😱 DAVE ROBERTS SOUNDS OFF! Dave Roberts ADMITS Shohei Ohtani WASN’T SHARP AS THE Los Angeles Dodgers WASTE ANOTHER GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY IN A PAINFUL LOSS! #XM

Ohtani took the mound against the Miami Marlins and looked nothing like the two-way force of nature who bent baseball to his will. His mechanics were off. His command wavered. And for the first time in what feels like an eternity, the man who makes the impossible seem routine looked utterly human.

“I don’t think he was completely in sync,” Roberts admitted. “There were a lot of misfires.”

That admission lands like a seismic tremor in a clubhouse built on the promise of October glory. The Dodgers didn’t just lose a game. They watched their ace labor through six innings of mislocated pitches and uncharacteristic struggles, barely escaping with only two runs allowed.

Roberts gave Ohtani credit for battling. For grinding. For surviving when he didn’t have his best stuff. “For him to give us six innings and two runs,” the manager said, “we should win that game.”

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But they didn’t. And the manager didn’t point at the man on the mound. He pointed right back at the lineup card.

The offense, even with Ohtani absent from the batter’s box, had every chance to slam the door. Every chance to rescue their struggling ace. Every chance to turn a shaky outing into a footnote on a longer season.

They failed. Repeatedly. Exponentially. And Roberts didn’t mince words.

“We were not good situationally,” he said. “That’s what it comes down to.”

The Dodgers chased. They expanded. They swung at pitches that belonged in another zip code with runners in scoring position. Roberts described a team that abandoned its plan at the worst possible moments, a lineup that pressed instead of breathed, that hunted instead of waited.

“You’re not hitting your pitch,” Roberts said flatly. “You have to have a plan.”

There were chances early. Chances late. Moments where one swing could have flipped the entire narrative, where one piece of situational hitting could have turned Ohtani’s ragged night into a gritty gem.

Instead, the Marlins escaped. Over and over. “You have chances,” Roberts said with visible frustration bleeding through his measured words, “and you let them off the hook.”

Even with Shohei Ohtani out of the lineup as a hitter — even without the most devastating offensive weapon in the sport — Roberts made it clear this loss had no excuse. “Even without him tonight,” the manager said, “we should have won the game.”

There was also a quiet, almost buried concern about Ohtani’s body. Neck tightness, Roberts mentioned. A possible physical factor lingering beneath the surface of those mechanical misfires. The kind of detail that sends a chill through a fanbase already bracing for the worst every time their superstar exhales.

This wasn’t just a loss. This was a warning. The Dodgers wasted a night when their ace battled through disaster and still gave them a chance. They wasted a night when six innings and two runs should have been more than enough.

The message from Roberts echoed long after the final out: Ohtani fought. The offense folded. And a franchise built on supercomputers and star power suddenly looks very, very breakable.

Some losses sting. This one simmers. Because in Los Angeles, wasted chances have a way of becoming October regrets before the calendar even turns to summer.