Cody Bellinger Dodger home run king at age 23
Cody Bellinger passed Adrian Beltre last night to be the first Dodger aged 23 or younger to hit at least 77 home runs. It must be noted that Beltre hit his 76 home runs in roughly twice as many plate appearances as Cody. At age 23, Beltre had been an inconsistent performer for the Dodgers but in two years at the age of 25, Beltre would break out with an MVP type season that included 48 home runs.
Bellinger would need to hit seventy home runs between now and the end of the 2021 season to beat out Beltre who ended his Dodger career with 147 home runs. Given he has 5/6 of 2019 to go, all of 2019, and all of 2020, I’d bet heavily that Bellinger does end his age 25 seasons with at least 147 home runs. He might have a shot at between 180 and 200 career home runs by age 25. And unlike Beltre, he won’t be a free agent after his age 25 season.
Player HR From To Age PA Cody Bellinger 77 2017 2019 21-23 1296 Adrian Beltre 76 1998 2002 19-23 2553 Duke Snider 59 1947 1950 20-23 1560 Tommy Davis 53 1959 1962 20-23 1594 Corey Seager 52 2015 2017 21-23 1413
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Generated 4/27/2019.
Bellinger crushes Total Base record for April
With four days still left in April Cody Bellinger now owns the historical total base record for the month of April.
Player Split Year HR PA 2B 3B TB Cody Bellinger April/March 2019 13 116 6 1 89 Chase Utley April/March 2008 11 128 10 1 85 Jermaine Dye April/March 2000 11 111 12 0 83 Alex Rodriguez April/March 2007 14 106 7 0 82 Larry Walker April/March 1997 11 106 6 1 82 Ken Griffey Jr. April/March 1997 13 119 5 1 81 Alfonso Soriano April/March 2003 9 138 6 1 81
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Generated 4/27/2019.
Some leaderboard records are filled with some flukes but the seven players who had at least 80 total bases in March/April were all bonafide stars at the time.
Maybe even more important. The year that Chase Utley had 85 total bases in 2008, the Phillies won the World Series.
We will hold off until the end of April before we show every leaderboard he showed up on with this monumental April but it will be a few. One home run away from the tying Pujols and Arod for most home runs in March/April. Three RBI from most RBI in March/April.
Cody has already crushed all of the Dodger leaderboards for March/April but might as well create the full month leaderboards when the month is complete.
Suffice to say this hitting month by Cody Bellinger is reminiscent of the 1981 Fernando run to start the season. We are watching things no one has ever seen before, no matter how old you are.
Barnes is crashing, Martin is badly needed
Austin Barnes barreled out of the gates this year and after the first seven games seemed to affirm the faith the Dodgers had in letting him be the everyday catcher. Barnes had an OPS of 1.328 on April 7th. The Dodgers left the sweet confines of Coors and it appears that Barnes left his bat behind. Since leaving Coors, Barnes is 3 for 33 with zero extra base hits, four walks, and has an OPS of .512.
Overall his numbers look very much like they did in 2018 which is not a good thing. Russell Martin got hurt and Barnes is playing way more than he should be and you can hope that is why he is struggling. We will find out, as Martin is due back this week, and Rocky Gale can go back to the depth cage of AAA.
I’m not sure we can count on much offense from either Barnes or Martin, but the Dodger offense in April has shown they can carry a weak bat at catcher. It is doubtful that Cody Bellinger and Joc Pederson will be hitting over twenty home runs per month but as they cool down, Justin Turner, Cory Seager, Max Muncy, and AJ Pollock will step it up.
Looking at the last seven days, I was surprised to see how bad Muncy/Verdugo/Hernandez have been. I knew Turner/Taylor/Barnes were all struggling but hadn’t quite noticed that so many Dodgers were struggling to hit. It really has been just the Cody and Joc show with Pollock and Seager quietly producing.
