No one is more critical of Clayton Kershaw than Kershaw himself. To anyone else, his 7-3 win over the first place Colorado Rockies on Friday night would be considered a brilliant outing, but to the defending NL MVP and three-time Cy Young award winner, there is room for improvement.
He was so bad that he only struck out 12 in his six innings of work. Yes, he was a lot happier with this start than the last two, but he still felt that he could have done better.
“Tonight the curveball was better,” Kershaw told reporters after Friday night’s game. “The slider, I left a lot up, got a lot of foul balls and just kind of ran the pitch count up.”
Are you kidding me? Twelve strikeouts and he isn’t happy with his performance? That is so… so… Kershaw-like.
In his six innings of work, Clayton allowed three runs (one earned) on six hits (two of which were home runs), one walk and the 12 strikeouts. But by the time the sixth inning ended, Kershaw had already made 104 pitches of which 70 were strikes. When he entered the dugout after a scoreless sixth, Dodgers manager Don Mattingly told his ace that he was done for the night. Did Kershaw want to go back out for the seventh inning?
“Yes he did,” said Mattingly during his post-game interview. “But it was a short cconversation.”
Even though his star left-hander wanted to keep going, the Dodgers skipper would have none of that – not with a 6-3 lead at the time and a crucial three-game series with the hated Giants looming large.
But in spite of not being entirely happy with his own performance, the 27-year-old lefty got something from his teammates that has been lacking for the past several years – run support, including a three-run home run from second baseman Howie Kendrick – his first of the season. He also benefited from a pair of RBI doubles from Adrian Gonzalez – the National League’s top hitter at .581.
Kershaw himself hit a double down the right field line in the second inning, although he was left stranded on base.
The Dodgers bullpen came up big yet again on Friday night with Paco Rodriguez, Yimi Garcia and Adam Liberatore pitching three shutout innings in relief. Liberatore, who was called up from Triple-A Oklahoma City earlier in the day, pitched a perfect ninth inning with one strike out in his MLB debut.
Game two of the three-game series is Saturday night at 6:10 pm PT and will feature Dodgers co-ace Zack Greinke (1-0, 0.69 ERA) against Rockies right-hander Jordan Lyles (1-0, 2.25 ERA). One can only hope that Greinke is as bad as Kershaw was.
That’s what I love about Kershaw, his determination to be the very best. He always feels there is room for improvement in his game. Any other pitcher in baseball would love to duplicate Kershaw’s outing last night every time out.
I, personally, wasn’t too pleased with Kershaw’s performance. Actually I never am unless he’s closer to perfection. If it was someone else, yes, a great game but not when it comes Kershaw.
If it wasn’t for AGon and the rest of the offense, we might not have won.
Are you kidding me? How in God’s name can you not be pleased with Kershaw’s performance last night? He faced 25 batters and struck out 12 of them, for crying out loud.
I liked that but I was still uncomfortable with the way they were hitting him, when they did. I have to stop thinking of him as always being perfect all the time and start accepting the fact that even he makes mistakes.
I remember I was the same way with Gagne’ when he was going through his save streak.