CRISIS MODE IN LA! Dodgers Facing a SERIOUS Problem That Could DERAIL Their SEASON | Dodgers News #XM

The Los Angeles Dodgers’ path to the World Series has hit a critical and alarming juncture following a devastating 12-6 loss to the New York Mets in Game 5 of the NLCS. While the team still holds a 3-2 series lead, the defeat exposed a fatal flaw that threatens to derail their championship aspirations entirely. The issue is not a slump from their powerhouse offense, but a profound and recurring crisis in starting pitching that has become the blueprint for beating this team.

 

In all four of their postseason losses, catastrophic early innings from the mound have buried the Dodgers before their bats could truly engage. Friday’s collapse was a stark exemplar, as starter Jack Flaherty delivered a performance that manager Dave Roberts could only describe as “not good enough.” Tasked with the opportunity to clinch a pennant, Flaherty lasted just three innings, surrendering eight runs without recording a single strikeout.

 

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His velocity was noticeably diminished, a factor attributed to pitching on short rest, and the Mets’ lineup pounced immediately. A three-run homer in the first inning set a dire tone, and the Dodgers found themselves in a 10-2 hole by the middle of the game. This outing was a jarring reversal from Flaherty’s brilliant Game 1 start, highlighting the crippling inconsistency that has plagued the rotation throughout October.

 

This pattern is not an isolated incident but a postseason epidemic. The two losses to San Diego in the NLDS featured similarly poor starts. In this series alone, the Dodgers have faced massive early deficits in both Games 4 and 5, with Landon Knack and Flaherty unable to provide stability. The formula for opponents is now clear: attack the Dodgers’ starting pitching aggressively and build an insurmountable lead before the bullpen can settle the game.

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The bullpen itself emerges as a lone silver lining from the Game 5 wreckage. Despite the lopsided score, relievers like Ryan Yarbrough ate critical innings, preserving high-leverage arms such as Evan Phillips, Blake Treinen, and Michael Petersen. This preservation is not a minor detail; it is the foundation of the Dodgers’ strategy for Game 6 on Sunday night at Dodger Stadium, which will be a designated bullpen game.

 

The entire pitching staff must now rally in a must-win scenario to avoid a perilous Game 7. The Dodgers’ offense, while prolific, cannot be expected to overcome double-digit deficits nightly. The unit showed its relentless character even in defeat, putting up six runs and consistently pressuring Mets pitchers, but the mountain was simply too high to climb.

 

Mookie Betts and Andy Pages, with a three-run homer, provided sparks, while Shohei Ohtani continues to reach base at a staggering rate. The Mets’ staff has demonstrated little consistent ability to quiet the Los Angeles lineup throughout the series. This offensive firepower is the primary source of confidence as the scene shifts back to Chavez Ravine, offering hope that even a patchwork pitching effort might be enough.

 

However, the underlying problem remains severe and systemic. The absence of Tyler Glasnow and Gavin Stone due to injury has stretched the rotation beyond its limits, forcing pitchers into unfamiliar roles and exposing a lack of reliable depth. The Dodgers are essentially navigating the most critical games of their season without a true, dependable starting pitching backbone.

 

The stakes for Game 6 could not be higher. A victory seals the National League pennant and provides a crucial week of rest before the World Series begins next Friday. A loss forces a winner-take-all Game 7, likely started by Walker Buehler on short rest, a scenario the organization desperately wants to avoid. It would exhaust their final viable starting option and create a cascade of pitching complications for the Fall Classic.

 

Manager Dave Roberts faces his most critical tactical test of the postseason. He must expertly navigate a committee of relievers, leveraging every match-up advantage to secure 27 outs before the Mets’ lineup can erupt. The margin for error is virtually nonexistent. The bullpen must replicate its heroic, season-saving performance from Game 4 of the NLDS in San Diego.

 

For the Mets, the victory has injected new life and validated their approach. They have proven the Dodgers’ starting pitching can be cracked, and they will carry that confidence into Los Angeles. Their own backs remain against the wall, but the pressure has subtly shifted. The Dodgers are no longer the unstoppable force cruising to the pennant; they are a team grappling with a fundamental weakness.

 

The narrative surrounding this team has changed overnight. The conversation is no longer about their historic offense or their inevitable march to the World Series. It is squarely about a glaring, unaddressed vulnerability on the mound. The Dodgers’ championship destiny now hinges on a single question: can their pitching staff, in whatever form it takes, provide just enough cover for their legendary offense to finish the job?

 

This weekend is no longer about mere advancement; it is a direct test of the team’s resilience and adaptability. The Dodgers possess the talent and the home-field advantage to close out the series. Yet, the specter of their pitching woes looms over every inning. The problem has been diagnosed with brutal clarity. Fixing it, under the bright lights of an elimination game, is the only task that matters. The entire baseball world will be watching to see if this team can find a solution before it is too late.