Panthers defenseman Uvis Balinskis visits youth hockey rink while sharing Stanley Cup with Latvian hometown

Earlier this week, the Stanley Cup was brought to one of the most hockey-crazed nations around: Latvia.

Florida Panthers defenseman and Latvian native Uvis Balinskis brought the Cup to his homeland on Monday.

One of his visits was to the Tukums Ice Hall, where Balinskis grew up playing junior hockey in the Tukums program.

“I spent a couple years here playing hockey and they took really good care of me,” Balinskis said from the ice at the Tukums Ice Hall. “I made a lot of friends here and I’m still really close to them. It’s nice I can bring the Cup here now, it’s a special place for me.”

It was one of the two stops Balinskis made at local youth hockey rinks with the Stanley Cup, also stopping by the Marupes Ice Hall as well.

Balinskis said he finished his special day with a party for his closest family and friends.

You can check out some video footage of Balinskis’ special day with the Cup below:

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Florida forward Sam Reinhart trending toward having his number retired by Panthers someday

Photo caption: Florida Panthers defenseman Uvis Balinskis shares the Stanley Cup with youth hockey players at Tukums Ice Hall, where he once played youth hockey. (Florida Panthers)

One area that Giants have struggled in that surprises GM Zack Minasian the most

One area that Giants have struggled in that surprises GM Zack Minasian the most originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Giants’ recent struggles are no mystery, but what has general manager Zack Minasian most perplexed?

Minasian joined KNBR 680’s the “Murph & Markus Show” on Thursday morning and was asked what surprises him the most about the team’s current skid.

“I don’t know if I would point to one particular area that has been disappointing other than our overall record,” Minasian explained. “For whatever reason, we just haven’t seemed to hit with runners in scoring position like we had hoped.”

Early in the year, the Giants’ offense wasn’t a problem, but the last few months have turned into a downward spiral.

“It’s always tough to isolate that situation and say, ‘Well, this is why,’ ” Minasian added. “I think we’re 30th by a decent margin vs. the 29 teams, probably since mid-May … mid-June.”

San Francisco acquired three-time MLB All-Star Rafael Devers from the Boston Red Sox on June 15th. Since then, the Giants have batted .214 with runners in scoring position, the worst mark in the league.

“That part, in particular, has been really difficult to put your finger on as far as why it’s not happening at that specific moment,” Minasian concluded.

Hopes of a NL Wild Card spot are nearly out of reach as the Giants were swept by the Padres earlier this week. San Francisco went 3-13 (.231) with runners in scoring position in the series.

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Phillies at Nationals Prediction: Odds, expert picks, starting pitchers, betting trends, stats for August 14

It's Thursday, August 14 and the Phillies (69-51) are in Washington to take on the Nationals (48-72). Jesús Luzardo is slated to take the mound for Philadelphia against Brad Lord for Washington.

The Phillies enter off two consecutive losses to the Reds where they were outscored 14-1. Philly will travel to DC and take on the the Nationals who got back in the winning column with an 8-7 victory over the Royals courtesy of a top of the ninth RBI single.

Washington is 4-10 over the last 14 games, but a 3-2 record in the last five. Philadelphia hasn't had a three-game losing streak since June 24-26 and followed up the last two two-game losing streaks with 13 and three-run victories.

Let's dive into the matchup and find a sweat or two. We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on how to catch first pitch, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.

Follow Rotoworld Player News for the latest fantasy and betting player news and analysis all season long.

Game details & how to watch Phillies at Nationals

  • Date: Thursday, August 14, 2025
  • Time: 6:45PM EST
  • Site: Nationals Park
  • City: Washington, DC
  • Network/Streaming: NBCSP, MASN

Never miss a second of the action and stay up-to-date with all the latest team stats and player news. Check out our day-by-day MLB schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game with every out.

