Dodger Talk is sponsored by La Care Health Plan, providing affordable healthcare insurance to millions of Angelinos for over twenty five years. And now your voice for Dodger Talking like back, David Vasse. What a night at Corsefield, a Corsefield Classic for the Dodgers as they score seven runs in the ninth inning to come from behind and beat the Rockies eleven to nine. Welcome the Dodger Talk,
David Vasse with you until the top of the hour tonight. We will head back to Corsefield to hear from manager Dave Roberts, and we also will check in with Jose Mota. But by the way, my phone was blowing up after that Teoscar Hernandez go ahead, three run home run. It feels like the whole city of Los Angeles, if you did not turn this game off, was treated to a very exciting finish. And if you were as excited as our very own Tim Neverett eight sixty six nine eight seven two five seventy
is the phone number. What a night by the Dodgers, who you know, many people feel like the Dodgers are going to fall apart without Mookie Bets. Quite the contrary, They have a lot of good players, and this may be in the long run somewhat of a blessing in disguise, because last year the Dodgers faced almost zero adversity as far as injuries of this significance goes.
Obviously, Kershaw was battling through that shoulder injury that required surgery, but the Dodgers did not lose a position player like this all season long last year. And for them to continue to keep this train moving in the right direction, they're going to have to come together as a unit to be able to overcome this adversity and really use it as a chip on their shoulder, as it seems that they are doing in the first two games without Mookie Bets,
and tonight was a great example of that. I thought last night was a great night start to finish. Will Smith ended it last night with a twelve pitch at bat with a sacrifice fly that kind of sent a message to the rest of the team, no matter how far we're down or how far we're up, we're not going to give away at bats, and certainly tonight the Dodgers did not give away any at bats. They continued to pass the baton in that ninth inning to set up Jason Hayward's grand slam, the first career
pinch hit grand slam by Jason Hayward. It was the fourth career grand slam by the Dodgers veteran right fielder. And look, Jason Hayward means a lot to this team. He makes a lot of really good plays, smart plays
that don't show up in the box score. But on a night like tonight where he's called to come off the bench at Corsfield for Chris Taylor, he delivered by inches right, It hit the foul pole in right field, and then Teoscar Hernandez hits the go ahead, three run home run despite many at Corsefield thinking he struck out to end the game, but Lance Barksdale at first
base, said, uh huh, he checked his swing. And look, I know there's a lot of different opinions on what a check swing is or isn't, And in fact, if you look in the Major League Baseball rule book, it's a gray area as well, and it kind of outlines the fact that it's the first or third base umpire or homeplate umpires discretion on what they believe was an attempt to swing. I know many of us were brought up to believe that it's whether or not the bat crosses the plane of home
plate. That's not the way it's presented in Major League Baseball's rule book. So it's whether or not the umpire or umpires believe that they hit her attempted to swing. So I did not believe ta Oscar Hernandez attempted to swing, and so did the first base umpire. But Bud Black had a differing opinion, obviously wanting to beat the Dodgers. The Rockies have not had many wins over the Dodgers since twenty eighteen's Game one sixty three, and really have not
had many wins at all this season, so they wanted it badly. They did not get it, and Bud Black was not around to see the go ahead three run home run by Taoscar Hernandez. Eight six six nine eight seven two five seventy is the phone number. Dodgers beat the Rockies eleven to nine, scoring seven runs in that ninth inning. Let's go out to the phones. Glenn in Hemmett, you're on Dodger Talk with David vasse Hi. Glenn,
thanks for taking my call. David. I I was watching the postgame show and no more Garcia Park explain the he chucked swing and he said he did not break his wrist. Well, see that, I mean, that's not in the rule book. It doesn't matter if you break your wrist or not. It's whether or not the umpire believes you attempted to swing. And I guess breaking the wrist I've heard that too, but that's not in the rule book. That's why it's all subjective. Okay, okay, yeah,
great gain tonight. I enjoyed it. I'll go Dodgers, all right, Glenn, thanks a lot for the phone call. Yeah, breaking the wrist usually means there's a good shot that you attempted to swing the bat, but that's not something in the rule book that says if the hit or breaks his wrist he swung. No, it's whether or not he attempted to swing, and it's at the umpire's discretion. Eight sixty six nine eight seven two five seventy is the phone number. We do have a one hundred dollars gift card
