Dodgers dreadful all the way around in blowout loss to Orioles

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The day started with a thick, harrowing haze enveloping Dodger Stadium.

Dodgers Manager Dave Roberts likened the scene to Gotham City as doubts about whether the game could proceed swirled like the smoke that filled the place.

Somehow, the mood darkened.

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Even though the fumes from a nearby warehouse fire cleared well before the first pitch Sunday, the gloominess only intensified.

Dodgers starter Emmet Sheehan delivered another stinker over just 3⅓ innings and the bullpen didn’t exactly hold things down from there during a 12-1 loss to the Baltimore Orioles.

Sheehan hasn’t won in more than a month and didn’t wow anyone in his latest outing.

After making it through a dreadful first inning that could have been much worse and giving up a solo homer in each of the next two innings, Sheehan (3-5) was done in the fourth. Roberts had seen enough after the right-hander walked two of the first three hitters he faced in that inning.

Sheehan’s pitching line – he gave up eight hits and a season-worst six runs while striking out four and walking three – was a contender for his worst of 2026.

Five Dodgers relievers combined to give up six more runs. The only highlight came when infielder Miguel Rojas took the mound and needed only seven pitches to complete a perfect ninth inning, earning a standing ovation.

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What it means

This was not the sort of sendoff the Dodgers were hoping to give themselves before a lengthy trip.

They have now lost back-to-back games for the first time since May 12, when they were in the midst of dropping four straight.

They also couldn’t build upon what remains the best home record in the National League, falling to 26-14 at Dodger Stadium.

But the Dodgers (49-29) aren’t exactly on the verge of giving up their massive lead in the NL West – they lead second-place San Diego by nine games.

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Who’s hot

Fans who braved the crummy conditions expecting to be rewarded.

Their anger level started to redline after patiently enduring Sheehan’s first-inning wobbles.

The first boos could be heard after Taylor Ward’s solo homer in the second gave the Orioles a 3-0 lead. There were more in the third when Colton Cowser added another solo shot.

The displeasure peaked in the seventh, after Pete Alonso’s three-run blast off reliever Jonathan Hernandez gave Baltimore a 10-1 lead. Fans started to leave in droves, no longer wanting to subject themselves to disappointment.

Who’s not

Maybe it’s time to start worrying about Sheehan.

Three pitches into the game, the Orioles had a baserunner.

Four pitches in, they had runners on second and third.

Nine pitches in, the bases were loaded with nobody out.

Things continued to deteriorate – Baltimore scored two runs as part of a 28-pitch first inning that was a sign of things to come. His earned-run average ballooned to 5.32, the highest it’s been since late April.

Up next

The Dodgers will open a nine-game, three-city trip Monday in Minneapolis. Left-handed pitcher Eric Lauer (2-5, 5.37 ERA) is scheduled to start for the Dodgers, with right-hander Zebby Matthews (3-4, 4.78) going for the Twins.



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