Player Split Year OPS PA HR RBI BA OBP SLG TB Cody Bellinger Last 7 days 2019 1.177 22 2 5 .389 .455 .722 13 Joc Pederson Last 7 days 2019 1.109 19 2 2 .313 .421 .688 11 A.J. Pollock Last 7 days 2019 .990 16 1 3 .231 .375 .615 8 Corey Seager Last 7 days 2019 .826 18 0 1 .313 .389 .438 7 Max Muncy Last 7 days 2019 .597 18 1 2 .125 .222 .375 6 Enrique Hernandez Last 7 days 2019 .548 14 1 3 .083 .214 .333 4 Alex Verdugo Last 7 days 2019 .523 12 0 1 .182 .250 .273 3 Justin Turner Last 7 days 2019 .387 19 0 0 .071 .316 .071 1 Austin Barnes Last 7 days 2019 .277 15 0 0 .077 .200 .077 1 Chris Taylor Last 7 days 2019 .222 9 0 0 .111 .111 .111 1 David Freese Last 7 days 2019 .167 6 0 0 .000 .167 .000 0 Rocky Gale Last 7 days 2019 .000 2 0 0 .000 .000 .000 0
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Generated 4/23/2019.
Rarely does a Clipper loss look so bright
The Clippers lost on Sunday to the best team in the NBA, but they didn’t go easily and even in the loss, the Clippers could take solace in the play of their rookies. The team is in the playoffs because of Lou Williams/Montrezl Harrell/Danilo Gallinari but they all failed to play at the level Clipper fans were used to seeing from them. Yet, at one time the Clippers led the game 87 – 82 and it was because of three rookies. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Landrey Shamit, and even Jerome Robinson.
Shai-Gilgeous Alexander had fourteen points in the first quarter and would go on to have the greatest playoff game of any Clipper rookie in history. Big deal, how many Clippers rookies have even played in a playoff game? That is a good point so I went to basketball reference to see just how great a game this rookie had. SGA had a game score of 17.9 so I looked up all the rookie game scores in the postseason of at least 15. There were a ton. So I continued to cherry pick and looked for all of the game scores of at least 15 in the postseason for a player age 20 or younger.
It is no surprise that Magic Johnson sits on top of this list because his game six in the 1980 postseason was the greatest game I’ve ever seen as a fan. But he is also number one and two. Both games came in the NBA finals. There is a reason that Magic Johnson is one of the top ten possibly top five and even to some the greatest player to ever play the game.
You can see the Jayson Tatum run from last year as he had seven games make the list.
You will also see Shai-Gilgeous-Alexander on this list. Not that far down. Sandwiched between Jayson Tatum and Carmelo Anthony.
So to be clear. The list below is every NBA player with a game score of at least 15 in the postseason who was 20 years or younger.
Player Age Pos Date Tm FT FTA TRB AST STL BLK TOV PTS GmSc Magic Johnson 20-276 G-F 1980-05-16 LAL 14 14 15 7 3 1 5 42 39.6 Magic Johnson 20-271 G-F 1980-05-11 LAL 8 10 9 9 3 1 3 28 31.1 Derrick Rose 20-196 G 2009-04-18 CHI 12 12 4 11 1 0 5 36 30.4 Jayson Tatum 20-081 F 2018-05-23 BOS 7 8 7 4 4 2 2 24 23.0 Stephon Marbury 20-063 G 1997-04-24 MIN 4 6 4 4 1 0 0 28 22.1 Magic Johnson 20-264 G-F 1980-05-04 LAL 0 0 9 10 3 0 2 16 21.9 Brandon Jennings 20-206 G 2010-04-17 MIL 2 4 3 3 1 0 3 34 21.5 Harrison Barnes 20-328 F 2013-04-23 GSW 4 4 6 2 1 0 0 24 21.2 Brandon Jennings 20-215 G 2010-04-26 MIL 5 5 4 6 1 0 1 23 20.0 Tony Parker 19-345 G 2002-04-27 SAS 2 4 5 4 1 0 1 23 19.6 James Harden 20-239 G 2010-04-22 OKC 7 8 5 3 2 0 0 18 19.1 Harrison Barnes 20-335 F 2013-04-30 GSW 4 4 9 1 2 1 1 23 19.0 Jayson Tatum 20-067 F 2018-05-09 BOS 9 11 3 4 1 0 2 25 18.4 Jayson Tatum 20-058 F 2018-04-30 BOS 11 12 3 2 0 1 4 28 18.2 Shai Gilgeous-Alexander 20-283 G 2019-04-21 LAC 4 4 2 2 1 0 2 25 17.9 Carmelo Anthony 19-331 F 2004-04-24 DEN 4 4 10 4 1 0 3 24 17.8 Amare Stoudemire 20-154 F-C 2003-04-19 PHO 5 6 9 0 0 2 4 24 17.8 Tony Parker 19-338 G 