to Superior Grocers to give away tonight. If you were listening to the game and the top of the sixth inning for the Andre Ethier Q to call. You will win one hundred dollars gift card, and we certainly have that to give away tonight. Eight sixty six nine eight seven two five seventy is the phone number. Let's go out to OZ and Valencia. You're on Dodger Talk with David vasse Hi Oz. Hey, David, how are you doing. I'm doing great. You seem very subdued considering the way the rest of the
Dodger faithful are feeling tonight. No, No, I'm very happy. What a comeback win by the guys. My question to you is just I was a little worried about Walker Buehler considering Yamamoto's injury and viewers struggling. Do you think we need to get out to get more starting pitching. Yeah, definitely. I feel like the Dodgers are going to be in the market for starting
pitching, whether it's Heesus Lozardo or anybody else. Garrett Crochet, the Dodgers are going to need more starting pitching if they can find a starter that they believe camp in the two or three spot in their playoff rotation. And Oz, it's a case of where Walker Buehller is just searching. He really hasn't found his footing since coming back, and he is going to be a phriege. And at the end of the year, the Dodgers have young pitchers like
Bobby Miller and Gavin Stone that can fill out a playoff rotation. I'm wondering, is Walker Bueller untouchable at the trade deadline. I'm wondering whether or not he is or not as we get closer to July thirtieth. I'm not saying the Dodgers will trade him, but is he really untouchable? Yeah, you're right, Thank you so much, David. All Right, thank you for the phone call, Oz. And nobody wants to see Walker Bueller go anywhere.
But if he continues to be searching and the facts are he is a freeg and at the end of the year and the Dodger rotation looks to be full next year and moving forward, is there a future for Walker Bueller after this season in a Dodger uniform. And if it's not, and he's pitching this way, you have to wonder whether or not the Dodgers are thinking, well, if we need to include him, is he untouchable? I would say at this point in time, he's not untouchable. Let's go out to
James and Guardina. You're on Dodger Talk. Hi James, Oh, Hi David. I just want to say I thought today was a magical win, and I'm starting to feel now that the Dodgers are a team of destiny. You do, huh over one game in Colorado? You feel like they're a team of destiny? Well, they say that, yeah, like over the course of the season, like like like like maybe one game can can can give you can give you and maybe give the team that feeling that you know
that they can go all the way. And I'm starting to feel that way about this team. Well, I felt that way before this game. I felt that way even more before Mookie Betts broke his left hand. But I feel like adversity is good, especially when you are getting a player like Mookie
Bets back instead of losing him for the entire season. So I'm not going just like I wouldn't overreact over one lost James, I'm not going to say one win guarantees you a Cinderella story either, especially when it's against the Rockies. If this was against the Phillies, I might be a little bit more emotional, Okay, But yeah, but like the last time the Dodgers had to win, like Elvis Presley was starting out, Yeah, nineteen fifty seven.
Yeah, that's the last time they had a win like this. You're right, all right, all right, thanks David, Hey, thanks for the phone call. James appreciate it. Eight six six nine eighty seven two five seventy is the phone number. Dodgers scores seven runs in the ninth inning, a grand slam by Jason Hayward, a pinch hit grand slam by Jason
Hayward. Will Smith being called out on strikes and when he was asking for time, set up Tioscar Hernandez to come to the plate after Freddie Freeman was walked intentionally, and Taoscar Hernandez said, all right, you want to walk him, all right, I'll take care of this, and he certainly did. He leads the Dodgers now with eighteen home runs, and also he leads the team with fifty four RBIs. He gets more opportunities than any other Dodger
in this lineup, with runners on base and runners in scoring position. When he delivers, there's a good chance the Dodgers are going to win. Because when Taoskar Hernandez drives in a run, the Dodgers are twenty and six. When he does not drive in a run, they're basically a five hundred team. Eight sixty six nine eight seven two five seventy is the phone number. Let's go out to Alta. Dina Rich, You're on Dodger Talk. Hi Rich, Yeah, Hi, Hi David Bush. You sir, I uh,
one of the most exciting games I've never heard. You've got to archive Tim Neverritt's call is on those two homers. They're epic And I don't care that it's that it's the Rockies. This, this win can help cement team unity and you know, in the face of the loss of Mookie, you know, and yam momotos So what an exciting game. This was good for the city, David. I mean, we need things like this, and
