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Dodgers can't keep pace with Nationals after giving up five home runs in loss

Benjamin Royer, Los Angeles Times on

Published in Baseball

LOS ANGELES — Dodger Stadium is the proud owner of the most home runs in baseball this season. The long-ball trend might not be an anomaly.

On Saturday night, the Los Angeles Dodgers and Washington Nationals combined for eight home runs, but only three came off L.A. bats.

Dodgers right-hander Dustin May gave up three solo home runs in a 7-3 loss to the Nationals that featured the teams combining for eight home runs — the most in a Dodgers game this season.

Andy Pages, Will Smith and Teoscar Hernández hit home runs in the fifth, sixth and ninth innings, respectively.

In the fourth inning, Nationals slugger James Wood used all of his 6-foot-7, 234-pound frame to launch a sinker from May to break a scoreless game. Pages only took one step from his position in center field as he tracked the ball — he knew where it was headed.

Wood’s 451-foot solo blast would give the Nationals a lead they wouldn’t relinquish. Three-hole hitter Luis Garcia Jr. followed Wood with a solo home run.

For being middle of the pack offense — ranked 18th overall in runs scored — the Nationals flexed their muscle with its young stars. CJ Abrams socked a two-run home run in the seventh off Dodgers reliever Jack Dreyer, his second in as many games.

Wood and Abrams were acquired by the Nationals in the Juan Soto trade with San Diego in 2022.

May gave up a home run in the sixth to Nathaniel Lowe — who recorded his first multi-home run game of his career Saturday after an eighth-inning blast — but managed to limit the Nationals to five hits. May struck out five and walked two batters, tossing six innings for the third time in his last five starts.

 

Outside of Pages, Smith and Hernández’s home runs, the Dodgers (47-31) threatened to score when Mookie Betts and Tommy Edman reached via singles in the fifth. Nationals starting pitcher Jake Irvin, however, struck out Freddie Freeman to end the threat. Irvin struck out seven and walked none in 51/3 innings pitched.

Shohei Ohtani, who will start on the mound Sunday against the Nationals (32-45) in his second pitching appearance of 2025, ended the game 0 for 4 with two strikeouts.

Eight home runs at Dodger Stadium is unusual, but humidity — or lack thereof in Los Angeles — fails to bog down the ball, the dry air helping hard hits soar. Climate change researchers have even pondered the effect that warmer climates could have on home runs, with a 2023 study in the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society claiming that more than 500 home runs since 2010 could be credited to global warming.

Across the last six seasons, Chavez Ravine has ranked top five in home runs on five occasions. In the 43 games the Dodgers have played at home in 2025, there have been an average of 3.39 home runs per game (146 home runs overall and 23 more than second-place George M. Steinbrenner Field).

Glasnow update

Tyler Glasnow (right shoulder) is scheduled to pitch two innings for triple-A Oklahoma City on Sunday. Relief pitcher Luis Garcia (right adductor) is set to appear for single-A Rancho Cucamonga on Sunday as well.

Both rehabilitation outings are their first since joining the injured list.


©2025 Los Angeles Times. Visit at latimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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