💣 TOTAL EMBARRASSMENT IN HOUSTON! Los Angeles Dodgers FAIL Shohei Ohtani YET AGAIN AS THE OFFENSE COMPLETELY CHOKES AGAINST THE Houston Astros! #XM

On a national stage in Houston, the game’s brightest superstar delivered something close to pitching perfection. Seven innings. Eight strikeouts. The kind of surgical dominance that makes franchises rewrite their entire future around one man.

And the Dodgers’ bats responded with absolute silence.

Another masterclass from Ohtani on the mound. Another loss staring back from the scoreboard. The numbers have stopped being a coincidence and started feeling like a curse.

Eleven losses in Ohtani’s last fourteen starts. Eleven times this generation-defining talent has watched his own offense evaporate into thin air the moment he toes the rubber.

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Against the Astros, the script was painfully familiar. Runners in scoring position? The Dodgers turned into strangers. Bases loaded? The bats went ice cold. What is supposed to be baseball’s most terrifying lineup looked haunted, tight, and utterly unrecognizable.

This was never the plan in Los Angeles.

The Dodgers didn’t spend a billion dollars to watch Shohei Ohtani pitch his heart out while the guys behind him wave helplessly at fastballs. They built a super-team to avoid this exact nightmare—the ace carrying the weight of an entire franchise on his shoulders.

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And yet here we are.

Dave Roberts faces growing questions that no manager wants to answer. Sitting Ohtani as a hitter on his pitching days sounds logical on paper. But when the rest of the lineup goes limp, that decision starts looking like self-sabotage.

The math is brutal. The emotions are raw. And the clock is ticking on a season that was supposed to be a victory lap.

Houston exposed something deeper than a bad week. The Astros, a smaller-market team by any definition, looked every bit as sharp, hungry, and dangerous as the Dodgers’ collection of All-Stars. The gap between baseball’s haves and have-nots? It might be closing faster than anyone in Los Angeles wants to admit.

Ohtani isn’t just losing games. He’s losing faith in the machine around him.

You can see it in his eyes between innings. The quiet frustration. The polite, closed-off body language of a man who knows he just did his job perfectly and still walked off the field with nothing to show for it.

This isn’t a slump. Slumps end.

This is a fracture. A fundamental breakdown between a legendary pitcher and the offense that keeps abandoning him.

The Dodgers’ clubhouse preaches resilience. They talk about the long season, the big picture, the championship-or-bust mentality. But words stop mattering when the same nightmare plays out start after start after start.

Something has to give. Either the bats wake up, or the Dodgers risk watching the most talented player of his generation grow quietly, dangerously tired of carrying an entire franchise alone.

Ohtani came to Los Angeles to win. Not to pitch perfect games and lose. Not to strike out eight over seven innings and watch his teammates choke with runners on base.

The season isn’t over. But the warning signs are flashing red.

And if the Dodgers don’t fix this fast, they won’t just lose another Ohtani start. They’ll lose everything they built this dynasty to become.

The man on the mound has done his part. Now the question haunts Chavez Ravine like a ghost: has everyone else already failed him?