The Sports Report: This Dodgers streak goes to 11
Howdy, I’m your host, Houston Mitchell. Let’s get right to the news.
Go beyond the scoreboard
Get the latest on L.A.'s teams in the daily Sports Report newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.
From Jack Harris: It took 120 games, 125 at-bats and what felt like hundreds more frustrating little moments along the way.
But, with the Dodgers 10-game winning streak on the line Thursday night, Austin Barnes picked the perfect time to hit his first home run of the year.
With a line drive blast to left field in the bottom of the eighth inning, Barnes broke a scoreless tie against the Milwaukee Brewers to lift the Dodgers to a 1-0 win, extending the team’s season-long winning streak to 11 games while completing a series sweep of the National League Central’s first-place team.
“It’s obviously been a while,” a smiling Barnes said postgame, after hitting his first home run since Sept. 20 of last year. “It’s been a struggle this year … But it was nice to put that run across, and give our team a shot to win.”
In a win streak that has been fueled by superstar performances from Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman, improved pitching from the rotation and bullpen, and well-rounded production from the Dodgers platoon-heavy lineup, Barnes became the latest -- and unlikeliest -- hero Thursday night.
Entering the game, the team’s long-time backup catcher was mired in a career-worst year. He was batting just .123. He’d driven in only six runs in 138 plate appearances. And he hadn’t hit a single home run all year, a lack of slugging prowess that highlighted his struggles at the plate.
“It’s been a grind this year,” Barnes said. “A lot of … tough nights.”
But, after catching seven scoreless innings from starter Lance Lynn, the ninth-year veteran made sure the outing didn’t go to waste.
After taking a first-pitch strike from Brewers reliever Joel Payamps, Barnes turned on an elevated slider, launching a scorched line drive into the Dodgers bullpen.
“It’s just nice when you have a veteran backstop who can spell Will [Smith] and you can trust him,” manager Dave Roberts said. “He had a heck of a ball game. It was really fun to see.”
Enjoying this newsletter? Consider subscribing to the Los Angeles Times
Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. Become a subscriber.
NL WEST STANDINGS
Dodgers, 74-46
San Francisco, 64-57, 10.5 GB
Arizona, 62-60, 13 GB
San Diego, 58-64, 17 GB
Colorado, 46-75, 28.5 GB
WILD-CARD STANDINGS
top three teams qualify
Philadelphia, 66-55
San Francisco, 64-57
Chicago, 62-58
Miami, 63-59, 0 GB
Cincinnati, 63-59, 0 GB
Arizona, 62-60, 1 GB
San Diego, 58-64, 5 GB
ANGELS
AL WEST STANDINGS
Texas, 72-49
Houston, 70-52, 2.5 GB
Seattle, 66-55, 6 GB
Angels, 60-62, 12.5 GB
Oakland, 34-87, 38 GB
WILD-CARD STANDINGS
top three teams qualify
Tampa Bay, 73-50
Houston, 70-52
Toronto, 67-55
Seattle, 66-55, 0.5 GB
Boston, 63-58, 3.5 GB
New York, 60-61, 6.5 GB
Angels, 60-62, 7 GB
Cleveland, 58-63, 8.5 GB
MAUI
From Chuck Schilken: Chargers safety Alohi Gilman has spent the past couple of weeks at training camp in Costa Mesa, but his thoughts have been thousands of miles away.
He was born and raised in the small town of Laie on the Hawaiian island of Oahu. While that’s two islands and nearly 100 miles away from Lahaina, Maui, the site of the deadliest U.S. wildfire in a century, Gilman says the recent events “have struck a deeply personal chord with me.”
“Maui isn’t just a place on the map; it’s a part of my homeland, my connection to Hawaii,” Gilman said in a statement on the team’s website. “My heart resonates with the resilience of the people who lost their homes while also stepping up for their neighbors in need.”
The Chargers have teamed with the 11 other major professional sports teams in Los Angeles — the NFL’s Rams, the NBA’s Lakers and Clippers, the WNBA’s Sparks, MLB’s Dodgers and Angels, the NHL’s Kings and Ducks, MLS’ Galaxy and LAFC, and the NWSL’s Angel City FC — to donate a combined $450,000 to help provide relief to those affected by the fires.
LAKERS
From Andrew Greif: The Lakers begin the 2023-24 NBA season with an opening-night road test against reigning champion Denver on Oct. 24. They then return home — but won’t stay there long.
In all, of the Lakers’ first 34 games, 19 will be played on the road, with additional miles potentially added still depending on how far they advance in November and December’s in-season tournament.
Coming off of a Western Conference finals appearance last season, the Lakers intend to advance even deeper in the postseason next spring. By the time they reach the season’s end, they will have been challenged by a slate ranked as the NBA’s fourth hardest by Positive Residual, a site that analyzes schedules.
