Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts saw Clayton Kershaw occasionally wince as he navigated through the Milwaukee Brewers ‘ lineup on Friday night and thought — hoped — he was merely upset at not getting some strike calls. It turned out to be far more serious — a recurrence of the forearm/elbow inflammation that kept Kershaw out for an extended period of time earlier this season, forcing an abrupt exit in the top of the second inning.
With the playoffs approaching, Kershaw’s season is seemingly over. With his contract expiring, it’s fair to wonder if Kershaw’s illustrious Dodgers career is over as well.
Kershaw, still in uniform moments after the Dodgers’ 8-6 comeback victory, called it “a tough blow.”
“It just got bad enough to where I couldn’t keep going tonight,” Kershaw said. “I’ll get it looked at again, obviously, in the next couple days. Haven’t quite wrapped my head around all that yet. The biggest thing was I just wanted to be part of this team going through October. This team is special. You saw tonight. … I’ve known that. I know that we’re gonna do something special this year, and I wanted to be a part of that. That’s the hardest part for me right now is just knowing that chances are it’s not looking great for October right now.”
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Kershaw, 33, spent 10 prior weeks rehabbing from inflammation around his pitching elbow, an ailment that began just before the All-Star break. He admittedly tried to return too quickly at the onset, forcing him to re-start the rehab process methodically. Throughout, as the team rallied behind the acquisition of Max Scherzer, Kershaw expressed eagerness to contribute to a team on the precipice of greatness.
His initial three starts were generally promising, consisting of a 3.29 ERA, 16 strikeouts and only two walks in 13 2/3 innings. But Kershaw struggled against the Brewers in what was supposed to be his final tune-up start before the postseason. He recorded as many outs as he allowed hits (five), was charged with three earned runs and allowed five batted balls that traveled faster than 95 mph.
Roberts came out to check on him alongside a trainer with one on and one out in the top of the second, then led him off the mound after a brief conversation, igniting a standing ovation from the 51,388 people in attendance.
“It was difficult,” Roberts said. “It was his last home start this year. You just don’t know what the future is gonna predict. I wanted it to be really special for him and his family, and it just didn’t end the way we had hoped. But with that said, we have to gather more information and see what’s next.”
Kershaw held the baseball in his hand as he walked towards the Dodgers’ third-base dugout, providing the impression that he was keeping a memento to commemorate what could be his final start in a Dodgers uniform.
He laughed off that notion.
“Probably just shock,” he said. “I honestly had no idea I was holding on to the ball.”
The Dodgers’ victory maintained their hope of winning a ninth consecutive National League West title, but just barely. With two regular-season games left, they’re still two games behind the San Francisco Giants, who have won 22 of 28 games since the start of September.
The Giants (106-54) can wrap up the division with a win over the San Diego Padres on Saturday afternoon, before the Dodgers even take the field for their penultimate game of the regular season. The Dodgers (104-56) need to win their two remaining games and for the Giants to lose their two remaining games just to force a tiebreaker game from Oracle Park in San Francisco on Monday.
More likely, the Dodgers will host the St. Louis Cardinals in the NL Wild Card Game on Wednesday, with Scherzer set to face Adam Wainwright. If they advance, Walker Buehler and Julio Urias can be lined up to pitch the first two games of the NL Division Series against the Giants.
Kershaw, who finally won his elusive championship last October, probably won’t factor in.
The Dodgers will know more when he undergoes further testing on Saturday.
“Obviously when Clayton has to come out of a game, it doesn’t bode well,” Roberts said. “What that means, we just don’t know enough right now. But where we’re at in the schedule, with what’s left of the season, just not too optimistic right now.”
Kershaw was the pre-eminent ace of the 2010s, particularly in a five-year stretch from 2011 to 2015 that saw him compile 88 wins, post a 2.11 ERA, average 226 innings and win three Cy Young Awards and an MVP. Injuries, mostly in his back, plagued him moving forward, but he continued to pitch among the game’s best, going 55-18 with a 2.47 ERA and an average of 166 innings from 2016 to 2019.
The COVID-19-shortened season saw Kershaw experience something of a resurgence. His fastball velocity ticked back up, to an average of nearly 92 mph, and he rode a 2.16 ERA in 58 1/3 innings into October. The Dodgers spent most of that postseason in a makeshift bubble in Arlington, Texas, playing near Kershaw’s hometown, where several of his closest friends and family members saw him win the championship that had famously eluded him his entire career.
The next chapter is uncertain.
Kershaw’s 2021, the last year of a three-year, $93 million extension he signed in November of 2018, will likely end with a 3.55 ERA, 144 strikeouts and 21 walks in 121 2/3 innings. Fittingly, he found a way to be very effective despite fighting injury.
“My future’s gonna take care of itself,” Kershaw said. “I’m not really worried about that right now. I really wanted to be a part of the moment right now, and I wanted to be with this group going through October. That was my only focus this year. Once I got hurt, it was just to come back and make it up for this month. That’s the hard part right now is knowing it’s gonna be a challenge to even contribute at all this next month. But as far as anything else goes — I haven’t wrapped my head around it, and I don’t plan to any time soon. I’m just excited to watch these guys next month.”
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