Odds for the Phillies at the Nationals

The latest odds as of Thursday:

  • Moneyline: Phillies (-211), Nationals (+174)
  • Spread:  Phillies -1.5
  • Total: 8.0 runs

Probable starting pitchers for Phillies at Nationals

  • Pitching matchup for August 14, 2025: Jesús Luzardo vs. Brad Lord
    • Phillies: Jesús Luzardo, (11-5, 4.20 ERA)
      Last outing: 1.50 ERA, 1 Earned Runs Allowed, 7 Hits Allowed, 1 Walks, and 4 Strikeouts
    • Nationals: Brad Lord, (3-6, 3.28 ERA)
      Last outing: 1.50 ERA, 1 Earned Runs Allowed, 4 Hits Allowed, 2 Walks, and 5 Strikeouts

Rotoworld still has you covered with all the latest MLB player news for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!

Expert picks & predictions for tonight’s game between the Phillies and the Nationals

Rotoworld Best Bet

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Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the MLB calendar based on data points like past performance, player matchups, ballpark information and weather forecasts.

Once the model is finished running, we put its projection next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.

Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Thursday’s game between the Phillies and the Nationals:

  • Moneyline: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the Philadelphia Phillies on the Moneyline.
  • Spread: NBC Sports Bet is leaning towards a play ATS on the Washington Nationals at +1.5.
  • Total: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the over on the Game Total of 8.0.

Want even more MLB best bets and predictions from our expert staff & tools? Check out the Expert MLB Predictions page from NBC.

Top betting trends & insights to know ahead of Phillies at Nationals

  • Washington is 3-2 in the last 5 games
  • Washington is 4-10 in the past 14 games
  • Philadelphia is 0-2 in the last 2 games
  • Philadelphia is 4-2 in the past 6 games
  • The Phillies have won 7 of their last 10 games
  • The Under is 4-1 in the Phillies' last 5 matchups against National League teams
  • The Phillies have covered in 4 of their last 5 games showing a profit of 2.50 units

If you’re looking for more key trends and stats around the spread, moneyline and total for every single game on the schedule today, check out our MLB Top Trends tool on NBC Sports!

Follow our experts on socials to keep up with all the latest content from the staff:

  • Jay Croucher (@croucherJD)
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Wayne Rooney hits back at Tom Brady: ‘I don’t think he really understood football’

  • NFL legend queried Rooney’s work ethic at Birmingham

  • Comments were ‘very unfair’, former striker says

Wayne Rooney has bitten back at Tom Brady over comments aired in a recent documentary depicting their short spell working together at Birmingham.

Brady, the legendary NFL quarterback and winner of seven Super Bowls, is heard during Built In Birmingham: Brady & The Blues, to question Rooney, when he was manager. “I’m a little worried about our head coach’s work ethic,” Brady tells his business manager Ben Rawitz. “I mean, I don’t have great instincts on that.”

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Hernández: Dodgers' failure to improve their bullpen spurred freefall with no end in sight

Dodgers pitcher Shohei Ohtani leaves the game in the fifth inning after giving up an RBI double
Dodgers pitcher and designated hitter Shohei Ohtani (17) leaves the mound in the fifth inning after giving up an RBI double against the Angels at Angel Stadium on Wednesday. (Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times)

In a year that has been so improbable, the impossible has happened.

The Dodgers have dropped out of first place.

The team that was expected to win 120 games has fallen a game behind the San Diego Padres in the National League West, and who knows how much further baseball’s most expensive collection of players could plummet?

The geniuses in the front office improved the farm system more than they did the obviously problematic bullpen at the trade deadline, resulting in blown lead after blown lead after blown lead.

Dodgers pitcher Shohei Ohtani delivers the ball from the mound against the Angles on Wednesday at Angel Stadium.
Dodgers pitcher Shohei Ohtani delivers the ball from the mound against the Angles on Wednesday at Angel Stadium. (Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times)

Games have become "Choose Your Own Adventure" books in which every choice available to manager Dave Roberts ends in disaster, with relievers giving up leads in four of the team’s last seven games.

The recent activation of Tyler Glasnow and Blake Snell have made the starting pitching whole, but what does it matter if the bullpen can’t close out games?

Mookie Betts has started hitting and the offense has picked up, but what does it matter if the relievers give the runs right back?

President of baseball operations Andrew Friedman told reporters the other day the look of the bullpen could significantly change by the time the playoffs start because of the anticipated returns of the likes of Tanner Scott, Kirby Yates and Michael Kopech. He could be right.

