Dodgers Team News

Dodgers’ Dave Roberts Defends Call That Preceded Padres’ Triple Play

The Los Angeles Dodgers were flat for most of the first eight innings Tuesday in a 4-2 loss to the San Diego Padres at Dodger Stadium.

Just when the momentum began to shift in the bottom of the ninth, the rug was pulled out from underneath them thanks to a game-ending triple play.



Trailing by three runs against All-Star closer Robert Suarez, Will Smith, Tommy Edman, and Kiké Hernández each delivered singles, igniting the Dodger Stadium crowd that had been waiting nearly three hours for a big inning.

The Dodgers had strung enough hits together that Shohei Ohtani was on deck when disaster struck.

With two on and no outs, and Shohei Ohtani waiting on deck, Miguel Rojas hit into a game-ending triple play, sealing the Dodgers’ crushing loss to the Padres.

“Yeah, definitely a tough one for myself,” Rojas said. “I’m totally confident that I can get to a fastball. Unfortunately, I hit it on the ground and it’s been tough for me the last couple of days. I haven’t been able to get the job done, but definitely this one, especially for me, I think I let the team down on that one.”

It wasn’t entirely Rojas’ fault. Prior to Suarez’s first pitch, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts gave Rojas the sign for a sacrifice bunt. Getting it down would have put runners on second and third with one out and Ohtani up with Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman waiting in the wings.

Roberts defended his decision to let Rojas swing away after he took the first pitch.

“I just don’t think that you’re expecting a triple play,” said Roberts. “(Rojas) hit the ball hard. And I just can’t play the game of, if it gets through then it’s a great play, and then if it’s hit right at him, it’s a bad play. The game tells you what to do. And in that situation, everyone is playing in, the shortstop is in the six-hole. There’s just a lot of holes out there. That’s just kind of the way you play baseball.”

“There’s less than a 1 percent chance that Shohei doesn’t come up to bat,” Roberts added. “Unfortunately, that small percentage came into play.”

After falling behind 0-1, the Dodgers made the surprising decision to let Rojas swing. Both Rojas and manager Dave Roberts explained the call was influenced by the Padres’ defensive setup. L.A. anticipated that if Rojas laid down a bunt, San Diego would execute a wheel play to get the lead runner at third, which they had shown on the missed bunt attempt on the first pitch.

The Dodgers have another opportunity against the Padres on Wednesday night.

Photo Credit: Joe Camporeale-USA TODAY Sports

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Photo of Maren Angus

Maren Angus

Maren Angus-Coombs was born in Los Angeles and raised in Nashville, Tenn. She is a graduate of Middle Tennessee State University and has been a sports writer since 2008. Despite being raised in the South, her sports obsession has always been in Los Angeles. She is currently a staff writer for Dodgers Nation and the LA Sports Report Network.

5 Comments

  1. And then he wonders why most fans don’t like him. He defends every decision he makes. It’s always the right decision in his mind. It’s decisions like these we have not won more titles despite being surrounded by great teams year in a year out. Anyone out to defend him must not watch the Dodgers on a daily basis like most of us do. You ask your 9th hitter to BUNT in that situation to give the team the chance to put runners in scoring position, especially with Ohtani on deck. Not doing so, and still defending it, is simply reproachable.

  2. Why not just own it. My mistake should have kept the bunt sign on and actually put in Kiermeir (sp) to get Ohtani to the plate?!?

  3. dumbest manager in baseball…and will again be a key reason they get knocked out. Time for a new skipper!

  4. Agree with all previous comments about Roberts. Sigh. Lifelong LAD fan, but live near Baltimore now. Took nephew to Os vs Rangers ALDS game 1 last year. Os were down by 1 run in the 8th, first two batters are single and walk, so 1st and 2nd, no outs. I looked at my nephew and said, “Reason I dislike Dave Roberts so much is he’d swing away in this situation. Hyde needs to bunt those guys to 2nd and 3rd with at most 1 out.” Nope, pulled a Roberts, a strikeout and double play later, and Rangers were on their way to a perfect road record in the playoffs and eventually the WS. Granted not the divisional playoffs, but this is the way Roberts manages and I can’t stand it. And then rationalizes it into oblivion. SMH.

  5. two glaring RECENT mistakes …… 1. not letting Kike or Chris Taylor hit ……… 2. not bunting ……… and every Dodger fan knows to what I am referring ………

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