I'm just excited about it. And thank you for your great commentary. Hey, Rich, how would you like one hundred dollars gift card to Superior Grossers compliments of AM five seventy LA Sports and Andre Ethier. Hey, that would be a blessing. You know, I said when that last homer came, I said, thank you Lord, and I thank you Lord for this too. Thank you so much. All right, rich you enjoyed and blessings to you and your family. It pays to listen to the Boys in Blue right
here on AM five seventy LA Sports. Listen to the game in the top of the sixth inning for the andre e your cue to call, and you can be the next to win a one hundred dollars gift card to Superior Grocers. I've been there before. I love their carne asada meat to grill. It's legit, and I know a lot of other people that love it as well, So I'm all in with Superior Grocers. Let's head back to Colorado right now to hear from manager Dave Roberts top to bottom honestly, is you
know you get the closer in there? Actually, you know you get back to Beaks coming into the game and having him try to go one plus and getting him out of the game and making him work, to then get the closer in the game and not concede even in a safe situation, and then to tack on and to get another arm in there. It was just quality of it back up and down the line. If I think it started with Pages taking a walk and then midguro at the base it and then they just
kept going on from there. So Jason was ready when called upon, had a big pinchhip Grand Slam, and then Showhay just continued to be on fire, and then obviously tail with that Homer. You know, it's just he keeps coming up with big hits. So I just couldn't be more excited for our guys on the offensive side. And you know, you got to also go back and Michael Peterson. You know, he makes his debut against the
team that drafted him. He's got his family here. He pitches two innings for us, gets a win, his major league win on his debut. He gets a couple of punch outs, and you know what the guys did. The guys in the pen were fantastic. Alex was great as always, and obviously Evan finishing it up. But you know, for us to weather a Walker Buller start that was, you know, not spectacular in any sense, and to come away with win was huge. With Walker's outing, just
what were your takeaways from it? It seems like his last two he's really obviously he's altered his pitch mikes quite a bit there. Do you feel like it's something to look for feel or just obviously there's game planning. But I guess we're your takeaways from these lasts. You know, I think that he's
certainly searching. He is not confident, not comfortable. I don't think in any of his uh you know, in his delivery, in his pitches and with the sequencing, and he just didn't have complete command tonight, and so they made him pay. And so, you know, it seemed like everything they hit, whether it was a grounder or ball in the air, it fell in and there were some walks in there, so you know, it's
baseball. I know, he took one a line shot in the hip, and so that's something of some concern that you know, was really sore and hurting, and so our docs are going to look at him, but I don't know, you know, you know, actually he was sort of okay after that, but you know, it was still really sore after that. So we'll see. But you know, we just got to keep going.
All right. There's manager Dave Roberts on Sports talking about the comeback in the ninth inning and goodbye him to point out Michael Peterson out of Riverside to City College, making his major league debut, pitching two innings in what at the time was low leverage relief, and it turns out to be his first major league win in his first major league game against the Rockies, the team that
drafted him. So congratulations to Michael Peterson. An exciting night for him, an exciting game to be part of, as the Dodgers come from behind by scoring seven runs in the ninth inning to beat the Rockies eleven to nine. When we continue on Dodger Talk, Jose Mota will check in from Denver. Also more of your phone calls at eight sixty six nine, eight seven two five seventy, and we will celebrate the tenth anniversary of Clayton Kershaw's one and
only career no hitter. We put together what says no hitter on a tenth anniversary other than a montage, We got a montage for you. And as we go to break here here was Tim Neverritt's call of Jason Hayward's first career pinchhit grand slam. I'm the right handers to two. Offer to Jason Hayward, swing on and hammer the right field. This ball is back, this ball is gone off. The foul ball A grand slam for Jay hay a fourth career Grand Slam for Hayward, and the Dodgers are within a run.
That's nine to eight. Oh can you believe it? On air at AM five seventy, online at AM five seventy LA sports dot com, and available by podcast on the iHeartRadio app. This is Dodger Talk with David Masson two two swung on heaving the air right center fielding deep, this ball heading back, This ball's gone. That's gone. Hitch On a three run home run. Tyascar head on us and the Dodgers have come all the way back to take the lead. Oh my goodness, absolutely incredible. It's eleven to nine.