Read more:Welcome to second place: Tumbling Dodgers are swept by the Angels

However, there’s no chance of that transformation occurring in the next 10 days, which could be the most important 10 days of the regular season. The Dodgers will play the Padres six times over that period — three times at Dodger Stadium this weekend and three times at Petco Park in San Diego next weekend.

The Padres have won 14 of their last 17 games to overtake the Dodgers, who were nine games ahead of them on July 3. Whereas the Dodgers were relatively inactive at the trade deadline, the Padres fortified a lineup powered by Manny Machado and Fernando Tatis Jr. They bolstered the league’s No. 1 bullpen with the addition of Mason Miller, the best reliever on the market.

The Dodgers also have momentum — but an entirely different kind. When their starting pitcher departs a game, a collapse feels inevitable.

That was certainly the case on Wednesday when Ohtani was taken out of the game against the Angels with a 5-4 advantage. Why wouldn’t there be a sense of impending doom in a game in which Roberts was forced to place the game in the hands of Justin Wrobleski and Edgardo Henriquez?

Dodgers pitcher Edgardo Henriquez bites his glove as he walks off the mound after giving up the go-ahead run.
Dodgers pitcher Edgardo Henriquez bites his glove as he walks off the mound after giving up the go-ahead run against the Angels on Wednesday at Angel Stadium. (Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times)

Wrobleski and Henriquez combined to give up two runs in the eighth inning, and the Angels went on to complete their three-game sweep of the Dodgers.

If they had protected the lead, who would have pitched the ninth inning?

Roberts: “Umm …”

The manager eventually came up with a name: , whom the Cincinnati Reds demoted to the minor leagues before trading him to the Dodgers.

Roberts explained that Blake Treinen was unavailable because he’d pitched in three of the last five games. Another potential consideration Roberts didn’t mention: Treinen, who was activated from the injured list about two weeks ago, has a 4.26 earned-run average.

The blown lead on Wednesday was the second by the Dodgers in as many days. A worn-down-looking Alex Vesia gave up a tying run in the ninth inning and Ben Casparius lost the game in the 10th.

Read more:Nine-game NL West lead gone: Dodgers fall into first-place tie after Angels walk-off

“It’s something that we’re really not accustomed to, to be quite honest,” Roberts said.

The bullpen played a major role in the championship the Dodgers won last year. That seems like a remote possibility this year. Even if Scott and Yates return, what are the chances of them pitching well when the high-price free-agent pickups haven’t pitched well for the majority of the season?

And, say, the bullpen comes together as Friedman envisions. Where will the Dodgers be in the standings? The Dodgers have the fifth-best record in the NL. Only two teams receive first-round byes.

In the wake of the loss on Wednesday night, Roberts sat in the visiting manager’s office at Angel Stadium. A bottle of wine was on the desk in front of him.

“It’s a gift,” Roberts said. “I haven’t opened it yet.”

He didn’t discount the possibility of doing so, however. Asked if he could drink the entire bottle that night, Roberts forced a smile.

“Possibility,” he said.

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

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Why Rafael Devers criticism confuses former Giants teammate Mike Yastrzemski

Why Rafael Devers criticism confuses former Giants teammate Mike Yastrzemski originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Mike Yastrzemski was not teammates with Rafael Devers for long, but he knows exactly what kind of person and player the slugger is.

The former Giants outfielder joined “Foul Territory” on Monday and was asked what it was like playing with Devers, whose Boston Red Sox tenure ended in controversy, for nearly two months before he was traded to the Kansas City Royals on July 31, before the MLB trade deadline.

“He was the best man. Awesome teammate … I think he just got thrown into a weird circumstance,” Yastrzemski told A.J. Pierzynski. “Sometimes as players you have to stick up for yourself and I think that’s what he tried to do. And I think the wording of it was delivered poorly. Because he’s an awesome teammate.”

“He works his tail off. He tries to help everybody. If you’re facing a guy that he’s faced and you haven’t faced him, full scouting report … He’s really smart and he cares about winning so much. So, I don’t understand where all the heat came from.”

