Dodgers Star Unpacks Pitching Collapse After 5 Run Nightmare in Lopsided Loss to Brewers

5 min read

In a string of three frustrating defeats, the Los Angeles Dodgers looked to their latest All-Star pitcher. He was supposed to be the fix they had been waiting for. Instead, what the Dodgers got at American Family Field was a full-out breakdown. In a shocking first-inning meltdown, the Milwaukee Brewers chased him from the game. He got 0 strikeouts and gave up five runs on 41 pitches. The Dodgers’ losing streak grew to four games with a 9-1 loss. It was a pitching nightmare.

Post-game, Yoshinobu Yamamoto spoke to the media, explaining why it was the shortest outing of his MLB career. And there were no excuses. The Japanese star offered honest introspection. In response to the Brewers’ aggression versus his own errors, Yamamoto claimed the latter as his mistakes.“Well, my condition itself wasn’t great, but it wasn’t bad either. The home run I gave up was on a slider, and I was trying very hard to throw it low and away, but it went high, and they got to it. Also, the runner before that was put on base by a walk, so there are just a lot of things to reflect on.” 

Command is usually a defining strength for the Dodgers’ ace. However, on this night, he issued two walks in less than an inning. An interviewer pressed him on what the loss of control meant. The right-hander admitted he didn’t have an immediate answer. “Well, for today, I haven’t really been able to review the pitching content in detail yet, so I don’t really know, but, uh, yeah. I guess I’ll have to go back and watch the video and review various things to really understand,” Yoshi explained in the post-match SportsNet LA interview.

 

Yoshinobu Yamamoto talks to the media after the shortest outing of his MLB career (0.2 IP, 4 H, 5 R, 3 ER, 0 K, 2 BB, 41 P) in the #Dodgers 9-1 loss to the Brewers in the series opener.

Get closer to the action with SNLA+, with the MLB app; including pregame and postgame at no… pic.twitter.com/KR2TPH1lms

— SportsNet LA (@SportsNetLA) July 8, 2025

Though Yamamoto had begun plotting his own review, his manager was already analyzing the strategic efforts gone wrong. Dave Roberts wondered about the pitch selection to Andrew Vaughn that resulted in the decisive home run. “I think we went to the, well, one too many times with the slider,” Roberts pointed out. The skipper also acknowledged that the team would look into whether Yamamoto was tipping his pitches.

In the match, Yamamoto came in with a 2.51 ERA. When he left, that mark had gone up to 2.77. In his last two starts, he was almost invincible. The prodigy threw out 12 scoreless innings while allowing only four hits. So, this meltdown felt out of character for him. But this one implosion might suggest a much broader problem for the Dodgers.

Cracks in the armor: The Dodgers’ pitching paradox

The Dodgers’ pitching staff presents a very mixed picture. With an overall ERA of 4.36, ranking 23rd in the league, their performance is well below the MLB average of 4.06. While the starting rotation has a respectable 4.02 ERA, the bullpen has been a significant issue with a much higher 4.61 ERA. The team’s overall WHIP of 1.32 also suggests they allow too many baserunners, putting constant pressure on the offense to keep pace.

The problems are spread within the entire pitching staff. While ace Yoshinobu Yamamoto has been brilliant with a 2.77 ERA, others have been inconsistent. Dustin May hasn’t been a solid contributor (4.52 ERA), and pitchers like Tony Gonsolin struggled (5.00 ERA) before landing on the injured list. In the bullpen, Alex Vesia has been a bright spot with a 2.75 ERA. However, the season-ending loss of closer Evan Phillips to Tommy John surgery has been a massive blow.

And the setbacks are aggravated by a large-scale injury crisis. Key starters like Tyler Glasnow, James Paxton, and Walker Buehler have all missed significant time. The list of long-term injuries is even more daunting, with pitchers like Roki Sasaki and Blake Treinen all on the 60-day IL with uncertain return dates. The Dodgers are navigating the season without an entire rotation’s worth of key arms.

Amidst all these, Dave Roberts reflected, “We have to execute pitches, and we are not doing that right now.”

Still, there is some light on the horizon for Los Angeles. The most immediate hope comes from the imminent returns of Glasnow, Paxton, and Buehler, who are all expected back in July. The most hopeful long-term thing out there is Shohei Ohtani’s full-fledged return to the mound. However, returning to an elite level after a second elbow surgery is a significant “if.”

As tension builds up, it will be interesting to watch what the second half of the season has in store…

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