Giants vs. Dodgers in NLDS Game 5: Live Updates

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Oct. 14, 2021, 8:45 p.m. ET

Oct. 14, 2021, 8:45 p.m. ETImageTommy La Stella will start Thursday’s game despite a sore Achilles tendon. Credit…John Hefti/Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — The Dodgers’ late decision to use reliever Corey Knebel as an opener, and the status of Giants second baseman Tommy La Stella’s tender Achilles tendon, caused San Francisco to delay finalizing a lineup until 90 minutes before Game 5.

The upshot: La Stella’s ankle tested fine during batting practice so he is leading off and playing second base. The Giants had planned to start the right-handed Donovan Solano at second base against the lefty Julio Urias. Instead, Solano likely will appear later. They kept right-hander Darin Ruf in the lineup batting second and playing left field and sprinkled three lefty bats throughout: La Stella, Brandon Crawford (hitting fourth and playing shortstop) and Mike Yastrzemski (sixth and playing right field).

When Urias started Game 2, the Giants stacked their lineup with right-handers against him. Crawford was the only lefty to start, and he batted sixth. The first five hitters against Urias that day were all right-handed: Ruf, Kris Bryant, Austin Slater, Buster Posey and Wilmer Flores.

Dodgers Manager Dave Roberts sent a courtesy text to San Francisco Manager Gabe Kapler on Wednesday evening informing of the decision to start Knebel instead of Urias.

“It’s understandable,” Kapler said of the Dodgers’ late pitching decision. “I don’t think it was unexpected. It certainly changes the way we were thinking about today’s game, but nothing out of the ordinary.”

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Oct. 14, 2021, 8:30 p.m. ET

Oct. 14, 2021, 8:30 p.m. ETCredit…Ronald Martinez/Getty Images

SAN FRANCISCO — The Dodgers’ other lineup change, the one not involving an opener and erstwhile starter Julio Urias, was telegraphed by Manager Dave Roberts after Game 4 and could be a game-changer.

Gavin Lux, a 23-year-old rookie, is batting sixth and starting in center field. He reached base in all four plate appearances in Game 4 (two singles, two walks, one run scored). It was Lux’s first start following pinch-hit appearances each of the first three games.

Two notable items:

When the Giants’ rookie right-hander Logan Webb dominated the Dodgers in Game 1, Lux tapped a bouncer back to Webb during a pinch-hitting appearance in the eighth inning. For his career, Lux is 1 for 5 with a double and a strikeout against Webb, who will start Thursday.

The Dodgers’ 1-0 Game 3 loss in windy Dodger Stadium ended with Lux smashing a fly ball into left field that both teams thought was going over the fence. Lux scorched the ball at 106.9 miles per hour and the game seemed to be headed for extra innings.

Lux couldn’t believe the wind got him that dramatically, either, and his reaction boomeranged around social media overnight.

“Scrolling through Twitter, there’s a lot of memes going around,” Lux said. “And I feel like everybody makes a meme of me anyways as it is because of all the facial reactions I have. But that’s just how I am.”

Tonight, Lux will be in the field instead of on the bench.

“I just love the heartbeat, the composure,” Roberts said after Game 4. “Just watching him take at-bats, it’s like a guy that’s played in the postseason much more than he has.” Roberts added that how Lux conducted himself in that setting “is very telling.”

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Oct. 14, 2021, 8:00 p.m. ET

Oct. 14, 2021, 8:00 p.m. ETCredit…Mark J. Terrill/Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — The Dodgers’ Hall of Fame broadcaster Vin Scully is retired (sadly) and not with the team, but that didn’t stop him from tweeting that he thinks tonight’s Game 5 is “the most important game” in the history of the Dodgers and Giants’ rivalry.

“Now I feel pressure,” Dodgers Manager Dave Roberts quipped when Scully’s tweet was passed on to him. “Gosh darn it, Vin.”

On a serious note, Roberts added: “For Vin to say that, no one knows this rivalry better than he does, so it just gives you the gravity of this, what it means. And it’s bigger than just one game and that’s what’s beautiful about this rivalry, sports in general. So we’re going to enjoy it. It’s going to be fun.”

Oct. 14, 2021, 7:30 p.m. ET

Oct. 14, 2021, 7:30 p.m. ETCredit…John Hefti/Associated Press

A 107-win team vs. a 106-win team. They have 109 each when accounting for postseason games. Rivals for 133 seasons, connected not just by their origins in New York but also through their pioneering roles in moving west. Just the fifth instance in baseball history where teams with 100 or more wins each will be facing off in a winner-take-all postseason game.

It is hard to get much bigger than this.

  • Who: Los Angeles Dodgers vs. San Francisco Giants

  • What: Game 5 of a National League division series

  • When: 9:07 p.m. Eastern

  • Where: Oracle Park in San Francisco

  • Why: The winner will advance to the National League Championship Series against Atlanta

  • How can I watch? The game will be broadcast on TBS. The TBS stream of it will be available on some streaming services, like Hulu Live and YouTube TV. It will also be available for some through TBS.com.

Oct. 14, 2021, 7:30 p.m. ET

Oct. 14, 2021, 7:30 p.m. ETCredit…Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images

SAN FRANCISCO — The Dodgers’ Julio Urias is about as established as a starting pitcher can be. He made 32 starts this season, without a relief appearance, and went 20-3 with a 2.96 E.R.A. Then he started and beat the Giants in Game 2 of this division series.

Yet his team decided — “from the tippy top of the Dodgers organization on down,” said Manager Dave Roberts — that Urias, 25, was not the best option to start the winner-take-all Game 5. They’ll go with an opener, Corey Knebel.

“Doesn’t mean it’s riskier, it’s different,” said Roberts, who texted Giants Manager Gabe Kapler last night to let him know. “But it does open up for potential criticism, which I’m imagining is already out there.”

He’s right about that; this certainly seems like a classic case of a very smart organization outsmarting itself. Roberts said Urias was the only starter he would use this way, based on Urias’s track record of being flexible — he has come out of the bullpen for 15 of his 19 career postseason appearances, and closed out the N.L.C.S. and World Series last fall.

Knebel, a former All-Star closer with Milwaukee, has done well in four tries as an opener, allowing one earned run in five and two-thirds innings. He’s a righty and Urias is a lefty.

“The Giants have been a tremendous ball club all year, and just speaking to the offensive side, they have been the best team in baseball as far as getting matchup advantages, platoon advantages,” Roberts said, adding that the strategy should help in “potentially giving us some matchups going forward throughout the game.”

Roberts and the Dodgers’ front office know their team much better than any fan or member of the news media. But it’s still jarring to see, and I asked Roberts about the downside of simply letting Urias start, as usual.

“There’s downside in him starting, if he were to start the game, because you could look at familiarity,” Roberts said. “He just faced this team five days ago. Those guys stacking and setting the matchups that they want.

“There’s downside in doing it the way we chose to do this. Corey’s never started a playoff game. But I think that, ultimately, we trust both players can handle this.”

So there you have it. Related note: Today is the 56th anniversary of Game 7 of the 1965 World Series, when another Dodgers lefty, Sandy Koufax, started against the Minnesota Twins. Koufax fired a nine-inning shutout, on two days’ rest.

Baseball is endlessly fascinating, maybe today more than ever. But boy how times have changed.

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