Dodgers Team News

3 Reasons the Dodgers Ought to Worry About the Padres

The Dodgers and San Diego Padres enter their final series of 2024 with control of their own destiny. Both teams have a crack at winning the National League West.

For the Padres (90-66), the task is quite a bit more difficult. The Dodgers (93-63) have a three-game advantage with only six regular season games remaining. Still, a series sweep by the Padres would leave the two teams tied atop the division — a nightmare scenario for a Dodgers team that’s been in first place all season.



So, how did the Padres get here? And should the Dodgers be worried?

Here are three reasons to take San Diego seriously:

1. The Padres’ rotation is better than the Dodgers’

San Diego took some time to find the right mix of starters and relievers, with some unexpected setbacks along the way.

Yu Darvish and Joe Musgrove were expected to lead the rotation, but both missed time at midseason with injuries. (Darvish also left the team for personal reasons for about six weeks.) Matt Waldron was tied for the team lead in starts when he was optioned to Triple-A in August with a 4.79 ERA; he hasn’t been back since.

Dylan Cease (a spring training acquisition) and Michael King (a reliever most of last season acquired in the Juan Soto trade) have filled in more than capably. Darvish and Musgrove are back and looking like their pre-injury selves. Trade deadline acquisition Martin Perez is 3-0 with a 2.61 ERA in nine starts since he was acquired.

That’s a wealth of riches for October, when a team’s top three starters matter more than their bottom-of-the-rotation depth. But the Dodgers are struggling to even identify a top three.

Jack Flaherty has delivered as advertised, going 6-2 with a 3.40 ERA in nine starts since he was acquired at the trade deadline. Yoshinobu Yamamoto is ostensibly the number-2, though the Dodgers are loathe to use him on fewer than five days’ rest, and his last start saw him allow four runs in three innings Sunday against the Rockies.

Walker Buehler (1-6, 5.63 ERA) and Landon Knack (3-4, 3.39 ERA, 4.71 FIP) are the top candidates to pitch a potential Game 3, and no one else — healthy or otherwise — has made even seven appearances for the Dodgers this season. That Tony Gonsolin is even under consideration for October starts, 13 months removed from Tommy John surgery, speaks volumes to the state of the Dodgers’ rotation.

2. Their lineup is more balanced

The Padres can’t compete with the Dodgers’ 1-2-3 hitters of Shohei Ohtani, Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman. No other team can, really. But their lineup is enviably deep — a source of concern for the Dodgers at times this season.

Since the All-Star break, none of the Padres’ top eight hitters has a Weighted Runs Created Plus (wRC+) below 113. Jackson Merrill is a strong candidate, if not the strongest, to win the NL Rookie of the Year award. Fernando Tatis Jr. is hitting like he did before a midseason femur injury (.634 slugging percentage in 17 games since returning). Manny Machado recently broke the team record for home runs.

The rest of the group — Jurickson Profar, Luis Arraez, Donovan Solano, Jake Cronenworth — is combining to strike out fewer than any lineup in baseball. That makes them a tough matchup in October, when every team has pitchers capable of using the strikeout to get out of jams.

3. They’re motivated to take their big brother down a peg

It’s easy to overstate the X-factor of motivation, but let’s face it: the Padres have a chip on their shoulder when it comes to beating the Dodgers. They’re 7-3 against the Dodgers this season. The Dodgers’ injuries and the Padres’ in-house talent only helps explain part of the reason why.

The Dodgers are a better team at home (50-28) than on the road (43-35) this season — nearly every team is — so it’s no small matter that this critical series is being played at Dodger Stadium. This is also why securing the top seed in the postseason matters to the Dodgers.

Can the Padres’ motivation overcome the Dodgers’ home-field advantage this week? It’s a fascinating subplot to watch this week, and perhaps again if the teams meet in October.

Photo Credit: David Frerker-USA TODAY Sports

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JP Hoornstra

J.P. Hoornstra writes and edits Major League Baseball content for DodgersNation.com and is the author of 'The 50 Greatest Dodger Games Of All Time.' He once recorded a keyboard solo on the same album as two of the original Doors. Follow at https://x.com/jphoornstra

11 Comments

  1. The Padres are the better team. More balanced, hungrier, and way better coached. The Dodgers looked flat and overmatched. Short playoffs again.

  2. Lets be honest here, We do not have the pitching to win a world series, let alone get to one. In addition, the dodgers worst stat is their inability to get runs home with runners in scoring position. In last nights SD loss, LA was 2 for 10 with runners in scoring position. The sooner you come to realize this is another failed season, the less it will hurt you once we lose the wild card or division series.

  3. Lets be honest here, We do not have the pitching to win a world series, let alone get to one. In addition, the dodgers worst stat is their inability to get runs home with runners in scoring position. In last nights SD loss, LA was 2 for 10 with runners in scoring position. The sooner you come to realize this is another failed season, the less it will hurt you once we lose the wild card or division series.

  4. I blame Andrew Friedman.
    This incredible team is left on the precipice of the postseason with 2 starting pitchers. That’s not going to be enough!!! How could he allow this to happen??? Buehler and Kershaw were always big Question marks, but apparently he assumed everything was fine, just fine.
    I can’t remember ever being this embarrassed by the Dodgers…
    If you enjoyed last night’s debacle, you’ll love what comes next. I don’t think I’m going to be able to watch

  5. You forgot the big reason.. Roberts is the manger.. and he can’t win the big ones.. look at his track record.. he is a loser.. and the Dodgers will go down because of him.. said for last 3 years and after spending almost a BILLION dollars the world will see

  6. Like Myself and Half the Dodgers fans already know, Drrrrrrrrrrrrrr would blow it with the 27 Yankees, if the Dodgers ever want to win another WS, they will need to find a Baseball manager that knows how to manage not only the game, but a pitching staff. Every player and Manager watching that game in the Country last night said BUNT, not Drrrrrrrr, It’s embarrassing watching Drrrrrrr fail every year with a billion dollar line up….

  7. Moderators, this is supposed to be a open forum, when you negate opinions just because you don’t agree, or are hiding truth, it shows poor journalism as well as selective bias. These acts are weak and are everything wrong with this world, not to mention tasteless and un American. Explains why there are never any threads on here with more than 3-5 comments. Either let people talk or move to a place that already censors it’s fans and citizens…

    1. Kirk
      You have an interesting comment here. I have no idea what you have experianced as far as maybe being blocked. But I find This cite Dodgers Nation the best Dodger site of them all. Two there’s I’ll just call 1)Think the other 2)Didgest are horrible and I see people complaint all the time about being blocked.
      If one is not using foul language nor constantly attacking someone personally then it shouldn’t be blocked I see this site allowing comments in the past about Trevor Bauer that personally those others went woke big time and didn’t allow respectful opinions. So without knowing your complaint I gotta say personally I love this site and check it multiple time every day for new stuff.Great job Dodgers Nation

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