Schedule
Oct. 24 at Denver 4:30 p.m. TNT
Oct. 26 Phoenix 7 p.m. TNT
Oct. 29 at Sacramento 6 p.m. SpecSN
Oct. 30 Orlando 7:30 p.m. SpecSN, NBA
Nov. 1 Clippers 7 p.m. ESPN
Nov. 4 at Orlando 4 p.m. SpecSN
Nov. 6 at Miami 4:30 p.m. SpecSN, NBA
Nov. 8 at Houston 5 p.m. SpecSN
Nov. 10 at Phoenix 7 p.m. ESPN
Nov. 12 Portland 7 p.m. SpecSN
Nov. 14 Memphis 7:30 p.m. SpecSN
Nov. 15 Sacramento 7 p.m. ESPN
Nov. 17 at Portland 7 p.m. SpecSN
Nov. 19 Houston 6:30 p.m. SpecSN
Nov. 21 Utah 7 p.m. TNT
Nov. 22 Dallas 7:30 p.m. SpecSN
Nov. 25 at Cleveland 4:30 p.m. SpecSN
Nov. 27 at Philadelphia 4 p.m. SpecSN, NBA
Nov. 29 at Detroit 4 p.m. SpecSN, NBA
Nov. 30 at Oklahoma City 5 p.m. SpecSN
Dec. 2 Houston 7:30 p.m. SpecSN
Dec. 4-9 in-season tournament
Dec. 12 at Dallas 4:30 p.m. TNT
Dec. 13 at San Antonio 5 p.m. SpecSN, NBA
Dec. 15 at San Antonio 4:30 p.m. ESPN
Dec. 18 New York 7:30 p.m. SpecSN
Dec. 20 at Chicago 5 p.m. SpecSN
Dec. 21 at Minnesota 6 p.m. SpecSN
Dec. 23 at Oklahoma City 5 p.m. SpecSN
Dec. 25 Boston 2 p.m. ABC
Dec. 28 Charlotte 7:30 p.m. SpecSN
Dec. 30 at Minnesota 5 p.m. SpecSN
Dec. 31 at New Orleans 4 p.m. SpecSN
Jan. 3 Miami 7 p.m. ESPN
Jan. 5 Memphis 7 p.m. ESPN
Jan. 7 Clippers 6:30 p.m. SpecSN
Jan. 9 Toronto 7:30 p.m. SpecSN
Jan. 11 Phoenix 7 p.m. TNT
Jan. 13 at Utah 6:30 p.m. SpecSN
Jan. 15 Oklahoma City 7:30 p.m. SpecSN, NBA
Jan. 17 Dallas 7 p.m. ESPN
Jan. 19 Brooklyn 7:30 p.m. SpecSN
Jan. 21 Portland 7 p.m. SpecSN
Jan. 23 at Clippers 7 p.m. TNT
Jan. 25 Chicago 7:30 p.m. SpecSN
Jan. 27 at Golden State 5:30 p.m. ABC
Jan. 29 at Houston 5 p.m. SpecSN
Jan. 30 at Atlanta 4:30 p.m. SpecSN
Feb. 1 at Boston 4:30 p.m. TNT
Feb. 3 at New York 5:30 p.m. ABC
Feb. 5 at Charlotte 4 p.m. SpecSN
Feb. 8 Denver 7 p.m. TNT
Feb. 9 New Orleans 7:30 p.m. SpecSN, NBA
Feb. 13 Detroit 7:30 p.m. SpecSN
Feb. 14 at Utah 6 p.m. SpecSN
NBA All-Star break
Feb. 22 at Golden State 7 p.m. TNT
Feb. 23 San Antonio 7:30 p.m. SpecSN
Feb. 25 at Phoenix 12:30 p.m. ABC
Feb. 28 at Clippers 7 p.m. ESPN
Feb. 29 Washington 7:30 p.m. SpecSN
March 2 Denver 5:30 p.m. ABC
March 4 Oklahoma City 7:30 p.m. SpecSN, NBA
March 6 Sacramento 7 p.m. SpecSN
March 8 Milwaukee 7 p.m. ESPN
March 10 Minnesota 6:30 p.m. ESPN
March 13 at Sacramento 7 p.m. ESPN
March 16 Golden State 5:30 p.m. ABC
March 18 Atlanta 7:30 p.m. SpecSN
March 22 Philadelphia 7:30 p.m. SpecSN, NBA
March 24 Indiana 7 p.m. SpecSN, NBA
March 26 at Milwaukee 4:30 p.m. TNT
March 27 at Memphis 5 p.m. SpecSN
March 29 at Indiana 4 p.m. SpecSN
March 31 at Brooklyn 3 p.m. SpecSN
April 2 at Toronto 4 p.m. SpecSN
April 3 at Washington 4 p.m. SpecSN
April 6 Cleveland 12:30 p.m. SpecSN
April 7 Minnesota 7 p.m. SpecSN, NBA
April 9 Golden State 7 p.m. TNT
April 12 at Memphis 5 p.m. SpecSN, NBA
April 14 at New Orleans 12:30 p.m. SpecSN
CLIPPERS
From Andrew Greif: The Clippers open their 2023-24 NBA season Oct. 25 at home against Portland, and then proceed to largely stay in Los Angeles for the following week.
