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Plaschke: Clayton Kershaw isn’t the Dodgers’ star, but he’s still their heart and soul

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When Los Angeles final noticed Clayton Kershaw, he was slowly dragging himself off the pitching mound on a sullen Friday evening in October.

It was solely the second inning. His shoulders have been slumped. His left elbow was screaming. His season was performed. His Dodgers profession was seemingly completed.

Observers satisfied of this finality ominously famous that, as an alternative of executing the normal handoff to supervisor Dave Roberts, Kershaw saved the baseball for himself.

All of which makes it very cool that on a wonderful Friday 5 months later, he determined to carry it again.

Sigh. Whew. Yay! Kershaw continues to be a Dodger, the free agent future Corridor-of-Famer avoiding the romance of his hometown Texas Rangers to return to Chavez Ravine for a one-year deal price $17 million plus incentives.

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He’s again, for a fifteenth season, maintaining alive a Kobe-Bryant sort run that would hold him a Dodger for all times.

He’s again, at soon-to-be age 34, for one 12 months that may very well be his final 12 months, this contract presumably ending in a statue.

He’s again, that uncommon Los Angeles athlete who has caught round for the whole evolution of a memorable profession, from younger ace to playoff loser to World Collection champion to battered however beloved veteran.

He’s not again as a savior. He’s not even again as a top-two starter. He’s again with elbow uncertainty, an growing older physique, and a pay lower of as much as $14 million.

Kershaw received’t be including to his document 9 opening day begins — that torch has been handed to Walker Buehler — and he may begin the season on the injured listing whereas nonetheless recovering from final October’s vital elbow harm.

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However, goodness, he’s again, and guess who’s getting the loudest cheers when his crew makes its first look at Dodger Stadium? Guess whose potential loss significantly troubled most Dodgers followers this winter, even those that appropriately booed him throughout all these earlier October meltdowns?

Clayton Kershaw is cherished greater than any present participant, and his return was important to the crew’s reference to the group, and he’ll be well worth the $17 million in sentiment and symbolism alone.

Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw takes within the scene earlier than Sport 1 of the NLCS in Atlanta final season.

(Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Occasions)

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However make no mistake. This was greater than a potential Kobe-retirement contract. This was greater than a possible parting present. The Dodgers’ entrance workplace doesn’t shed tears, they crunch numbers, and Kershaw doesn’t shed tears, he’s throws curveballs, and, on this case, the underside line is way bolder than the headline.

With a beginning pitching employees weakened by suspension and defection, the Dodgers want Kershaw.

With a future unsure by age and harm, Kershaw wants the Dodgers.

The Dodgers have mainly two confirmed championship starters in Buehler and Julio Urías. They misplaced Max Scherzer to the New York Mets. They proceed to lose Trevor Bauer to baseball’s home violence penalties, as he was positioned on at the very least one other week of administrative go away Friday and can seemingly be ultimately suspended or lower.

They want veteran arms, significantly October arms, and if nothing else, if he can keep wholesome throughout what’s going to absolutely be a protected common season, Kershaw will give them that.

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“It’s not simply what he’s meant wanting again, it’s additionally what we predict he’ll do for our championship odds in ’22,” stated Dodgers’ baseball boss Andrew Friedman to reporters this winter.

As for Kershaw, as a result of he’s nonetheless recovering from the elbow harm, this deal permits him to rehabilitate in a snug setting with out strain whereas giving him an opportunity to show his resilience for future suitors.

Final 12 months he had his highest ERA (3.55) since his rookie season whereas making simply 22 begins in a summer season wracked by harm. If he does need to ultimately need to return to his hometown Texas Rangers on strong footing, a powerful season right here would enable him to take action.

The one-year deal offers each events a wanted jolt, even when Kershaw is the fourth starter who doesn’t take the mound till Could, particularly if he spends the season mainly preparing for the playoffs.

After all, who is aware of, in an ideal state of affairs, it may result in that lifetime stick with one crew that has develop into so uncommon on this period of free company. Amongst Dodgers’ Corridor of Fame pitchers, his retirement right here would perpetually put him within the firm of Sandy Koufax and Don Drysdale, his No. 22 holding particular which means because it shines from that Dodger Stadium wall.

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And, lastly, after years of fretting over his postseason troubles, Dodgers followers lastly appear to need Kershaw again.