Devers left Boston on a sour note after he reportedly refused to play first base after the team already transitioned him from third base to designated hitter when they signed Alex Bregman in the offseason.

He began his Giants tenure as the team’s designated hitter while nursing a minor groin injury before eventually debuting at first base for San Francisco on July 22, and in the weeks since the move, appears to have taken kindly to the transition.

Although his short stint with the Giants has not gone the way he or the team expected after the blockbuster trade in June, there is no denying how impactful Devers can be for San Francisco moving forward.

As Yastrzemski can attest to.

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Triumph and disaster for you, soft power for the Premier League: fantasy football is back | Jonathan Liew

Celebrities play it. Footballers play it. Gradually, insidiously, fantasy football has seeped into the way we consume the game

Perhaps you’re a template kind of guy. Perhaps, by contrast, you’re spurning the triple Liverpool consensus and stacking your team with handy differentials like Jarrod Bowen and Donyell Malen. Perhaps even Erling Haaland could be considered a differential given his historically low current ownership stats. Perhaps you’re feeling a cheeky BB GW1, followed by a FH GW2. Perhaps, by contrast, you’re furiously stabbing at the “close tab” button on your browser in the hope of purging these words from your eyes as expeditiously as possible.

In which case, relax. This is actually a column about sport: what it is, what it isn’t, how we watch it, where it’s going. Most important, you can rest assured I shall not be relating any details of my Fantasy Premier League exploits, for the same reason I will not be sharing my dreams, my Wordle stats or the contents of my belly button. However fascinating you may find your own, it is genuinely no excuse for wasting anybody else’s time.

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Fantasy Baseball Closer Report: Bryan Abreu poised to step up as Josh Hader lands on injured list

In this week's Closer Report, the Astros will be without their top closer as Josh Hader lands on the 15-day injured list with a shoulder strain. With Bryan Abreu poised to step into the ninth-inning role, where does he place in the updated closer rankings? We review the situation and more as we examine the last week in saves.

Fantasy Baseball Closer Rankings

Tier 1

Andrés Muñoz - Seattle Mariners
Edwin Díaz - New York Mets

The Mariners' bullpen had a busy week. Muñoz picked up his 28th save against the Orioles on Tuesday. The 26-year-old right-hander has recorded a 1.34 ERA, 1.00 WHIP, and a 60/23 K/BB ratio across 47 innings. Meanwhile, Matt Brash stepped in for two saves during rest days for Muñoz.

Díaz hasn't gotten much work amid the Mets' struggles over the last couple of weeks. He made one appearance against the Brewers on Sunday and took the loss, giving up a solo home run.

Tier 2

Trevor Megill - Milwaukee Brewers
Aroldis Chapman - Boston Red Sox
Jhoan Duran - Philadelphia Phillies
Robert Suarez - San Diego Padres

Megill's stellar season continues with two more saves on back-to-back days this week against the Mets. The 31-year-old right-hander is up to 28 saves with a 2.20 ERA, 1.07 WHIP, and a 49/15 K/BB ratio across 41 innings. Shelby Miller was activated from the injured list to help bolster the middle innings.

Chapman made just one appearance, tossing a clean inning against the Padres on Saturday. In Philadelphia, Duran locked down back-to-back saves against the Rangers over the weekend before Orion Kerkering stepped in for a save against the Reds on Monday. Duran has already recorded four saves with the Phillies and is up to 20 on the season while posting a 1.86 ERA, 1.11 WHIP, and a 56/18 K/BB ratio across 53 1/3 innings.

Suarez allowed one run to blow a save opportunity against the Red Sox on Saturday. He then bounced back with a clean inning against the Giants on Monday for his 33rd save. Behind Suarez, Mason Miller recorded a pair of holds in a setup role and has struck out nine batters over his last three outings.