2002-04-20 SAS 0 0 1 3 1 0 1 21 17.8 Amare Stoudemire 20-166 F-C 2003-05-01 PHO 2 3 10 3 3 1 2 18 17.8 Harrison Barnes 20-349 F 2013-05-14 GSW 3 4 7 1 0 1 1 25 17.3 Tony Parker 19-358 G 2002-05-10 SAS 5 6 1 5 1 0 2 24 17.3 Kawhi Leonard 20-335 F 2012-05-29 SAS 1 1 10 0 1 2 1 18 17.2 Kawhi Leonard 20-321 F 2012-05-15 SAS 3 4 6 1 3 1 2 16 17.0 Derrick Rose 20-208 G 2009-04-30 CHI 4 6 8 7 0 1 5 28 16.7 Brandon Jennings 20-217 G 2010-04-28 MIL 7 8 4 3 1 1 2 25 16.4 Derrick Rose 20-204 G 2009-04-26 CHI 3 4 11 9 0 0 7 23 16.1 Larry Hughes 20-112 G 1999-05-15 PHI 6 6 7 3 1 2 1 14 16.1 Myles Turner 20-028 C-F 2016-04-21 IND 3 4 8 1 0 3 1 17 16.0 Kawhi Leonard 20-308 F 2012-05-02 SAS 2 2 3 1 2 0 1 17 15.9 Kawhi Leonard 20-339 F 2012-06-02 SAS 0 0 9 0 1 0 2 17 15.9 Jayson Tatum 20-063 F 2018-05-05 BOS 1 4 5 4 1 0 4 24 15.8 Kawhi Leonard 20-325 F 2012-05-19 SAS 1 1 9 1 2 1 1 14 15.8 Jayson Tatum 20-056 F 2018-04-28 BOS 5 5 6 5 0 1 1 20 15.5 Tyrus Thomas 20-263 F 2007-05-07 CHI 8 11 4 1 3 1 1 18 15.5 Thaddeus Young 19-311 F 2008-04-27 PHI 4 4 9 3 0 0 0 15 15.5 Jayson Tatum 20-050 F 2018-04-22 BOS 5 6 3 3 2 0 1 21 15.4 James Harden 20-241 G 2010-04-24 OKC 7 8 5 4 2 1 1 15 15.2 Jayson Tatum 20-054 F 2018-04-26 BOS 8 9 3 3 2 0 3 22 15.0
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Generated 4/23/2019.
Jovan Buha, the Clipper beat writer for The Athletic wrote this about the game.
Game 4 was the actualization of all of Gilgeous-Alexander’s scoring gifts and instincts in one package. It was everything that makes him such a tantalizing long-term prospect — and potentially an All-Star down the line. The size, the pace, the touch, the confidence.
The Clippers have big plans for the summer of 2019 centered around Kawi Leonard and Anthony Davis but if none of them work out and the kids are all still here, I look forward to watching Landry Shamet and SGA grow up together in the backcourt. Are championships in their future? Probably not, Portland has gotten to watch Damian Lillard and CJ McCollum grow into a devasting backcourt but they don’t have any championships in their past or future. They also didn’t have Kawi who I really hope is a Clipper in a few months.
Anyone curious how Bellingers first 100 Plate Appearances of 2019 compare to Puig’s in 2013?
Cody Bellinger has now accumulated 100 plate appearances and it is probably the greatest stretch of 100 plate appearances we will ever see from a Dodger. I thought it would be fun to compare this stretch to the first 100 PA of Puig when Puig first showed up, because they are both age 23, they are both playing right field, and those first 100 plate appearances by Puig was probably the greatest stretch of offense and defense I’ve seen from any Dodger in my lifetime.
Now I had to stop at 98 for Puig because that is where the Baseball Ref Game log took me. That stretch is from game one on June one on June 3rd, to game 24 on June 28th.
It is cool to see that they both have the exact same batting average (.424), but Bellinger blows Puig away in OBP and Slug. During that Puig stretch, we have to remember the throws he made that put his arm on the map, but Bellinger has made a few of his own defensive highlight reels, taking a home run away from Yelich the other day.
Year Age PA R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS Bellinger - 2019 23 100 26 36 4 1 11 28 13 12 .424 .500 .882 1.382 Puig - 2019 23 98 16 39 4 0 7 16 4 19 .424 .459 .696 1.155
Ross Stripling blooms in the spring
Just like your favorite flowers that bloom every April and May, Ross Stripling has that fragrant spring smell when he takes the mound as a starter in the spring. Ross has made forty-two major league starts and has a game score of 69 or greater in seven of them. Of those dominant seven starts, six of them came either in April or May.