As the Dodgers down to their last strike, strike big time as Tausker hits his eighteenth home run of the year. Tim Neverett on the call, as excited as anybody in the city of Los Angeles after ti Oscar Hernandez hit the go ahead three run home run as the Dodgers were down to their last strike and they come from behind, scoring seven runs in that ninth inning to
beat the Rockies eleven to nine. Daniels Jewelers is the official sponsor of the Trip Around the Diamond Stop by any Daniel's location and say home run for your free team bracelet and fifty dollars gift card toward any purchase of ninety nine dollars or more Daniels Jewelers Own the Dreams Still to come. Here on Dodger Talk, we will get to the celebration of Clayton Kershaw's one and only career no
hitter. It's the tenth anniversary today of Kershawn no hitting the Rockies. So I guess June eighteenth, when the Dodgers play the Rockies, it's not going to be a good night for the Rockies, but it's going to be a historic night for the Dodgers, because tonight was only the fifth time in Dodger or sixth time in Dodger franchise history, they have come back by five runs or have come back from a five run or more deficit in the ninth inning
to win the game. And the only thing I could think of that comes close in recent history to this type of comeback for the Dodgers at Corsefield was the Andrew Toles game back in twenty six Remember that game, Andrew Toles hit a grand Slam in the ninth inning. The Dodgers scored three in the eighth and five in the ninth, four off the bat of Tolls's bat, a
grand slam. The Dodgers were down six runs going into the eighth inning, and they came from behind, And that will forever be known as the Andrew Tolls Game, the grand slam in the ninth inning to put the exclamation mark on that Dodger come from behind victory. But in recent history, that's the only wacky corse Field come from behind victory for the Dodgers other than this one tonight. It will be remembered as the Taascar Hernandez and Jason Hayward check swing
called strike three. While I'm calling for time, game at cors Field. All right, let's set out to Jose Mota. It's time to go around the horn with Jose Mota. All right, Jose Mota live in Denver. What a ninth inning for the Dodgers. What a roller coaster of a ninth inning? Usually a game as a roller coaster, but that inning was a
roller coaster. I mean, man, that you saw Walker walk onto the mountain, gave up those early runs, four runs right away, You're like, oh, you know what, Thankfully there's a lot of game left. I just didn't know that the game left I was talking about was going to come in that one inning with the Dodgers just never gave up. Dave Roberts
pulling all the punches again. You know, the approach from yesterday carry into carry into today to some degree because the guy continued to pursue some good masses at the end. I mean, Vargas and Pies had key, I mean very key walks in a park that attracts you do out there and swing the bat. They stayed right with it, and they're a big, big part of the w This combat happened when you look at that ninth inning, Jose
number one. Let's start with what's set up Jason Hayward's grand Slam. It was past I've seen the baton and it feels like in the last two games so far, the Dodgers are taking on that identity and making a concerted effort to not to try to be the hero, but to trust the guy behind
you. It is what needs to happen, David. I know that perhaps some people are saying, yeah, this is against the Rockies, but you know there's a Rockies team that also I'm glad we're not talking about the Dodgers cannot beat the Rockies, and then we all be talking about Bookie be As being out right. So no, you take whatever the game's giving you today, you use it, and passing the baton becomes a very important part of what you want to prolong in your stay in the big leagues as a hitter
and as a team. Saying we could do this when those times go a little bit dry, you know that the walk has to be part of this team. We know that, and we talked about it a lot extensively about Max Montly not being in it and prolonging innings and giving guys behind them a chance to, you know, see more pitches. All those things go along with the guy getting worn down and the bullpen that perhaps has not been very
good at all, and Buddy black wanders stay with from that open. But most the younger guys understand this then, and then you see a team have success. If you talk about keep the line moving means exactly what happened today. You guys are a big part of this. Players know this, learn this and know that against premiere pitching is going to be a win, which you're going to be able to be one, two and three guys. All right, let's get to two of the controversial moments in the ninth inning.
