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Dodgers’ Dave Roberts Explains Controversial Roki Sasaki Decision
For most of the 2025 season, Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts was saddled with a bullpen that was largely ineffective, unhealthy, or some combination of both.
Not until Roki Sasaki returned from a minor league rehab assignment as a relief pitcher in September did Roberts have something resembling a reliable closer. So why wasn’t Sasaki on the mound when the Dodgers led the Philadelphia Phillies 4-1 in the ninth inning of Game 2 of the National League Division Series on Monday?
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“I thought about it,” Roberts said. “(Sasaki) hasn’t gone two out of three much at all.”

Sasaki, 23, pitched a scoreless inning last Tuesday against the Cincinnati Reds in the NL Wild Card Series. He pitched a scoreless inning again Saturday in Philadelphia, when he recorded the save in Game 1. Game 3 is Wednesday in Los Angeles, and Game 4 is Thursday.
Asking Sasaki to close each game in the series would be potentially taxing for any reliever with a triple-digit fastball, let alone a rookie who only became a reliever last month. A three-run lead might have struck Roberts as an opportunity to give Sasaki a day off Monday. It was not to be.
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Veteran right-hander Blake Treinen, who was 2-for-5 in the regular season in save situations, got the first shot at converting the save in Game 2. He faced Alec Bohm, J.T. Realmuto and Nick Castellanos, and allowed hits to all three. Castellanos’ double to left field scored a pair of runs, bringing the Phillies within 4-3.
“Blake’s pitched some of the biggest outs, innings, in the postseason for us,” Roberts said. “And felt really confident right there. And with (Alex) Vesia behind him if needed.”
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Vesia was the next man up, summoned with a left-handed hitter (Bryson Stott) due to bat. Stott laid down a bunt, and only a perfect relay from third baseman Max Muncy to shortstop Mookie Betts covering first base retired the lead runner, Castellanos.
A single by Harrison Bader, and a groundout by Max Kepler, gave Philadelphia runners on second and third base with two outs. Finally, with Vesia having faced the minimum three batters and Sasaki having warmed up in the bullpen, Roberts summoned the Dodgers’ unofficial closer.
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Sasaki got Trea Turner to ground out to end the game, with Dodgers first baseman Freddie Freeman dropping to his knees to scoop Tommy Edman’s throw out of the dirt.
“I didn’t want to just kind of, you know, preemptively put him in there,” Roberts said of Sasaki. “Again, I felt good with who we had, with our leverage relievers, a couple of our highest-leverage relievers (Treinen and Vesia). And fortunately (Sasaki) was ready when called upon. And I liked him versus Trea, and he got a big out for us.”
For more MLB news, visit Newsweek Sports.
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