Date Opp Rslt AppDec IP H ER BB SO GSc 2016-04-08 SFG L 2-3 GS-8 7.1 0 1 4 4 74 2016-05-08 TOR W 4-2 GS-6 6.0 1 1 0 6 72 2018-05-30 PHI W 8-2 GS-7 W 7.0 4 1 2 9 72 2019-04-14 MIL W 7-1 GS-8 W 8.0 4 1 1 3 72 2018-05-25 SDP W 4-1 GS-7 W 6.2 6 0 0 10 70 2018-05-19(1) WSN W 4-1 GS-6 W 6.0 4 1 0 9 69 2018-07-07 LAA W 3-1 GS-6 W 6.0 3 1 0 7 69
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Generated 4/20/2019.
With Ryu coming off the DL to pitch today, with Rich Hill on the horizon, and with Clayton Kershaw already back, it is possible that Ross Stripling just made his last start for the Dodgers until the next starter goes on the disabled list. That may not take long given the fragility of the three pitchers given their DL history over the past three years but it may not happen until at least June and we won’t be seeing any May starts for Stripling.
But what a bullpen. Dodgers will now have three weapons in Ross Stripling, Caleb Ferguson, and Julio Urias that can go multiple productive innings.
Kiké was the star, but this was a team victory from the manager to the bullpen.
The big hero last night was Kiké and his improbable three-run home against the fireball Josh Hader. As Ken Gurnick noted last night it was the first time that Kiké had ever homered on an 0 – 2 count and it was the first home run ever given up by Hader on an 0 – 2 count.
Here is the math for the home run. I bet you didn’t expect a paragraph like this ten years ago when explaining a home run.
According to Statcast, the 95.5-mph pitch had a spin rate of 2327 RPM and a pitch height of 3.04 feet, and Hader had an extension of 7.1 feet. It exited at 106.1 mph and traveled an estimated 399 feet with a launch angle of 20 degrees and a hang time of 4.3 second.
As big as the home run was, Friday Night was a microcosm of how to win tough games. Ross Stripling gave up two runs in the first but you can’t be upset when someone gives up a home run to Christian Yelich. It is the in thing to do right now in the NL. Down 2 – 0 after one is never a good look, but Ross buckled down and did what he’s done in every April he’s been in a rotation. Ross and the bullpen allowed only one more run giving the Dodger offense plenty of time to come back.
The Pitching Breakdown – Ross for 14 outs, two earned in 1st, comes out after intelligently walking Yelich. Alexander comes in and gets Mike Moustakas to ground out to end the fifth. Alexander starts the 6th, gives up a single, then gets his specialty, the ground ball double play. With two outs, Alexander gives up two straight singles, putting two on with two out. Dylan Floro comes in and does what Dylan Floro does, a pop up out to end the threat in the 6th. The key moves here is that when Floro replaced Alexander, it became a double switch and Hernandez came into to play 2nd, Muncy moved to 1st, and Bellinger to RF. This doesn’t happen in the AL. Nothing happens in the AL. Floro gets the first batter in the 7th but then hits Cain, bringing up Yelich. Dave Roberts counters with Pedro Baez and it works out with Yelich just missing it, and hitting a long fly ball for an out. Moustakas gives Pedro all he has for eight pitches but Baez strikes him out on the 9th pitch. Joe Kelly comes in to protect the three-run lead that Hernandez gave the Dodgers with his home run in the top of the eighth. Joe has struggled all season but with each appearance, he seems to be finding his groove. Joe strikes out the first two Brewers and just as you think he’s coming around, Marcus Thames crushes a solo home run to cut the lead to 5 -3. Joe finishes the innings with another strikeout and struck out the side around the solo home run. Kenley Jansen comes in for the save and needs to get three straight outs so the Yelich will not come up representing the tying run. Jansen is up to the task and sets down the Brewers in order in what I think was his best appearance to date.
