Shohei Ohtani is still dealing with the knee issue that knocked him out of a game nearly three weeks ago, but the Dodgers are getting plenty from him anyway.
Los Angeles opened its three-game set against the Athletics with a win, and the night came with another reminder of how dangerous Ohtani can be even when he’s not fully right. He launched a three-run homer, one of several Dodgers home runs in the game, as the club stretched its National League West lead to 11 games.
Ohtani briefly left a game just under three weeks ago because of knee inflammation. The imaging came back clean, and he wound up missing only one game before returning to the lineup. Still, manager Dave Roberts said the issue has not fully gone away.
“I don’t think he’s 100 percent with his knee. But as far as his swing mechanics, where he’s at, he’s on balance. He’s 100 percent in the box," Roberts said.
Even with the knee bothering him, Ohtani has kept himself in the middle of the Dodgers’ offense. He has been more limited on the bases than usual, with just six stolen bases this year, as he puts more of his focus on contributing as a pitcher.
The production at the plate has stayed loud. Ohtani is hitting .297 with 18 home runs and 50 runs batted in, and his OPS sits at .958.
He has also been sharp on the mound, going 8-2 with a 1.58 ERA and 86 strikeouts in 79.2 innings.
That combination keeps him squarely in the mix for the National League MVP award, and if he maintains this pace, it would be his fourth straight season taking home the honor.
Roberts had plenty of appreciation for the homer Ohtani crushed against the Athletics.
“Yeah, that was a good one,” Roberts said. “You could just see that he was kind of sizing up that slider and he got one left up and put a really good swing on it."
For the Dodgers, the big picture is simple: they want Ohtani healthy when it matters most. They are trying to chase a three-peat, and keeping him fresh for the postseason is one of the biggest priorities as they manage the knee issue.
In Other News...
Dodgers Fans Will Love This Wild Max Muncy Coincidence
Max Muncy has already given Dodgers fans plenty to enjoy, but his name has an especially strange twist that makes the baseball world feel a little smaller. He is one of two MLB players named Max Muncy, and the coincidence runs deeper than a simple shared nickname.
Both men were drafted by the Athletics, both were born on Aug. 25, and despite the matching name and parallel paths, they are not related. For the Dodgers, it is one more odd little piece of trivia attached to a familiar face, and one that should make every Max Muncy mention a little more interesting the next time his name pops up around the league. [Read more 🡒]
Max Muncy Quietly Entered Elite Company After One Key Change
Max Muncys latest adjustment did not come from a new swing path or a mechanical overhaul. It came from a pair of glasses he began wearing on April 30 after being diagnosed with astigmatism in his right eye, and the change has fit neatly with what the Dodgers have seen at the plate. Since then, Muncy has looked more like the version of himself the club has long counted on, with his production drawing notice even in a season crowded with star power.
The results have been hard to ignore. Muncy has been one of only nine hitters in Major League Baseball with a .900 OPS since he started wearing the glasses, and both he and observers have pointed to the visual tweak as a reason his offense has ticked up. For a player whose value often hinges on timing and precision, even a subtle correction has turned into a meaningful edge, and it gives the Dodgers another reminder of how small changes can matter over the course of a long season. [Read more 🡒]
