DENVER — For the first time this season, the Dodgers have lost back-to-back games.
And in a 9-6 loss to the Rockies on Sunday, they picked an ugly way to do it.
After leading by three runs early, the Dodgers slowly wilted on a sunny afternoon at Coors Field. Roki Sasaki repeatedly stubbed his toe at the end of a 4 ⅔-inning, three-run start. Blake Treinen surrendered another lead in the seventh with a clunker out of the bullpen. The offense went quiet over the second half of the game.
The Dodgers’ Shohei Ohtani reacts after fouling off a pitch. Ohtani went 2-for-5 with an RBI on Sunday. APEven Edwin Díaz’s return to action, after a nine-day layoff amid a drop in velocity that caused concern over his knee, only gave the club more questions to answer.
The Dodgers scored the first three runs of the game, plating two in the third on an RBI single from Alex Freeland and an RBI double from Shohei Ohtani, then another in the fourth when debuting 28-year-old prospect Ryan Ward lofted a line drive over the second baseman’s head for his first career hit and an RBI single.
Alas, just like their loss on Saturday, the offense cooled off, scoring only once more until the ninth.
And, also like Saturday, their pitching couldn’t keep them in front at hitter-friendly Coors Field.
The meltdown started with Sasaki, who couldn’t maintain his strong start to the day.
In the first three frames, the right-hander retired 8 of 10 batters he faced while attacking with his fastball. But after that, he let 8 of 12 reach base while once again losing his command.
The Rockies got one run in the fourth, an inning that could’ve been worse if not for a double-play that retired the side. They then tied the game in the fifth, when Kyle Karros hit a 448-foot blast to lead the inning off and Edouard Julien followed Jake McCarthy’s double with an RBI single.
Veteran reliever Treinen was Sunday’s other culprit. Handed a 4-3 lead in the seventh, he failed to record an out while allowing four straight hits. The big blow was a two-run, go-ahead homer from Mickey Moniak. Tyler Freeman drove in another to extend the Colorado lead.
Then came Díaz, who also failed to record an out in a three-run eighth inning –– extinguishing virtually any hope of a comeback (even though the Dodgers did get the tying run to the plate in the ninth) to send the team to this season’s first losing streak.
The Dodgers’ Hyeseong Kim reacts after misplaying a ball Sunday against the host Rockies. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters ConnectWhat it means
That, surprisingly, the Dodgers will not win this series in Denver.
They can still salvage a four-game split, with a quirk in the schedule setting up a series finale on Monday.
But given the gulf of class between the two franchises, even that would represent a disappointment for a Dodgers club that had won five of its first six series this season.
Of their many problems the last couple days, the lack of production from the offense has stood out. Following a seven-run outburst amid frigid conditions on Friday, they’ve totaled just seven more runs in 18 innings since. In that span, they are 4-for-21. with runners in scoring poisition.
Who’s hot
Díaz. But only in the most literal sense.
For the first time since a blown save back on April 10, the Dodgers’ new $69 million closer not only got warm, but finally entered a game.
What happened next, however, was not pretty.
He faced four batters. He recorded zero outs. And his velocity concerns did not go away.
The Rockies loaded the bases immediately against the right-hander, after Willi Castro lined a leadoff single, Karros walked on five pitches and Brenton Doyle bunted for a hit.
Díaz then allowed a two-run single to Eduoard Julien, in an at-bat that began with a 92.8 mph fastball –– among the 10 slowest of his entire career.
Granted, Díaz was coming off a long layoff and not pitching in a save situation. He also hit 97 mph on the radar gun a couple of times.
Overall, though, he simply didn’t look sharp, ballooning his early-season ERA over 10.00.
Who’s not
There’s obviously Sasaki, who allowed 10 baserunners (seven hits, two walks, one HBP) for a second straight start and now has a 6.11 ERA and 1.87 WHIP in four outings (only one of which has seen him complete the fifth).
However, even before Díaz’s entrance, Treinen and the Dodgers’ bullpen made their own ugly case.
Over the first three weeks of the season, the unit had only blown two late-game leads. Now, they’ve done it on back-to-back days.
Treinen had entered Sunday without allowing a run in his first eight appearances this year. Amid the Colorado altitude, however, he had trouble with his trademark sweeper. All four hits he allowed came on the pitch, with all but one of them smoked at least 95 mph off the bat.
Up next
The Dodgers will go for a series split on Monday with Justin Wrobleski (2-0, 2.12 ERA) on the mound. The Rockies will counter with veteran left-hander Jose Quintana (0-1, 5.63 ERA).

1 hour ago
3
English (US)