Four of their first five games will be played at Crypto.com Arena — including a Nov. 1 matchup against the Lakers, a Clippers road game. The home stretch begins, and sets the tone for, a regular-season schedule that could be seen as more forgiving than recent seasons.
The schedule reflects matchups for 80 of their 82 games because their performance in the NBA’s inaugural in-season tournament will determine whether those dates are played as part of the knockout round, or filled against two opponents who also failed to advance out of group play.
CHARGERS
From Jeff Miller: After 14 practices against Justin Herbert and his collection of weapons, the Chargers’ first-team defense welcomed a new opponent to training camp Thursday.
The group responded by largely punching the New Orleans Saints in the chops.
In the first of two joint practices between the teams, the Chargers throttled Derek Carr and a Saints offense that includes running back Alvin Kamara and wide receiver Michael Thomas.
“I thought we were physical,” coach Brandon Staley said. “I thought we played hard. I thought the technique was good for the most part. I thought the communication was good for the most part.”
RAMS
From Gary Klein: The Rams and the Las Vegas Raiders held their second joint practice on Thursday in Thousand Oaks. Rams star defensive tackle Aaron Donald returned after a rest day and immediately raised the intensity level of the workout.
In something of an upset, no fights broke out.
Donald — and the frustration he produces for opponents — has ignited many of the major scuffles and brawls the Rams have engaged in during joint practices through the years. Last year in Cincinnati, Donald swung a helmet during a melee with the Bengals.
But there were no incidents Thursday.
LITTLE LEAGUE WORLD SERIES
From Eric Sondheimer: After a slow start in which its pitcher walked five, El Segundo turned loose its power hitters, Brody Brooks and Louis Lappe, in the third inning to overcome a two-run deficit and rally for a 4-3 win over the Great Lakes champion, New Albany, Ohio, in a weather-shortened opening game of the Little League World Series on Thursday night in Williamsport, Pa.
The game was halted after four innings. The teams had waited more than two hours to see if conditions would allow the game to resume. El Segundo advances to play on Monday.
COLLEGE REALIGNMENT
From Ben Bolch: College sports administrators have touted the benefits of conference realignment for their athletes. Increased exposure. Better competition. More money for nutrition, mental health and academic support, not to mention the stability of athletic departments that otherwise might have to cut teams.
Count UCLA basketball coach Mick Cronin among those who aren’t buying it.
Any of it.
“None of it is in the best interest of the student-athlete, no matter what anybody says,” Cronin, whose team will compete in the Big Ten starting in the 2024-25 season, said Thursday. “It’s in the best interest of more money to cover the bills. That’s it.”
Cronin pointed to all the athletic departments in the red — a list that includes UCLA, which faces a four-year shortfall of $130.8 million — and the behind-the-scenes accounting that is not widely known as factors sparking so much movement.
“The problem is the public doesn’t understand the scope of why it’s all even happening,” Cronin said. “Like, the public thinks right now that I have the 12 guys on scholarship and they go to UCLA for free. They don’t realize the athletic department at UCLA has 25 sports and 700 kids on scholarship that they have to pay the university for those scholarships. That, right there, 99% of the people do not know that.
“So why do these schools need all this money? There’s about four athletic departments that actually make money in the entire nation because of scholarship bills and budget expenses, so this all happened because of money, that’s just a reality. It’s not all because of football. And what I would tell you is, this is not the end-all fix. It’s far from over.”
GOLF
From Helene Elliott: Lilia Vu wasn’t looking to change her game after the bottom fell out of a season that had started so well, with her first LPGA victory in February and her first win at a major in April, when she outdueled Angel Yin to win a playoff at the Chevron Championship at The Woodlands, Texas.
When Vu missed the cut in four of her next five starts after the Chevron championship — including at the U.S. Women’s Open at Pebble Beach in June — she knew the problem wasn’t the clubs in her bag or flaws in her technique. The obstacle was the self-defeating thoughts that dominated her mind and eroded her confidence.