They’ve booed him. They questioned him. However, lastly, it appears, most are offered on him. He’s received them a World Collection. He’s given them a constant icon. He’s launched them to, “We Are Younger.”

After he left the mound early and injured on that long-ago October evening in opposition to the Milwaukee Brewers, Roberts overtly fretted that everybody was seeing him in Dodgers’ uniform for the final time.

“It was tough, it was his final dwelling begin, you simply don’t know what the longer term will predict, so I wished it to be particular for him and his household,” Roberts stated on the time. “It didn’t finish the best way we hoped.”

Seems, it hasn’t ended in any respect.

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The Dodgers have retained their rock. Clayton Kershaw is again.

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Why Alex Morgan missed the USWNT Olympic roster

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Why Alex Morgan missed the USWNT Olympic roster

For the first time in 16 years, forward Alex Morgan will not feature on a major tournament roster for the U.S. women’s national soccer team.

On Wednesday, coach Emma Hayes left Morgan off the 18-player roster for the Olympics this summer in Paris. In her absence, the U.S. will be without a previous gold medal winner, with the team’s last win from the London Games in 2012.

“It was a tough decision, of course, especially considering Alex’s history and record with this team,” Hayes said, “but I felt that I wanted to go in another direction and selected other players.”

Morgan’s absence can be considered in several ways. It is the end of an era for the USWNT. Some will see it as an overdue move to balance younger players alongside veterans. Others will argue that Hayes made a simple soccer decision. Above all, Wednesday’s move reminded us that no spot on any U.S. roster is guaranteed.

“Today, I’m disappointed about not having the opportunity to represent our country on the Olympic stage,” Morgan posted on social media following the announcement. “This will always be a tournament that is close to my heart and I take immense pride any time I put on the crest.”

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Hayes declined to get into her reasons for leaving Morgan off the roster and a list of four alternates, which included Gotham FC forward Lynn Williams. Instead, she highlighted “what an amazing player and human that Alex Morgan has been” through her brief window of working with her at this month’s camp for two friendlies against South Korea.

“I saw firsthand not just her qualities, but her professionalism. Her record speaks for itself,” Hayes said. At the same time, she acknowledged the constraints of the 18-player roster, with spots for only 16 field players.

Morgan has leadership, having captained the Americans on the biggest stage at the World Cup. Her experience outranks every other player on the roster in terms of appearances and goals. So what kept her off the Olympic team?

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It had been clear since the South Korea friendlies that the best forward starting line involved Trinity Rodman, Sophia Smith and Mallory Swanson, yet Morgan was still in contention for a roster spot. But her club performance may have hurt her campaign for a role.

“I’ve come from a club level and what I have learned is the best development is done at club level,” Hayes said at her first media availability last month in New York City, essentially directly addressing players through the media. “So go back to your clubs, play, compete, get healthy, and put yourself in the best possible place.”

Hayes has been consistent since taking over the job that performance and form matter in her assessment, particularly on the club side.

“There are players on the roster that are performing well, and the decision to take those players was one that we certainly deliberated over, but I think it’s a balanced roster,” Hayes said. “I’ve considered all the factors that we’re going to need throughout the Olympics, and (this roster is) one that I’m really happy with.”

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After a few years with limited club involvement — she only played 10 league games across the Orlando Pride and Tottenham from 2019-2021, including a break while she was pregnant with daughter Charlie — Morgan had a resurgent 2022 season for the newly launched San Diego Wave. She won the Golden Boot by leading the NWSL with 15 goals, including 11 from the run of play. It was Morgan at her best — consistently setting up shots on her left foot while finding plenty of space inside the six-yard box to convert dangerous chances.

Morgan, who turns 35 on Tuesday, has also missed time due to a lingering ankle injury.

Her form wasn’t quite as robust at the start of 2023, but her place on Vlatko Andonovski’s World Cup roster was assured. She was a fixture in his lineups throughout the run-up to the tournament, and the hope was that she could do some thankless line-leading work even if her scoring touch wasn’t quite in vintage form.

Since the USWNT’s elimination in the World Cup round of 16, however, Morgan has struggled to score for club and country alike. San Diego has not hit form this season and dismissed head coach Casey Stoney this week. Still, a player of Morgan’s pedigree is expected to score even when the going gets rough. Instead, she has yet to find the back of the net in 2024, midway through the season.