Tier 3

Daniel Palencia - Chicago Cubs
Emilio Pagán - Cincinnati Reds
Randy Rodríguez - San Francisco Giants
Kenley Jansen - Los Angeles Angels
Pete Fairbanks - Tampa Bay Rays
Bryan Abreu - Houston Astros
Cade Smith - Cleveland Guardians
Jeff Hoffman - Toronto Blue Jays
David Bednar - New York Yankees
Kyle Finnegan/Will Vest - Detroit Tigers
Carlos Estévez - Kansas City Royals
Dennis Santana - Pittsburgh Pirates

Palencia made one appearance this week, tossing a clean inning with one strikeout for a save against the Blue Jays on Wednesday. He's up to 16 saves with a 1.69 ERA, 0.91 WHIP, and a 46/11 K/BB ratio across 42 2/3 innings. Meanwhile, Pagán converted his 25th save with a scoreless inning against the Pirates on Saturday.

It was also a quiet week for Rodríguez as the Giants' struggles continue. He saw no save chances and did not make an appearance on the mound. In Anaheim, Jansen struck out two batters in a pair of perfect outings for two saves before giving up a solo homer to Shohei Ohtani on Tuesday. Pitching for the fourth time in five days, the 37-year-old veteran closer locked down his 23rd save with a clean inning on Wednesday. Jansen has recorded a 2.74 ERA, 1.00 WHIP, and a 45/13 K/BB ratio across 46 innings.

Fairbanks struck out one batter in a scoreless inning against the Athletics on Monday for his 20th save of the season. Tampa's biggest acquisition at the trade deadline, Griffin Jax, has slotted in to setup duties. He surrendered three runs and took the loss against the Mariners on Friday, then bounced back with two outs against the A's on Monday to record a hold.

Josh Hader tossed 36 pitches over two scoreless innings on Friday to earn the win against the Yankees. Hader was unavailable to pitch against the Red Sox on Monday due to left shoulder discomfort was placed on the 15-day injured list with a left shoulder strain on Tuesday. Hader is reportedly seeking a second opinion and anticipates being out longer than the two-week minimum. Bryan Abreu is set to fill in as the primary closer. He's more than capable of stepping into the role, with a 1.64 ERA, 1.05 WHIP, and an 81/25 K/BB ratio across 55 innings. He converted his first save on Wednesday against the Red Sox, working around two hits with two strikeouts in a scoreless inning.

Smith recorded a clean save with two strikeouts against the White Sox on Saturday, then fell in line for a win with four outs against the Marlins on Tuesday. The 26-year-old right-hander should finish out the season as Cleveland's closer. He's converted five saves with a 2.68 ERA, 1.10 WHIP, and a 74/18 K/BB ratio across 53 2/3 innings.

Hoffman walked five batters against the Dodgers on Sunday and was charged with a blown save before somehow falling in line for a win. He then bounced back with two strikeouts in a clean inning in a non-save situation against the Cubs on Tuesday. The 32-year-old right-hander has converted 26 saves with a 4.41 ERA, 1.10 WHIP, and a 66/16 K/BB ratio across 49 innings.

Bednar entered in the eighth inning against the Astros on Saturday with the bases loaded and one out. He walked in the game-tying run and was charged with a blown save before recording the final five outs and falling in line for a win. He then tossed a clean ninth inning with a four-run lead against the Twins on Monday, indicating that Bednar is likely the reliever the team will go to in save opportunities for now.

Finnegan converted a save against the Angels on Friday, his third with the Tigers. Vest then stepped in for the next two saves against the White Sox on Monday and Wednesday, with Finnegan pitching the eighth in both instances. Expect this committee approach to continue likely through the rest of the season.

It was a mixed week on the mound for Estévez. He took two losses and recorded a pair of saves. The 32-year-old right-hander is up to 30 saves with a 2.92 ERA, 1.18 WHIP, and a 43/20 K/BB ratio across 52 1/3 innings. And in Pittsburgh, Santana worked a clean inning for his seventh save against the Reds on Friday, then pitched a scoreless inning in a non-save situation against the Brewers on Tuesday.

Tier 4

Raisel Iglesias - Atlanta Braves
Jojo Romero - St. Louis Cardinals
Phil Maton/Robert Garcia - Texas Rangers
Blake Treinen/Alex Vesia/Ben Casparius - Los Angeles Dodgers
Ronny Henriquez/Calvin Faucher - Miami Marlins

Iglesias worked two clean outings this week for a pair of saves against the Marlins. The 35-year-old right-hander has converted 16 saves with a 4.34 ERA, 1.11 WHIP, and a 53/10 K/BB ratio across 47 2/3 innings.

