Dodgers fall to Brewers as Justin Wrobleski comes back to earth

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MILWAUKEE –– For most of the year, Justin Wrobleski’s starts have almost all followed the same script.

Attack the zone. Pitch to contact. Limit damage. Breeze through quick innings.

On Friday night in Milwaukee, however, the Dodgers’ left-hander faced a contact-minded Brewers lineup uniquely adept at neutralizing his skill set.

And in a 5-1 loss at American Family Field, it led to the longest inning of Wrobleski’s breakout campaign.

For most of the year, Justin Wrobleski’s starts have almost all followed the same script. Getty Images

Four runs, 10 batters, six hits and 38 pitches in a nightmarish bottom of the first that dragged on for more than 15 minutes.

The Brewers’ game-opening, and back-breaking, rally started quickly. Jackson Chourio snuck a ground ball through the infield for a leadoff single.

Brice Turang followed with a line-drive knock to center. Then, William Contreras ambushed a first-pitch slider for a towering three-run homer deep to left field.

Just like that, Wrobleski had allowed more than two runs for only the second time as a starter all year.

The grind would only continue from there. With one out, Andrew Vaughn, Jake Bauers and Luis Rengifo struck together three more singles to load the bases. After a Sal Frelick sacrifice fly, Wrobleski walked No. 9 hitter Joey Ortiz to juice the bags again.

The good news: The 25-year-old southpaw averted total disaster over the rest of his five-inning start, striking out Chourio to retire the side in the first before giving up just one run over his next four frames.

Four runs, 10 batters, six hits and 38 pitches in a nightmarish bottom of the first that dragged on for more than 15 minutes. AP Photo/Jeffrey Phelps

The bad news: He suffered the exact kind of struggles that more skeptical observers of his hot start had feared.

After all, Wrobleski entered the game with the lowest strikeout rate among all 78 qualified big-league pitchers. And while he’d been able to limit hard contact and be efficient in his outings previously –– he had a 2.12 ERA since moving into the rotation, and was averaging 6 ⅔ innings over seven starts in that span –– so-called “regression to mean” had been looming as a threat.


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What it means

Wrobleski, it turns out, might not be invincible.

But neither was the Dodgers’ recently resurgent offense on Friday.

Instead, the club was shut down by rookie right-hander Logan Henderson, who didn’t give up a hit in his first three innings, escaped a bases-loaded jam in the fourth, and finished with seven strikeouts over five scoreless innings.

The Dodgers didn’t get on the board until the seventh, when Shohei Ohtani hit a sacrifice fly, and finished with just three hits –– their fewest in almost two weeks.

As a result, the club has now lost nine straight regular-season games to the Brewers dating back to 2024. Of course, they won the only four games that truly mattered when the teams crossed paths in last year’s National League Championship Series.

Instead, the club was shut down by rookie right-hander Logan Henderson, who didn’t give up a hit in his first three innings. Getty Images

Who’s hot

Ohtani was the one productive member of the Dodgers lineup, reaching base twice in addition to his sac fly.

Even he wasn’t perfect, however. In the first, he drew a walk to begin the game but then was thrown out trying to steal second to retire the side. And while his leadoff single in the fourth helped generate the squandered bases-loaded opportunity, Ohtani struck out to end the fifth after Teoscar Hernández had led the inning off with a hit.

Who’s not

Both of the Dodgers’ catchers.

Before first pitch, manager Dave Roberts said the recently scuffling Will Smith –– who was dropped down to the No. 7 spot in the order in Wednesday’s series finale in San Diego –– would only start one out of three games in Milwaukee this weekend, in order to give him time to “reset” and “work on his swing” amid a .197 slump over the last month.

The only problem: Backup catcher Dalton Rushing has gone cold since his blistering start to the season, too, only snapping a recent 0-for-19 skid with a single in the seventh inning Friday.

Up next

The Dodgers will try to even this weekend series on Saturday, when Roki Sasaki (2-3, 5.09 ERA) takes the mound against left-hander Robert Gasser (0-0, 4.50 ERA).

Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: nypost.com