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Given the Wave’s struggles to advance possession this year, Morgan has had to drop deeper than usual to get on the ball. That’s illustrated by how much more frequently she’s having to direct her passes upfield — 16.2% of her distribution advances at least 5 yards toward goal, a rate more commonly seen from a midfielder than a striker and well above her 12.1% in 2022. She has looked less inclined to take an opponent on with her dribble, making just three take-ons in 542 minutes this season after logging 35 in 1,630 minutes last year.

Even more concerning is the 0 in her goals scored column this season despite logging nearly 600 minutes.

Morgan’s lack of versatility could have also factored into Hayes’ decision. Morgan has long been an expert striker, scoring 123 goals as the USWNT’s fifth-all-time leading goalscorer. But with that specialization comes a lack of experience at other positions, like some of the players called up for the tournament.

Hindered in part by her club team’s stagnating approach in possession, Morgan hasn’t been able to enjoy a similarly bountiful amount of service in the box. She has yet to take a single shot inside the six-yard box in the 2024 season, leading to a steep regression in her expected goals per shot, and only six of her 20 shot attempts this season have been taken on her stronger left foot.

Wave teammate Jaedyn Shaw was able to do just enough despite the team’s floundering form to remain in Hayes’ plans for the Olympics. Unfortunately, Morgan didn’t have the same bulk of strong USWNT performances that helped anchor Shaw’s case for inclusion, with Hayes calling her national team goal involvements “significant” on Wednesday.

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Morgan’s greatest case for making another Olympic appearance had more to do with the intangibles, whether that was her presence as a veteran leader alongside captain Lindsey Horan, or the kind of presence she could offer at the late stages of a knockout match considering her major tournament track record. With an 18-player roster, it’s clear Hayes could not justify those intangibles over more basic roster needs.

“There’s no denying the history of this program has been hugely successful, but the reality is that it’s going to take a lot of work for us to get to that top level again,” Hayes said.

Youth is part of that process. Hayes has named the youngest Olympic roster for the USWNT since 2008, when the team won gold in Beijing. The current roster has an average age of 26.8, four years younger than the team that went to Tokyo in 2021 and settled for a bronze medal. But even more stark is the difference in the number of appearances from the last Olympics. The average caps per player in 2021 was 111; for this team the average is only 58.

“Looking through the cap accumulation of the team, there’s been a lack of development, of putting some of the less experienced players in positions where they can develop that experience,” Hayes said. “I think it’s important that we have to do that to take the next step. So I’m not looking backwards.”


Morgan’s 224 appearances for the U.S. far surpasses any player on the Olympic squad. (Photo by Brad Smith, Getty Images for USSF)

Hayes pointed to Shaw’s inclusion on the roster to support this idea, focusing on younger players and their development at major tournaments to gain experience that would benefit the USWNT immediately and in the longer term. Hayes avoided questions about where the team might finish or what its goals would be for the Olympics, stressing that her mission was getting the team as close as possible to its best level and best version.

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Morgan, for all the history and legacy she will leave in her absence, might have provided a short-term boost. She also might not have. It’s impossible to predict what an individual player might contribute in the run of a major tournament. Ultimately, Hayes is focusing on something larger, building on the changes that have already been made following the early exit from last summer’s World Cup.

“For us, this is an opportunity to show those learnings will take us much further than it did last time,” she said. “But there is no guarantee in anything in life.”

(Top photo: Getty Images; Design: Dan Goldfarb)

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Pelicans acquire All-Star guard Dejounte Murray in trade with Hawks: report

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Pelicans acquire All-Star guard Dejounte Murray in trade with Hawks: report

The New Orleans Pelicans have made the first post-NBA Draft splash. 

The Pelicans acquired All-Star guard Dejounte Murray, ESPN reported Friday.

Adding Murray to the roster improves New Orleans’ backcourt and will likely boost their overall shot creation. The Pelicans sent a pair of first-round picks, Larry Nance Jr. and Dyson Daniels, to Atlanta in exchange for Murray.

Murray is coming off a strong season. He appeared in 78 games and averaged a career-best 22.5 points.

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Dejounte Murray of the Atlanta Hawks against the Boston Celtics during Game 3 of the first round of the 2023 NBA Playoffs April 21, 2023, at State Farm Arena in Atlanta. (Adam Hagy/NBAE via Getty Images)

He also was a catalyst for the Hawks during three-time All-Star Trae Young’s extended absence due to injury in the second half of the season. 