Vu, who grew up in Fountain Valley and earned all-America honors at UCLA while setting the program record of eight victories, is a perfectionist. That can be a strength. It made her probably the best putter the Bruins have had and lends authority to her clean ballstriking. But it becomes a weakness when she lets the slightest wobble shatter her focus. A shaky hole too often became a shaky round, which became a disappointing finish.
“I thought at the U.S. Open, after I played so bad, I didn’t know if I could ever win again,” she said.
Following a practice round last week in advance of the AIG Women’s Open, she sat down with her caddy of nearly a year, Cole Pensanti, to explain why she was so hard on herself and why she felt stifled by pressure to excel. It had happened to her before, pushing her into a slump after she had become the No. 1 amateur in the world, and again during a bumpy first year on the LPGA tour. She had found her way back on those occasions. She needed help to do it again.
WOMEN’S WORLD CUP
From Kevin Baxter: U.S. Soccer thanked Vlatko Andonovski for his four years of service, then named his interim replacement after accepting Andonovski’s resignation as coach of the women’s national team Thursday. The moves come less than two weeks after the U.S. was eliminated from the World Cup in the round of 16, the team’s earliest exit from a tournament it has won four times.
“We want to extend our deepest gratitude to Vlatko for his dedication to the women’s national team,” U.S. Soccer president Cindy Parlow Cone said in a statement. “We know he will continue to contribute to the growth of the women’s game in the United States and wish him well in his future endeavors.”
Twila Kilgore will serve the team’s temporary head coach as U.S. Soccer begins the search for a permanent replacement. Kilgore (formerly Kaufman) served as an assistant coach for the past year and a half, and in 2021 became the first American-born woman to earn U.S. Soccer’s Pro Coaching License. Kilgore spent 2½ years as an assistant coach with the Houston Dash and 15 years in the college game as a head coach and an assistant coach at UC Davis and Pepperdine.
Schedule, results
All times Pacific
THIRD-PLACE GAME
Saturday
Sweden vs. Australia, 1 a.m., Fox
FINAL
Sunday
Spain vs. England, 3 a.m., Fox
THIS DATE IN SPORTS
1923 — Helen Mills, 17, ends Molla Bjurstedt Mallory’s domination of the U.S. Lawn Tennis Assn. championships and starts her own with a 6-2, 6-1 victory.
1958 — Floyd Patterson knocks out Roy Harris in the 13th round at Wrigley Field in Los Angeles to retain his world heavyweight title.
1964 — The International Olympic Committee bans South Africa from competing in the Summer Olympics because of its apartheid policies.
1982 — Pete Rose sets record with his 13,941st plate appearance.
1995 — Thirteen-year-old Dominique Moceanu becomes the youngest to win the National Gymnastics Championships senior women’s all-around title in New Orleans.
2004 — Paul Hamm wins the men’s gymnastics all-around Olympic gold medal by the closest margin ever in the event. Controversy follows after it was discovered a scoring error that may have cost Yang Tae-young of South Korea the men’s all-around title. Yang, who finished with a bronze, is wrongly docked a tenth of a point on his second-to-last routine, the parallel bars. He finishes third, 0.049 points behind Hamm, who becomes the first American man to win gymnastics’ biggest prize.
2008 — A day after winning an Olympic gold medal in Beijing, Rafael Nadal officially unseats Roger Federer to become the world’s No. 1 tennis player when the ATP rankings are released. Federer had been atop the rankings for 235 weeks.
2013 — For the first time in Solheim Cup history, the Europeans leaves America with the trophy. Caroline Hedwall becomes the first player in the 23-year history of the event to win all five matches. She finishes with a 1-up victory over Michelle Wie and gives Europe the 14 points it needed to retain the cup.
2016 — Jamaica’s Usain Bolt completes an unprecedented third consecutive sweep of the 100 and 200-meter sprints, elevating his status as the most decorated male sprinter in Olympic history. He wins the 200-meter race with a time of 19.78 seconds to defeat Andre de Grasse of Canada. American Ashton Eaton defends his Olympic decathlon title, equaling the games record with a surge on the last lap of the 1,500 meters — the last event in the two-day competition. Helen Maroulis defeats Japan’s Saori Yoshida 4-1 in the 53-kilogram freestyle final to win the first-ever gold medal for a United States women’s wrestler.
2021 — Atlanta Braves first baseman Freddie Freeman hit for the cycle for the second time in his career as they beat the Miami Marlins 11-9.
—Compiled by the Associated Press
Until next time...
That concludes today’s newsletter. If you have any feedback, ideas for improvement or things you’d like to see, email me at houston.mitchell@latimes.com, and follow me on Twitter at @latimeshouston. To get this newsletter in your inbox, click here.
Go beyond the scoreboard
Get the latest on L.A.'s teams in the daily Sports Report newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.