First, Will Smith called out on strikes for the second out of the ninth inning. It seemed like on the replay he verbally was asking for time, but was he too quiet about it? What did you see or what do you believe happened in that at bat when he was calling for time. What needs to happen is if the umpires considers that you're calling a little bit too late, even though you're entitled to call time now once per plate appearance,
the umpires still had the last call. And what Will I was the catcher forgot about was that you cannot be the umpire in other words, until you hear time or you see the umpires in front of me get their hands up, you can now get out of the battlest box. So in that case, yeah, some guys are granted time, so umpires are quicker with a trigger and giving it to you. But also at the same time, you have to stand in the box until somebody says time. And that's one that
will I'm sure will not happen again. Were you looking at the pitch clock, Jose, was it ticking down? Did he feel like the pitch clock was Was he trying to play games with the pitch clock? How did that play into it? I think perhaps well little just thaw, the pitchcuck was just a little bit too far down from the call, the time out of that situation and the pisture getting ready and getting ready set up to deliver to the play, so he does not have to give it to you if he
considers it it's a little bit too late. But I did not pay attention to see where the clock was. But I don't know. He's winding down and not more than anything. People tell you all the time, don't play on pire. You stand the battlest box until you hear something. Dodgers come from behind, scoring seven runs in the ninth inning, beating the Rockies eleven to nine. All right on the flip side, the Dodgers got what appeared to be a break when yes Oscar Hernandez was called to check his swing.
It was not strike three? What did you see on the check swing? And did Bud Black have an argument? He did have an argument if this set happened against the Dodgers and they lose a game like the Rockets at tonight, it will be a big issue right now. So yes, it does have a point. But at the same time, who you are to Osco or Nanda saying, well, I just got a little break here. What
do I do? Now? You clear your head and you put together the best at that possible and think about the other way and think about the middle of the field. But there's no doubt, Dave. If this had been against the Dodgers, we'll be talking about what a back pall that was true or not, No doubt about it. But I will say this, I'm being very impartial. I did not believe ta Oscar Hernandez attempted to swing, but he crossed the bat. He did cross the plane. That's it.
But that's a judgment call in the Major League Baseball rule book, Jose. There's no plane that they talk about. It's about whether or not the umpire believes he attempted to swing the bat. Well, Dave, I'm gonna leave it that way. If this happened against the Dodgers, we'll be talking about that being a swing. Now. I'm gonna stay right. Whether it be impartial about her, know that they got a break. You get breaks here and there, but the main thing was I said to Oscar, took advantage
of it and bade them pay. It's interesting after that you heard Teoscar Hernandez and Jason Hayward say the same thing as they were facing vic Vodnik. They talked about not seeing him before seeing two of his best pitches and then attacking. Was there something more as far as the scouting report being brought back to the dugout. Was it a scouting report maybe from the runner at second base? They almost said the identical same thing when it came to vic Vodnik,
the verbal man. And then the adjustments they both made. For one, you know, Jason, heyw he's so far from the plate and guys will use Guys with a little sweep will use that pitch almost as a change up against him, because left he's like anything that's coming in on him and low and take something off of it. He got full on that once and then he figured, well the book on me is this. They want to get
me away on change up. So what I do is I changed my mind into off speed thinking, stay back, be late on the fastbold is not going to beach because you were far from the plate. Remember this, and that fast was supposed to be end. It's going to be the middle. But when you make a mistake with something off speed as he did there, you paid that price right there. Different for Oscra because ti Oscar and actually I just talked to him after the game and it told me this yesterday.
I need to get back to using my hands. And the report was somebody like bot Mak that you haven't seen. The more you wait on him, forcing him to throw something over the plate and find out immediately what is his best pitch? What is it? Outpitching, You look all these things that are presented the players get ahead, get even, and also put away what is that pitch? They look for it and they did not miss. They
put some good swings, control swings, copying what they did yesterday. An exciting night of course field as the Dodgers come from behind with seven runs in the ninth inning to beat the Rockies tonight eleven to nine. Unfortunately, during the game, Jose, we got the news that Willy Mays passed away at
the age of ninety three. No matter the age, obviously, it's hard to lose an icon like Willie Mays, and I saw what Alex Korra said when he was asked by the Boston media about losing Willy Mays and whether or not he had met him. He said that he met him a lot of different times when he was playing with the Dodgers, and Orlando Supaida would actually
introduce him to Willie Mays when he was playing for the Dodgers. But he also mentioned your dad many Mota telling him stories about Roberto Clemente and Willie Mays. How much did your dad play against Willy Mays? How well did he know Willy Mays? Well, Willie Mays called him Chico. They both called each other Chico. And when my dad got called up by the Giants in nineteen sixty two for the first time, their patrolling center field is thirty one
