2022 MLB Playoffs: Dodgers' 111-win season ends in NLDS disaster vs. Padres
By Rowan Kavner
FOX Sports MLB Writer
SAN DIEGO — The rain began pouring. San Diego's fans didn't budge. They stayed in their seats, soaked, twisting their rally towels, dancing and singing to Blink-182 as the grounds crew repaired the mound at Petco Park before the bottom of the eighth inning in Game 4 of the National League Division Series.
By then, the Padres' explosive comeback against the top-seeded, 111-win Dodgers was already complete.
"Nothing I can say is going to make it feel any better," Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said Saturday after the season came to a shocking end in a 5-3 defeat. "Obviously, we didn't expect to be in this position."
The Dodgers were supposed to be the battle-tested team, the group capable of countering a punch and persisting. Instead, it was the Padres doing "All The Small Things." They hit when they needed to, while the Dodgers did not. They secured their lead when they went ahead, while the Dodgers did not.
And after a stunning, five-run Padres blitz in the seventh inning, they finished off what they couldn't before: They finally slayed the dragon up the freeway.
"Shock factor, very high," Roberts said. "Disappointment, very high. It's crushing."
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The San Diego Padres' five-run inning gives them the lead against the Los Angeles Dodgers in Game 4 of NLDS before their eventual victory.
The Dodgers had just wrapped up a franchise-best season. Their offense was as stacked as any during their 10 straight playoff runs. Even without a defined closer this October, they seemed as capable as ever of matching up enough high-quality arms to make a championship run.
Their first test would come against a Padres team they bested 14 times in 19 regular-season matchups this season, one they swept in the NLDS en route to their 2020 World Series championship, one they had not dropped a series to all year — until the one that mattered most.
They took Game 1, then dropped three straight.
"October baseball can be brutal," Freddie Freeman said.
Though it ended that way, that's not how it began Saturday for the Dodgers. They looked primed to break out of their offensive funk after entering Game 4 hitless in their previous 19 at-bats with runners in scoring position.
Roberts didn't think his offense was exhibiting its usual patience. The skid stretched to an 0-for-20 mark with a flyout in the first inning, but Freeman — the NL hits leader who helped turn a formidable Dodgers lineup into the best in baseball — ended the drought with a two-run double in the third.
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The Dodgers take a 2-0 lead on the Padres with Freddie Freeman's two-run double in the third inning.
That, plus Tyler Anderson's five shutout innings, zapped the energy from Petco Park.
Presented the chance he craved, Anderson delivered. The veteran lefty went to the Dodgers for the opportunity to win, to pitch in the postseason, something he hadn't done since 2018. He is a different player now than the one who arrived at spring training. He had completed his transformation from long reliever to starter to All-Star, vaulting to heights unseen previously in his seven-year career.
On Saturday, the Dodgers put their season in his hands. He did everything asked of him.
"I would've thrown 150 pitches if they would've let me," Anderson said.
He instead got 86, his night ending after he retired 10 of the last 11 batters he faced. Soon after his departure, pandemonium ensued.
"You never second-guess that situation," Anderson said. "We have an unbelievable bullpen. They've been so good all year, and they've helped us win so many games this year. You understand, try to piece this thing together until the end and get us to tomorrow."
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Ben Verlander and Alex Curry break down the San Diego Padres' 5-3 win over the Los Angeles Dodgers to advance to the NLCS.
The Padres had other thoughts.
Every Dodgers reliever who entered in the seventh and eighth innings fell victim to San Diego's persistent fusillade. Freeman had seen that kind of underdog ascension before. Just last year, his 88-win Braves team shocked the world on their way to the World Series, toppling the Dodgers on the way.
"You always seem to get those double-plays when you need them. That hit that gets through," Freeman said.
This time, they were happening on the other side.
After mustering just two hits in five innings against Anderson, the Padres recorded two hits off reliever Chris Martin in the sixth inning, though he escaped unscathed. The Dodgers wouldn't be so lucky in the seventh, when each of the first five Padres batters reached base. They recorded two hits against Tommy Kahnle and another two against Yency Almonte. Surprisingly, Evan Phillips, the man the Dodgers turned to in leverage more than any other reliever this year, was not part of the equation as the season slipped away.
But Almonte seemed to settle in, retiring two straight batters to keep the game tied when something strange happened. He threw one pitch, a ball to Jake Cronenworth, before being pulled. Catcher Will Smith and Roberts both said there was a miscommunication as Alex Vesia warmed up in the bullpen getting ready for the lefty-lefty matchup.
"We missed a throw-over to buy a little bit of time, so Alex inherited a 1-0 count," Roberts said. "I still liked the matchup right there. Cronenworth put a good swing on the 2-2 pitch."
The swing, a two-run single up the middle off Vesia, provided the dagger.
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The San Diego Padres scored five runs in the seventh inning to take the lead on the Los Angeles Dodgers in Game 4 of the NLDS.
By the time Phillips entered in the eighth, striking out all three batters he faced, the damage was done. The party had begun. For the first time since 2006, Padres fans were witnessing a home playoff series in person. And for the first time since the Padres went to the World Series in 1998, their playoff ride will continue past the National League Division Series.
For the Dodgers?
"It's just disappointment," Freeman said. "We had a really good team. We just didn't get it done."
The Dodgers got one last chance.
In the ninth inning, it was Mookie Betts, Trea Turner and Freeman against Josh Hader. But the vaunted trio, the one that guided the best offense in baseball all season, went down in order.
All three NL division winners and all three NL 100-win teams have already been eliminated from the postseason.
"You play the game to win a World Series," Betts said. "To come up short, it's a sudden end. It sucks. But there's nothing else we can do now."
Roberts said that nobody on the Dodgers would consider it a wasted season, but the disappointment was palpable in the visiting clubhouse as hugs were handed out and goodbyes were said.
The No. 5-seed Padres will move on to face the 6-seed Phillies in the National League Championship Series. The Dodgers, meanwhile, will have the offseason to consider the worth of a 111-win season that included one playoff win.
"They played better than us," Clayton Kershaw said. "It's hard to admit sometimes, but that's the truth of it. They just beat us."
Rowan Kavner covers the Dodgers and NL West for FOX Sports. He previously was the Dodgers’ editor of digital and print publications. Follow him on Twitter at @RowanKavner.