Rockies Dodgers Tension Boils Over After Heated Extra Innings Clash

Tensions flared and benches were poised to empty when a heated exchange erupted between Dodgers catcher Dalton Rushing and Rockies Cole Carrigg after a contentious 10th-inning play.

The Dodgers’ first extra-innings game of the season came with a little heat attached Monday night, and Dalton Rushing was right in the middle of it.

After Los Angeles coughed up a three-run lead in the ninth against the Colorado Rockies, the game was still hanging in the balance when Colorado pushed across the go-ahead run in the top of the 10th. The score came on a tight play at the plate, with Cole Carrigg just getting around Rushing’s tag to cross home. That’s when the conversation started.

Carrigg had words for the Dodgers catcher after scoring, and Rushing answered right back. The two jawed at each other until teammates stepped in, and both benches began to spill out before things were calmed down.

It looked like Carrigg’s frustration centered on Rushing tagging him a second time after the run had already scored. Rushing was making sure Carrigg had touched home plate, since missing the plate would have meant an out on the second tag. Carrigg didn’t like it, and he made that clear.

Rushing tried to explain his side before right-handed pitcher Edgardo Henriquez pulled him away. Third baseman Max Muncy also moved in front of him to keep the situation from getting out of hand.

Dodgers broadcaster Joe Davis summed up the moment with a line that fit the scene: "This is like one of those science projects where you get the perfect ingredients to put together and you make a volcano," Dodgers broadcaster Joe Davis joked about Rushing and Carrigg.

This wasn’t the first time Rushing has found himself in the middle of a confrontation this season. His on-field edge has already been documented, including a more recent run-in with teammate Shohei Ohtani. In this case, though, the Dodgers catcher wasn’t the one escalating things, and his teammates got to him quickly before the moment could turn into something bigger.

Los Angeles also needs Rushing to keep holding down the position while Will Smith remains on the injured list until sometime after the All-Star break. Rushing has been pushed into the starting role and has handled it well so far.

Through nine innings Monday, he was 2-for-4, which lifted his season line to .265. He has 10 home runs, 29 RBIs and an .844 OPS.

For now, he’s set to remain the Dodgers’ starter behind the plate, and the club expects more growth from him along the way. As Roberts said last month: "It's a work in progress.

He wants to do really well, expects a lot of himself, so when he's not doing what he expects, he gets frustrated," Roberts said of Rushing last month. "I think that the good thing is that he understands his priority is to serve the pitchers and be behind the plate."

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