Hitting Breakdown – down two runs the Dodgers answer right back on an infield single by Cody Bellinger and a big two-out full count double by Alex Verdugo. In the 3rd the Dodgers tie the game on a long sacrifice fly to Left Field by Bellinger. They had loaded the bases on two walks and a single. The key play was the walk to Ross Stripling. You won’t see that in the NL. With the score tied and Josh Hader pitching his second inning the Dodgers went to work. Pollock worked a full count walk. David Freese worked a 3 – 1 walk. On his 34th pitch, Hernandez drilled the back-breaking three-run home run. Overall the Dodgers earned nine walks last night and that patient approach is what ultimately gave them the opportunities to win this game.
Managing – Dave Roberts made all the right calls in this game. He used the right relief pitchers at the right time. He made the huge double switch that put Hernandez into the game.
That is how you win a tough 5 – 3 game against one of the best teams in baseball.
Dodgers have reeled off four straight games scores > 64, can Julio Urias make it five?
The last time a Dodger starter was hammered was when Julio Urias took the mound on April 12th. Since that point, Caleb was an opener, but Ross, Clayton, Kenta, and Walker have all fired excellent games giving up just four runs in twenty-eight innings. Urias gave up five runs in five innings all by himself in his last start.
When Julio threw five dominant innings in his first start of 2019 I had hoped that he was going to take the gift of the Rich Hill injury and run with it making a case to stay in the rotation. His second start didn’t go as well and his 3rd start was horrible. With Kershaw back, with Rich Hill on the horizon, and with Ross Stripling pitching as well as anyone in the rotation, this could very well be the last start that Urias makes until the next Dodger hurler suffers an injury. Given that three-fifths of the rotation has already been on the DL he may not have to wait very long.
It would help his case to pitch a good game after two bad ones. I don’t expect middling games from Julio Urias, I have great expectations for him and he’ll be facing the hottest hitter in baseball in 2018 MVP Yelich and one of the best hitters against lefties in Lorenzo Cain. Urias needs to cool them down if the Dodgers are going to remind them why the Dodgers were the 2018 NL Champions.
He can do it
The Miraculous Monday
Monday started with a bang and ended with one of the greatest comebacks in the history of sports.
It was Jackie Robinson Day throughout baseball and some key NBA postseason games were going to take place. ESPN was broadcasting the Dodger game because of the Dodger history with Jackie Robinson so all eyes in Los Angeles were going to be on the Dodgers because the Dodger / Red matchup had about as much intrigue as any game could have in April.
You had five ex-Dodgers starting against the Dodgers including the whole outfield. You had Clayton Kershaw making his first start of 2019. You had two of the most polarizing ex-Dodgers batting back to back.
What kind of reaction would Puig get?
What kind of reaction would Kemp get?
Can the 2019 version of Clayton Kershaw help the beleaguered rotation or will he simply add wood to the rotation fire?
Who would step up in the bullpen?
Along with the Dodger game, the Clippers were playing at Oracle Arena and the only question of that game was by how much the Warriors would win. No one except a few hardy Clipper fans and NBA junkies would be paying attention.
Clayton started the game with an out but quickly gave up a hard hit single. Up stepped Puig and he got a nice ovation, not a great one. He tipped his cap and the ovation picked up but was hardly worthy of the Wild Horse. Whatever, he’s a Red now and he looked good in red. Two strikes down, Puig teed off on Clayton slugging a home run over the head of the guy who has basically replaced his bat in the lineup. Dodgers down 2 – 0 and it didn’t look good for Clayton. Velocity was around 90 – 91 but as the game continued, Clayton showed he can still be a force on the mound. Once Puig touched home, Clayton gave up just three singles the rest of the way and left the game having garnered twenty-one outs with the Dodgers tied at 2 – 2.
As Clayton left the game if you peaked at the Clipper / Warrior game you noticed they were losing 94 – 63 and weren’t surprised.
Pedro Baez had an easy eighth inning but so did Robert Stephenson and the game went to the 9th tied at 2. Kenley Jansen came in and quickly gave up a long double to Curt Casali. Jansen seemed to get his nasty going and struck out the dangerous Suarez. It was Puig again, but this time his one-time teammate got the best of him on a deep fly to Verdugo. Matt Kemp came up and looked hopeless on the first two wicked strikes. With the 0 – 2 Jansen was supposed to hit the target high but he missed the target and Kemp lofted a weak fly-drive toward 2nd base but there was no second baseman there and it landed giving the Reds a 3 – 2 lead.
