Yoshinobu Yamamoto to be ‘part’ of Dodgers’ Game 5 plan, but bullpen will have key role
Dodgers pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto delivers during Game 1 of the NLDS against the San Diego Padres at Dodger Stadium on Oct. 5. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
Exactly 25 hours before the biggest game of his teamâs season, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts was only sure of one thing about his pitching plans for Game 5 in the National League Division Series on Friday night.
âObviously, I’m sure Yoshinobu will be a part of it,â Roberts said Thursday, referring to $325-million offseason signing, and Game 1 starter, Yoshinobu Yamamoto.
What does that mean exactly?
âI just don’t know,â Roberts said.
Or, at least, he wasnât ready to say yet.
When the Dodgers made a late change to their starting rotation for this series last week, they did it with Game 5 largely in mind.
Read more: HernĂĄndez: Don’t overthink it, Dodgers. Game 5 should be another bullpen game
After initially announcing that trade deadline acquisition Jack Flaherty would start Game 1, the Dodgers instead bumped Yamamoto up to the opener and Flaherty to Game 2.
The idea was to keep both pitchers available for a potential fifth game, giving Yamamoto his standard five days of rest (a schedule he has followed all season since arriving from Japan) and Flaherty the typical four days off most MLB starters take before starts.
However, circumstances have changed in the four games since, which the Dodgers and San Diego Padres split to set up Fridayâs winner-take-all showdown.
Yamamoto was not only knocked around in Game 1, giving up five runs in three innings, but was also believed to be tipping his pitches, a problem that plagued him early in his rookie MLB season.
Flaherty, meanwhile, was only slightly better in Game 2, managing to pitch into the sixth inning but also giving up four runs in a loss.
Then, of course, there was the success the Dodgers found in a Game 4 bullpen game, shutting the Padres out on a night eight different relievers combined for nine dominant innings.
It set up a question that surrounded Thursdayâs off-day: Would the Dodgers go with a traditional start from Yamamoto or Flaherty, or run back a bullpen plan that was tantalizingly effective in Wednesdayâs elimination-game win.
The answer, it appears, might be somewhere in the middle.
Yamamoto seems likely to pitch at some point. Flaherty will also be available, according to Roberts. But the appeal of another bullpen game still beckons â maybe one in which Yamamoto and/or Flaherty handle a few innings, but leave the bulk of the game to a lockdown relief corps.
âWeâre still talking through it,â Roberts said. âI think the main variable is seeing our [relief] guys go out there today, play catch, see how they feel, which will give us a little bit more information on ultimately who takes the brunt of the game, who starts the game.â
âBut coming off of what they did last night,â Roberts added of the bullpen, âmakes everyone feel pretty confident going into Game 5.â
The simplest scenario could be the Dodgers using an opener in front of Yamamoto, and having him come out of the bullpen for bulk innings.
Yamamoto has pitched out of the bullpen before in his career, both as a young pitcher in Japanâs Nippon Professional Baseball league and during last yearâs World Baseball Classic with the countryâs national team.
Roberts said Yamamoto told the team heâs open to do so again on Friday night.
âI just feel he’ll do whatever we ask,â Roberts said.
As for Yamamotoâs potential pitch-tipping issue in Game 1, Roberts said the 25-year-old right-hander has âcleaned stuff upâ over the last week.
âWhere Yoshinobu is at, I feel really comfortable,â Roberts said.
That didnât stop Roberts from illustrating the advantages of a more bullpen-heavy pitching plan â especially considering the 0.93 ERA the teamâs seven leverage relievers (Michael Kopech, Blake Treinen, Evan Phillips, Daniel Hudson, Ryan Brasier, Alex Vesia and Anthony Banda) have combined for this series.
Read more: Shaikin: Dodgers want fans fired up for Game 5. ‘Bring the energy, but be smart about it’
âYou have a lot of neutrality with our guys,â Roberts said. âI feel that we have a lot of different guys that we can kind of deploy in certain lanes or certain spots.â
Where Yamamoto, or anyone else on the staff, fits into the script for Friday remains to be seen.
âI think our only focus,â Roberts said, âis finding the best pitchers to prevent runs tomorrow.â
Itâs a task that will determine the fate of the Dodgersâ season.
Freeman likely, Rojas doubtful for Game 5While Roberts said he doesnât anticipate injured shortstop Miguel Rojas (adductor) being in the starting lineup for Game 5, he did provide a more optimistic update on first baseman Freddie Freeman and his sprained right ankle.
âI think Freddie is going to be in there,â Roberts said, after Freeman was removed early from Games 2 and 3 and didnât play at all in Game 4.
âWith two days off â he didn’t try to get ready yesterday â he’s feeling better today with treatment. So I just feel like tomorrow he’ll be in there.â
Freeman spent a few minutes on the field during Thursdayâs workout, going through agility and baserunning drills.
His right ankle was also heavily wrapped in spatting tape, something Freeman said he might use for Fridayâs game.
âWeâre trying everything,â he joked.
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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.