LOS ANGELES — Dodger fans have come to expect performances like this when Clayton Kershaw pitches: A fastball good enough to make the breaking pitches swing-and-miss deadly, a strike-throwing performance that gains momentum as it goes on, a master class in working out of trouble. You know, Hall of Fame stuff.
But the 52,159 who sold out Dodger Stadium didn't seem to enjoy Tuesday's demonstration quite as much. Probably because it was Bailey Ober who looked the part.
Ober was impeccable when it mattered, limiting the Dodgers to six hits over six innings, coming within one bad bounce of keeping the National League's highest-scoring team off the scoreboard, and becoming the first Twins pitcher since Carlos Silva in 2005 to beat the Dodgers in Los Angeles.
The final score was 5-1 Twins, an efficiency, if not an outcome, that Kershaw, who had not been charged with a loss on his home field since June 16, 2021, could surely appreciate.
"It just shows how different we are — our mentality and who we are becoming as a team," Byron Buxton said after reaching base three times, scoring twice and stealing a pair of bases for the first time since 2018. "We didn't go out there today like, 'Oh, Kershaw's pitching.' It was like, 'They're facing the Twins. … You've got to pitch to us. We nasty. We dangerous.' And once we get it clicking, it's going to be way worse."
The three-time Cy Young winner wasn't up to his usual standards in his second career start against the Twins — he memorably was lifted after pitching seven no-hit innings in his 2022 debut at Target Field last April — but he too put up a fierce battle. Kershaw needed 90 pitches to get through four innings, and while he induced 17 swing-and-misses with them, he also made his life much harder by putting the leadoff hitter on base three times.
It cost him in the first inning, when Donovan Solano — who owns a career .400 average (12-for-30) against Kershaw — opened the game with a double, then scored when Kyle Farmer, who once caught Kershaw during a rehab assignment in the minors, lined a two-out single.
In the fourth, Michael A. Taylor walked to open the inning, then advanced to second base on an odd balk by Kershaw, who tried unsuccessfully three times to pick Taylor off first base, one more than the new pitch-clock rules allow.