Romero worked around three hits and a walk on Sunday against the Cubs, holding on for a four-out save. He then surrendered two runs against the Rockies on Wednesday to blow the save and take the loss. With Romero the only healthy left-hander in the Cardinals bullpen, Riley O'Brien could figure into the saves mix on a matchup basis.

The late-inning mess continues in Texas. Garcia was charged with a blown save after he blew the lead in the seventh inning against the Diamondbacks on Tuesday. Maton then got the save chance in the ninth on Wednesday and surrendered four runs to blow the save and take the loss.

It's a similar struggle in Los Angeles as the Dodgers try to fill the ninth-inning void left by Tanner Scott. Both Treinen and Vesia were charged with blown saves this week. Scott could be ready to face live hitters at some point next week as he continues his rehab from an elbow injury. For now, expect the team to continue to use a committee approach. Meanwhile, no saves in Miami this week as Faucher and Henriquez remain at 11 and six saves, respectively.

Tier 5

Keegan Akin - Baltimore Orioles
Justin Topa/Cole Sands - Minnesota Twins
Jose Ferrer - Washington Nationals
Sean Newcomb - Athletics
Juan Morillo/Kyle Backhus - Arizona Diamondbacks
Grant Taylor - Chicago White Sox
Victor Vodnik - Colorado Rockies

Most of this tier consists of situations you don't really want to go chasing. In Minnesota, Topa pitched the final two innings against the Yankees on Wednesday for his second save for the Twins. Things are even murkier for the Diamondbacks. Morillo picked up a save in his first appearance since he was recalled from Triple-A. Andrew Saalfrank then got the save chance on Wednesday, while Kyle Backhus also remains in the mix. Akin seems to be the guy in Baltimore, though he was charged with two blown saves this week.

David Peterson's implosion vs. Braves another in a long line of 'frustrating' performances from Mets starters

David Peterson was the only arm out of the starting rotation the Mets could rely on to give the team length. 

Entering Wednesday's game against the Braves, Peterson had six consecutive starts where he went six innings (a career-high) and in 15 of his last 22 starts. That would not continue on Wednesday as Peterson's fourth-inning implosion led to nine runs and an eventual 11-6 loss. Of those nine runs, six were charged to Peterson thanks to walks and getting behind in counts.

"He lost the strike zone, missing a lot armside and the walks, especially when you’re walking the bottom of the lineup," manager Carlos Mendoza said of Peterson's fourth inning. "The inning started with four straight balls…they made him pay."

In the fourth, Peterson allowed four walks and two hits before being pulled for Reed Garrett. The right-handed reliever could not get out of the inning, as the Braves capped off the inning with a grand slam from Michael Harris II.

Peterson allowed six earned runs for the first time in a game since May 15, 2023, at Washington and for the sixth time in his 124 career outings. His 3.1 innings pitched also marked his shortest start since Aug. 4, 2023.

But starters have bad outings throughout a 162-game season, but this has become an epidemic for the Mets' starting rotation. With Peterson's short outing, the Mets starters have gone a full turn -- including Frankie Montas' bulk outing -- without going five innings. 

When asked why his starters haven't been able to give the team length, Mendoza pointed to one reason.

"When you look at the last couple of nights, we lost the strike zone," Mendoza said. "Pretty much with all of them, giving free passes. Teams are going to make you pay. Top of my head, that’s been the biggest thing for me. We haven’t been able to get a shutdown inning, especially when we get the lead like that. It’s frustrating."

"Yeah, it’s frustrating. We’re not holding up our end, and we need to do better," Peterson said of the rotation not giving length. "[Fixing it] starts with analyzing the performance and turning the page and moving on to the next one." 

The team has received only 594.1 innings from starters this season, which is 27th in the majors. Since June 13, they have been last in that category. 

"We got the coaches looking at pretty much everything, trying to figure it out," Mendoza said of this stretch of losses for the Mets. "How can we continue to help these guys, especially the guys from the rotation. We know the talent’s there, we just haven’t been able to get much from them, especially this last time through. Not easy, but understanding, we have to keep going."