If you peaked at the Clipper / Warrior game you noticed that the one time 31 point Warrior lead had been cut to 14 by the end of the 3rd quarter. If you were a Clipper fan you nodded your head because all year they had come back from huge leads. Even if they were destined to lose, at least they had erased the embarrassing 31 point deficit. You turned back to the Dodger game.
All the runs driven in by the Reds had been driven in by Puig and Kemp. Meanwhile, AJ Pollock who was signed to replace the offense of Kemp and defense of Puig was struggling once again to drive in runs. In the first Pollock had struck out in the first with runners on 2nd and 3rd. Any contact would have driven in the tying run. He couldn’t make contact. In the 3rd he struck out again with a runner on first. In the fifth, Pollock finally made his mark by walking with the bases loaded to tie the game at two. Pollock was not needed in the 9th.
David Freese led off with a walk against Raisel Iglesias. Joc Pederson got his first walk-off hit and he did it only the way that Joc Pederson could do it. He gave a mighty swing and blasted the ball to RCF, he dropped the bat, he pointed to his teammates, he finally started to jog, but while he was jogging the CF had not given up and even though Joc thought he’d hit a no-doubter, in the end, the ball barely cleared the fence. The Dodgers had won. Clayton had been brilliant. Puig had hit a home run. Kemp had a key single. It was about a good a game a conflicted Dodger fan could have asked for.
Meanwhile, the Clipper fan peaked at the score and holy shit, the Clippers were now tied with the Warriors. And just as you realize that the game is tied and that they had erased a 31 point lead Steph Curry hits a three-pointer. You can do nothing but shrug because you expect Steph to hit that shot. Except, for this night the script is flipped. The Warriors would miss the rest of their shots. The Clippers would not. Rookie Landsey Shamet would hit his own three-pointer. Montrezl Harrell would sink two free throws with five seconds to go and give the Clippers an insurmountable four-point lead.
The Clippers didn’t just beat the World Champion Warriors, they beat them at home, they came back from a 31 point deficit, they beat them with Pat Beverly fouled out, they beat them with two rookies playing in the backcourt.
It turned out to be the greatest comeback in Clipper History. It also turned out to be the greatest comeback in NBA postseason history. Los Angeles may not have noticed but basketball fans did. All over the world.
Ryu looks to extend his walkless streak
Ryu has yet to walk a batter in 2019. He went 15 spring training innings without a walk and has followed that up with 13 innings to start the season without a walk.
At thirteen innings, Ryu has the fifth-best mark to in LAD history for starters to start a season without a walk. Just last year, Alex Wood started the season with three starts and seventeen innings of zero walk pitching. He’s now playing for the Reds. In 2001 Luke Prokopec started the season with 20 innings of zero walk pitching. The next year he was pitching in Toronto and was out of baseball the year after that. Mike Morgan has the longest streak to start a season at 23 2/3 innings. He did it in 1990 and was pitching for the Cubs by 1992.
Name Strk Start End Games GS IP H ER BB SO ERA Mike Morgan 1990-04-13 1990-04-24 3 3 23.2 19 3 0 12 1.14 Luke Prokopec 2001-04-06 2001-04-27 3 3 20.2 16 6 0 17 2.61 Orel Hershiser 1990-04-09 1990-04-19 3 3 19.0 20 7 0 13 3.32 Alex Wood 2018-03-30 2018-04-11 3 3 17.2 14 10 0 15 5.09 Hyun-Jin Ryu 2019-03-28 2019-04-02 2 2 13.0 10 3 0 13 2.08 Clayton Kershaw 2017-04-03 2017-04-08 2 2 13.0 10 5 0 14 3.46 Ted Lilly 2010-08-03 2010-08-08 2 2 13.0 7 4 0 11 2.77 Chan Ho Park 1997-04-05 1997-04-09 2 2 13.0 9 4 0 9 2.77 Alan Foster 1969-04-26 1969-05-03 2 2 12.0 14 5 0 1 3.75 Odalis Perez 2002-04-04 2002-04-10 2 2 11.2 8 4 0 9 3.09 Terry Adams 2001-06-05 2001-06-10 2 2 10.2 10 4 0 14 3.38 Bob Welch 1978-06-30 1978-07-08 2 2 10.2 13 5 0 6 4.22 Tim Leary 1988-04-08 1988-04-13 2 2 10.0 9 5 0 9 4.50 Clem Labine 1958-05-15 1958-05-15 1 1 10.0 7 1 0 4 0.90
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Generated 4/8/2019.