulated game Saturday and will pitch at Oklahoma City in September. “It’s been a long 13 months. I’m very excited to be back,” said Hurt, 27.
Roberts did not rule out a bullpen role for Hurt down the stretch.
Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
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Canadiens' Defense Get Massive Praise From Martin St. Louis
When looking at the Montreal Canadiens' roster, it is clear that their defense is a major strength. This is because they have seven caliber NHL defensemen, and they have multiple prospect blueliners who are knocking on the door to becoming NHLers.
The Canadiens only strengthened their blueline this off-season, too, as they brought in star defenseman Noah Dobson from the Montreal Canadiens in a trade with the New York Islanders. Thus, it is hard not to feel optimistic about the Canadiens' blueline heading into the 2025-26 campaign.
Canadiens head coach Martin St. Louis certainly is confident in the club's defensive group heading into the season. While speaking to reporters, including Habs 360's Chris G, Canadiens defenseman Jayden Struble revealed that St. Louis had some massive praise for the Habs' blueline.
"Marty was doing his rounds, calling guys in the summer. He was "I'll take out seven d versus anyone in the league, and I would agree with that," Struble said.
Struble then discussed why he agrees with St. Louis' take on the Canadiens' defense.
"We have some really good young talent," Struble said. "We have some good young guys. We have some good older veterans. We have a good mix of skill and hard-nose, so it's going to be fun. It's going to be interesting to see how the year goes, but I think I'd take out seven guys versus anyone's."
St. Louis being so confident in the Canadiens' defense is certainly nice to hear, and it clearly has resonated with Struble. The Canadiens undoubtedly have some very good defensemen to work with this campaign, and it is a big reason why there is plenty of excitement surrounding the club heading into the 2025-26 season.
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Yankees win seventh straight after outlasting White Sox, 5-3, in extras
The Yankees beat the Chicago White Sox, 5-3, in extra innings on Saturday night.
Here are the takeaways...
-We pick this one up in the 11th inning of a 2-2 tie. Unable to settle the score after 10 innings, New York took the lead in the top of the 11th. Cody Bellinger's single put the Yanks ahead before Jazz Chisholm doubled in another run and put runners at second and third with one out.
Despite the second out being made at home, the rally didn't stop there as Anthony Volpe doubled in the third run of the inning to make things 5-2. Entering the frame, the Yankees had three hits and they doubled that in the 11th inning alone.
New York turned to Camilo Doval to lock down the win and the right-hander got two ground outs that scored a run before striking out his final batter to notch his 16th save of the season but first since getting traded to the Bronx.
-In the 10th inning, New York squandered its chance to score following another out at home, but Chicago came out for the bottom half against David Bednar who sent the game to extras after a scoreless ninth and failed to score, as well.
-Before extra innings, Austin Wells' solo shot to lead off the seventh inning broke a 1-1 tie and gave New York a one-run lead. The blast was Wells' 19th of the season and was crushed off Chicago starter Shane Smith, traveling 410 feet to right center field.
The home run was just the Yankees' third hit of the game at the time as Smith actually pitched well over 6.1 innings. Although, before Wells' long ball, Aaron Judge hit a tape-measure shot to center field that went 429 feet and had an exit velocity of 111 mph to start the scoring in the fourth inning.
-However, each time New York scored, the White Sox came back soon after.
In the fifth, Mike Tauchman singled home Curtis Mead to tie things at one against Cam Schlittler who hit Mead to begin the inning. Immediately following the HBP, Schlittler had an injury scare after taking a line drive off of his backside before recording the out. The right-hander was deemed okay, but he'll surely have a bruise tomorrow.
Schlitter's final line: 6 IP, 4 H, 1 ER, 1 BB, 8 K. He now has a 2.61 ERA in 48.1 innings since being called up and has been a huge help for the Yanks' starting rotation.
-Following Wells' homer, the White Sox tied it again, this time even quicker. In the bottom of the seventh and facing Devin Williams, Mead led off with a double and came around to score on Chase Meidroth's single. It was Williams' fourth blown save of the season as his disappointing first season in New York continues.
-The win was the Yankees' seventh straight win and they'll go for their eighth on Sunday in search of a four-game series sweep in Chicago.
Game MVP: David Bednar
Bednar's two scoreless innings came at a crucial point in the game and allowed the Yankees' offense to eventually win it.
Highlights
Aaron Judge's 42nd home run of the year! 💪 pic.twitter.com/5KoWNKbUYd
— Yankees Videos (@snyyankees) August 31, 2025
Austin Wells homers to give the Yankees the lead 🌯 pic.twitter.com/LozteKv5Xx
— Yankees Videos (@snyyankees) August 31, 2025
Cody Bellinger gives the Yankees the lead in the 11th! pic.twitter.com/85eeXP9dk0
— Yankees Videos (@snyyankees) August 31, 2025
Jazz Chisholm Jr. brings home Aaron Judge with an RBI double 🎷 pic.twitter.com/iJj1dffNXa
— Yankees Videos (@snyyankees) August 31, 2025
Anthony Volpe brings home another run! pic.twitter.com/qrETnd0J6q
— Yankees Videos (@snyyankees) August 31, 2025
What's next
The Yankees and White Sox finish out their four-game series with a Sunday matinee starting at 2:10 p.m.
RHP Luis Gil (2-1, 3.75 ERA) goes for New York and will be opposed by LHP Martin Perez (1-3, 2.02 ERA).