The Mets will look to win their series with the Braves on Thursday before hosting the Mariners over the weekend. Pitching prospect Nolan McLean will start Saturday's game, and perhaps the youthful arm can give the team the length from the rotation they are desperate for.

Welcome to second place: Tumbling Dodgers are swept by the Angels

ANAHEIM, CA -AUGUST 13, 2025: Los Angeles Angels second base Christian Moore (4) scores the winning run on a two-RBI single by Los Angeles Angels catcher Logan O'Hoppe in the eighth inning at Angel Stadium on August 13, 2025 in Anaheim, California.(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
Christian Moore slides home with the go-ahead run in the eighth inning as Will Smith awaits the throw. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

The result was historic. The way it happened was all too familiar.

Never before, since interleague play began in 1997, had the Dodgers been swept in a six-game season series against the Angels.

But plenty of times in recent weeks had they suffered the kind of fate that befell them Wednesday.

Entering the eighth inning, the team was leading by one run. Without many trustworthy options in a recently scuffling bullpen, however, manager Dave Roberts had few cards to play from his deck.

First, he sent left-hander Justin Wrobleski out for a third inning of work. When he walked the first two batters, Roberts turned to right-hander Edgardo Henriquez, who had pitched multiple innings the night before.

You can probably guess what happened next.

Despite perfectly defending a sacrifice bunt to get the lead runner at third, the Dodgers again failed to escape a late-game threat. With one out, Jo Adell hit what looked like a possible double-play grounder — only for Henriquez to deflect the ball on an ill-advised fielding attempt and send it rolling away for an infield single.

Two batters later, Logan O’Hoppe roped a go-ahead, two-out base hit into center.

Read more:Shaikin: Will Smith could win a batting title. Could the Dodgers stop him?

Another lead had been squandered by the bullpen. Another loss — the Dodgers’ fourth straight, and 21st in their last 33 games — had been all but cemented.

With a 6-5 defeat, the Dodgers were swept for the second time this season by the Angels. They also fell out of first place in the National League West for the first time since April.

It was yet another day they could only shake their head.

Wednesday was supposed to be about Shohei Ohtani, who was making his first pitching start as a visitor at his old home ballpark at Angel Stadium.

It was also Ohtani’s first full-length outing since returning from a second career Tommy John surgery earlier this year. But even the two-way star could only conjure so much magic.

After building up inning by inning since his return to pitching, Ohtani’s leash was extended into the fifth for the first time this season — a target length the Dodgers don’t plan on having him surpass at least until the playoffs.

“He’s just such a valuable player to us offensively, as a pitcher,” Roberts said. “So to push for an extra inning, or call it five extra innings in totality, it’s just not worth it. There’s just way too much downside.”

Read more:After one year, this MLB postseason schedule innovation is no longer

And by the time Ohtani took the mound for the first time, he’d already helped the Dodgers take an early lead, beginning the game with a scorching line-drive triple before Mookie Betts singled him home and Will Smith went deep to make a three-run first inning.

The two-way star gave up two runs in the second, one on a Taylor Ward home run, then another after Yoán Moncada doubled and came around to score on a sacrifice fly, but the Dodgers restored their three-run advantage with a two-run rally in the fourth; one that featured three walks (including one from Ohtani and a run-scoring free pass from Smith) and an RBI single from Betts (who extended his hitting streak to eight games, five of which have been multi-hit efforts).

Ohtani’s first foray into the fifth inning didn’t go smoothly. O’Hoppe and Bryce Teodosio hit consecutive one-out singles. Zach Neto laced a two-run double into the left-field corner that kicked away from Alex Call. And with his pitch count up to a season-high of 80, Roberts went to get him before he could qualify for the win.

Reliever Anthony Banda escaped the inning without further damage. Ohtani’s final line was 4 1/3 innings, four runs, five hits and seven strikeouts (two of them against former Angels co-star Mike Trout). His season ERA is now 3.47. He has 32 strikeouts in 23⅔ innings.

And for a while, it appeared the score would remain that way — until yet another late-game collapse sent the Dodgers to another maddening setback.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.