year old Willie Mays, and my dad tells the story. And by the way, my dad was pretty inpacted by this as we gave the news over the air, and he sent a message also for the radio listeners about how much it meant to him. Willie May has received them as a big leaguer. Toad McField Wilson's pulled his ear a couple of times, but also you know that'said. The thing that people forget about with May is is how he
revolutionized how you play center field. You think about this, there's no pettit walls, there's no diving play in style, right, I mean it was a shoestring that was like the best play ever guy coming in right. And in other words, you didn't see Willie Mays go crash against walls, but you saw Willie Mays play center field beautifully. I mean it's like an artist out there. And then he's impact with the glove, he's throwing on the
bat. The power of the combination is a five to two player. I mean, born in La Alabama and playing for the Barons of Alabama in the Negro leagues, which is just marvel to be in your career. But I remember one time that Willie Mays, as a youngster, told me, Hose, I didn't know that, you know, thirty third is going to be a big deal. Forty forty I would have done more times. He goes, I don't know that was going to be a big deal. I would
have done it more times. Knowing that people are making a big deal out of this, and he's obviously very close to Barry Bonds. He's a godfather, but he also is a player that when Afro American players came into the league in the early sixties late fifties would take him and say, listen, here's a lesson to be learned. Jackie set it up for us. Make
sure that we are good citizens off the field. But also don't take don't take for granted the fact that you are fighting for something as a black man or Latino guy with dark skin, and make sure that you go out there and put the best effort putting in. And a quick story for our fends
from Willie Mays. My dad is a spring training as a rookie in nineteen sixty two and he's taking fly balls in center field early rounds and he feels a tap on his shoulder and he says, hey, you know, young motive, you can levels anywhere you want in this outfield, but not here in centerfield. This is mine. I love that. Thanks Jose, thanks for sharing those stories and memories. And we'll catch up with you after tomorrow night's game as well. All Right, they're good job there, he goes,
Good job by you, Jose Mota. The Dodgers come from behind and beat the Rockies tonight eleven to nine. We are going to take one final time out here on Dodger Talk. When we come back, I see you
guys online. Stay where you are. We will get to your phone calls, and also we will get to the celebration of Clayton Kershaw's ten year anniversary of his one and only career no hitter against the Rockies June the eighteenth, Rockies Dodgers usually ends up in history for LA, and tonight they did it again, coming from behind seven runs in the ninth inning to beat the Rockies
tonight eleven to nine on the Los Angeles Dodgers Audio Network. Dodger Talk is available on AM five seven E LA Sports dot Com, hand on the iHeartRadio app. Back to more Dodger Talk with Dodger insider David Basset falls no strikes to Otani Gomberdio. This fall a swung on a hammer deep center field, way back and down. That's unto the forest. Show, Hey Otny home run number twenty, Oh majestic, last hit the dead center field. Then
O'tani makes us seven to three. Oh yeah, that happened? Show, Hey Otani with the longest home run hit this season in Major League Baseball. Four hundred and seventy six feet was the estimated distance straightaway center field into the forest at Corse Field in the sixth inning, and the Dodgers mounted the comeback in the ninth inning with an eleven to nine victory over the Rockies. Thanks for hanging with us. We're with you until ten thirty tonight. A lot
going on and exciting come from behind victory for the Dodgers tonight. Eight six six nine, eight seven two five seventy is the phone number. Don't forget. By the way, the Dodgers had a chance to come from behind in the seventh inning with two on and two out, but Brenton Doyle, the center fielder for the Rockies, had an amazing game. He had four hits tonight and robbed O'tani of extra bases and two RBIs in the top of the seventh inning. And if Doyle does not come up with that catch, I
mean he is gambling, laying it all out on the line. If that ball gets behind him and goes to right center field and the wall bag there, Otani can run and he probably hits an inside the park home run. So at the moment, Brenton Doyle in the seventh inning saved the game for the Rockies, but it was not meant to be for the hapless Rockies in the ninth inning, as they allowed seven runs in the ninth inning for the
Dodgers to come from behind and beat them tonight at Corpsfield. The Rockies now twenty five and forty eight, twenty games behind the Dodgers in the NL West, the Dodgers now forty six and twenty nine, nine games get ahead of now the second place Diamondbacks in the NL West, and the Dodgers still the only team consistently that has been above five hundred all season long in their division. Let's go back out to the phones, Brad in mission Viejo. Thanks
for being patient, Brad, you're on Dodger Talk. Yeah, Hi, thanks for taking my call. Yeah. But nineteen fifty seven was their last year in Brooklyn too, which is really interesting, you know, with that last comeback. Yeah, yeah, good point. And also I heard Jim Hill mention that it's the first time in Major League history that a team down on the ninth had a three run home running a grand slam in the same inning. I would believe that, Brad. That's amazing, isn't it.
