The Dodgers are sticking with Dalton Rushing behind the plate for Shohei Ohtani on Friday night against the San Diego Padres, keeping the same battery that has worked together in Ohtani’s last three starts.
Manager Dave Roberts told reporters ahead of Thursday’s series opener that Rushing will catch Ohtani again, a notable call after the two had some public friction in their last outing together. Roberts had been undecided about whether to pair them again after that game.
Last Wednesday’s second inning got messy in a hurry. Rushing and Ohtani got crossed up on a pitch that turned into a run on a passed ball, and the tension didn’t stop there. Ohtani wanted to challenge multiple calls, while Rushing did not, and both players showed visible frustration.
Afterward, Rushing spoke with several people in the Dodgers dugout, Roberts included. He owned the moment after the game and said he intended to handle things better going forward.
“Look, he’s the greatest player to play this game,” Rushing said to the California Post. “And he has every right to, one, call whatever he would like, and two, just attack the way that he wants to on the mound. Because no one on this earth can tell him that he doesn’t know what he’s doing out there.
“So we’re gonna move forward from it. I’ve talked to him a lot.
Never in a million years could you ever have a bad thing to say about a guy like that. Never in a million years could you ever feel like a player like that is in the wrong.
So it’s kind of up to me, as a young guy, to wear the situation, wear it on my chest, get over it, move past it, and make sure that we allow a guy like that to do what he wants to do.”
Roberts said recently that Rushing’s emotions have been part of the learning curve this season.
"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 recently.
"I think that the good thing is that he understands his priority is to serve the pitchers and be behind the plate. But yeah, the last few games, he's had a tough go of it."
There’s another wrinkle for Friday: Ohtani started calling his own pitches from the third inning on last week, and it’s not clear whether he’ll do that again after the change paid off.
The Dodgers also pushed Ohtani’s start back two days to give him extra rest, and they’re hoping that helps him reset after he gave up 10 runs, nine earned, over his last three starts.
By contrast, he had allowed just five earned runs over his first 10 starts this season with Will Smith catching him. Smith is expected to remain out until sometime after the All-Star break.
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