HAWKS SELECT FRENCH TEEN ZACCHARIE RISACHER WITH FIRST PICK OF NBA DRAFT

Murray’s shooting from beyond the arc also improved last season. The 27-year-old knocked down a career-best 201 3-pointers during the 2023-24 campaign.

Larry Nance

Larry Nance Jr. during a game against the Los Angeles Lakers during the 2024 SoFi Play-In Tournament April 16, 2024, at the Smoothie King Center in New Orleans. (Layne Murdoch Jr./NBAE via Getty Images)

The Hawks gave up three first-round draft picks to land Murray in 2022. The franchise hoped adding Murray to Atlanta’s backcourt alongside Young would create one of the more formidable duos in the NBA. 

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But the experiment was largely unsuccessful, and Murray will now see how he fares in New Orleans with Brandon Ingram.

Dejounte Murray and Trae Young fist pound

Atlanta Hawks guard Dejounte Murray (5) and guard Trae Young (11) celebrate before a win against the Boston Celtics during the second half of Game 3 of a first-round NBA basketball playoff series April 21, 2023, in Atlanta.  (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

Murray signed a four-year, $114 million extension with the Hawks last year, but Atlanta will not have to pay any of that salary as the deal has yet to kick in. Murray is scheduled to earn an estimated $25.3 million for the 2024-25 season.

New Orleans hopes Murray can help reverse the team’s fortunes when they are trailing late in games. Last season, the Pelicans lost every game when they entered the fourth quarter facing a deficit. Murray made three go-ahead baskets in the final five seconds of the fourth quarter or in overtime last seasson.

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Dodgers bat boy on saving Shohei Ohtani from line drive: 'Just doing my job'

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Dodgers bat boy on saving Shohei Ohtani from line drive: 'Just doing my job'

Javier Herrera set the snooze alarm on his 15 minutes of fame, the Dodgers bat boy soaking up the spotlight for one more day in the wake of his Shohei Ohtani-saving catch of a blistering line drive off the bat of Kiké Hernández during Wednesday night’s 4-0 win over the White Sox in Chicago.

About two dozen reporters from Japanese and Southern California-based news outlets surrounded Herrera, 38, as he conducted an interview with SportsNet LA in the tunnel below the team’s Oracle Park dugout before Friday night’s series opener against the San Francisco Giants.

How did it feel to shield the Dodgers’ $700-million man, a two-time American League most valuable player and one of baseball’s best all-around players, from potential harm when he made a bare-handed catch of a drive that appeared headed for Ohtani’s head?

“I don’t know,” a reluctant Herrera said. “I was just doing my job.”

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Asked about his quick reaction time, Herrera, who is in his 18th year with the club, said, “I saw the pitch all the way through. It hit the bat, and the ball pretty much found me. I was able to grab it.”

Did it hurt?

“Not at all,” Herrera said.

Does Herrera have the softest hands of any clubhouse attendant in the league?

“We use a lot of lotion,” he said.

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What did Ohtani, who was walking behind Herrera toward the bat rack and did not even see the ball coming toward the dugout, say to him?

“He said, ‘Thank you,’ ” Herrera said, “and I said, ‘I told you, I have your back.’ ”

And what about the rumors that Ohtani, who famously gifted reliever Joe Kelly’s wife a Porsche for relinquishing No. 17 to the two-way star, was going to buy Herrera a Porsche?

“Nope,” Herrera said. “These are all just rumors.”

Dodgers bat boy Javier Herrera, left, is interviewed before Friday’s game between the Dodgers and San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park.

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(Mike DiGiovanna / Los Angeles Times)

Herrera said he did not realize the clip of his catch had gone viral until later Wednesday night, when a friend sent him the video.

“I saw it 100 times,” Herrera said. “It was pretty impressive. I was impressed. But in the moment, it was just like, ‘OK, let’s keep playing.’ ”

Ohtani posted a video clip of Herrera’s interview Friday to his Instagram account and wrote, “My hero!!”

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Herrera also earned praise from manager Dave Roberts.

“Yeah, he needs a contract extension, a raise,” Roberts said. “I was obviously right next to him, but I didn’t appreciate how close it was, you know, going towards Shohei. And what a great play it was. So, very quick reaction from Javy, and very grateful.”

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