Well, Jason Hayward's grand Slam. It may get lost in the highlights in the shuffle, but to me that was just as critical to ta Oscar Hernandez's go ahead three run home run, because if Hayward does not come off the bench for that pinch hit grand slam, the Dodgers lose this game. Inning over. Thanks for the phone call. Eight six six seven two five seventy is the phone number, by the way, that pinch hit grand slam by Jason Hayward, only his second career pinch hit home run and obviously the first
ever pinch hit grand slam in Jason Hayward's career. Let's go out to Trey in West LA. You're on Dodger Talk with David vasse Hi Trey. Oh yeah, man, oh man, oh man, thank you. David just wanted the chance to come on and celebrate what a heck of a win by the team tonight. It's why I never leave a turn off a game early.
As the immortal Yogi Berra said, it ain't over till it's over, And what a circle of the wagons morale boosty when that was tonight, just fantastic shout out to Tim for two epic on the precipice of losing his mind and jumping out of the press box and enjoy type of call. Fantastic and just shout out to Doctor's Nation and everybody was just a hell of a game and came at the right time and appreciate taking my call. Just a great
win for everybody. Shout out to everybody out there. Thanks awesome, Trey. Yeah, Tim never did a great job on the call alongside Rick Monday. And how could you not get excited over that home run. I feel like those two calls, the grand Slam call and the go ahead three run home run call by Tim Neverett reflected how all of you were feeling listening to the game back in Los Angeles. So definitely those calls reflected the moment and
everybody was certainly excited. And look, I'm not trying to drop names here, but a very loyal listener to Dodger Talk, Brad Paisley. We had lunch together today and he was trying to convince me that Mookie Bets getting hurt could be in the long run, a very good thing for this team because they will come together and they will rally amongst each other. And when Mookie Bets returns, he is going to find a very hardened, battle tested team.
So I'm starting to buy into what old Brad had to say earlier today and love Brad, great guy, big Dodger fan, and was offered tickets to see Clayton Kershaw pitch tomorrow Rancho Kuckamunga, but he couldn't make it, So we'll just give you and Brad the updates. Tomorrow night, Kershaw will be at Rancho Kuckamonga in case you live out that way or want to make the drive out there to Loan Mark Field, Kershaw is expected to throw three
innings. And speaking of our very own Clayton Kershaw, today is the ten year anniversary of his one and only career no hitter at Dodgers Stadium against these Rockies, and I feel like you're short changing the fact that it was a no hitter. Yes, it was nearly a perfect game if not for Hanley Ramirez's horrible throw rushing the throw at that point in time. But even with that error in the game, it's still considered one of the greatest games,
if not the greatest game ever pitched in Major League Baseball. History in the regular season. From what I understand from ESPN stats and info, there is a way where they score pitchers games similar to a QB rating in a game, and only Carrie Woods twenty strikeout game in nineteen eighty nineteen ninety eight was scored higher than Kershaw's nearly perfect game on this day ten years ago, and still to this date, Kershaw's no hitter the only one with fifteen strikeouts and
no walks. Just a remarkable night at Dodgers Stadium. He had that curveball work in perfectly twelve to six. He was dominating these Rockies hitters. And it wasn't these Rockies. It was a team that had some good, pretty good hitters. And at dj Lemayhew Troy to Lewitski, Corey Dickerson, there were guys in this lineup or in that lineup ten years ago, and we thought the best way to celebrate the Kershaw no hitter was by putting together a
montage. Our guy, Colin Ye and Tim Kats put it together and we wanted to share it with you. So here is our tribute to the great Kershaw and his no hitter ten years ago. Clayton Kershaw with a regular of six and two one to zero against the Rockies this year, eleven and five lifetime. He is six and one over his last nine starts against Colorado, and he's working on a three game winning speed and his earned run average over that period of three wins one point eight. The one to two pitch on
the way slow curveball see you later. Oh, that's not fair when you're thrown in the middle nineties and then you come up with that thing, a big slow rainbow curve. It was seventy three miles an hour, and it's just dropped perfectly into a j Ellis meth. Here's the two to two and there's a fast bread. He swung out and miss Strike three. Well, he strikes out the side. Kershaw has fan ten. He's been perfect through six and the folks inside Dodger Stadium are giving him a standing ovation, sensing
something special is going on tonight. Crom All back headed to third, some play by Rojas, rows to first and dugout by Adrian Gonzalez, a terrific play turned in by Miguel Rojas to keep the no hitter in tack Hing two, kershawn or rubbedge, swung on and miss strike three, strikeout number fourteen, a new career high for Clayton Kershaw. Now ball's two strikes, two outs, fourteen strikeouts for Kershaw. Corey Dickerson is the batter. Here comes
the two slung on and miss, strike three and a no hitter. On the fifteenth strikeout of the game, Clayton Kershaw about to be mobbed by his teammates. The Dodgers win ate nothing. The greatness of Clayton Kershaw shown off yet again, another sparkling chapter in the career of Clayton Edward Kershaw. Talk about great final calls. That was a great one by Charlie Steiner. And
you heard the legendary Vin Scully at the beginning of the game. If you recall, Vin Scully would broadcast a simulcast for the first two innings that night and that season, and certainly great to hear Vin's voice on such a historic night Clayton Kershaw's. Even though it wasn't a perfect game technically, it was the perfect game I have ever seen pitched by a Dodger with my own living eyes, and I know Coofax had the perfect game against the Cubs. I
did not see that. I'm saying the one game that I have ever seen that was as perfect of a game pitched. It was that night June eighteenth, twenty fourteen, at Dodger Stadium, and it was pitched by Clayton Kershaw. And thanks to our guy Brad Paisley for allowing us to have his song
so many summers underneath those calls during that montage. I thought it was fitting because man baseball players, they only have so many summers, and there are only so many summers where you see a game pitched like that, and certainly a special night at Dodger Stadium. And I don't want to sound like Kershaw's career is over, because let's face it, two years ago he had a great chance for a perfect game two separate times, no hitters, two separate
times Minnesota when he was taken out in his first start of that season. I firmly believe then and I firmly believe now he should not have come out of that game. It's not like it prevented him from any more significant injury. And then in Anaheim they let him stay in the game and it was broken up, I believe in the eighth inning of that night too in Anaheim, so he had two other really good chances, and look, he's a great pitcher, and I don't doubt that he's going to find a way to
compete this year and be a big part of the Dodgers second half. Eight six sixne eight seven two five seventy is the phone number if you were at that game, I'd love to hear from you. If you remember that game, find Lee would love to hear from you. Eight six six nine eight seven two five seventy. As we mentioned earlier, we got the news during the game tonight that we lost one of the greatest players in baseball history, Willie Man. And if you ask Vin Scully who the greatest player he ever
saw play, he would automatically say, without hesitation, Willie Mays. And here was Vin during a broadcast when it was Willy's eighty fifth birthday, And here was Vin describing the greatest play he ever saw, Willie Mays. Make HI, this is Vin Scully. I've been around a long time. In all the years I've been broadcasting, people have always asked me, who's the greatest player you ever saw? Well, I didn't see many American League games,
but I certainly saw a lot of National League games. And without a doubt, the number one, the greatest player I ever saw was Willie Mays. I was also privileged to see Willie make the greatest catch of his career, and he agrees with me that it was no not the catch in the World Series against Vic Wurtz and Cleveland. I'm talking a Dodger Giant game. In the field, Dodgers trailing by a run, bases loaded and two out.
We had a young third baseman out of Oklahoma by the name of Bobby Morgan, and Morgan had a line drive in the left center As soon as the ball left the bat, you knew it was an extra base hit. Everybody knew that except Willie. And Willie, running as hard as he can, left his feet parallel like an arrow going through the air, and caught the ball. But that was only part of it. In those days,
certainly at Ebbets Field, we had a gravel warning track. So Willie, going head first, hit that gravel and then bounced and headfirst into the concrete wall. And he was not wearing a helmet. They didn't wear helmets in those days. He hit the concrete wall, rolled over on his back. The left fielder was a fellow named Henry Thompson for the Giants. Henry came over, bent down, there was Willie unconscious, holding the ball on his chest. Henry reached down, took the ball and held it up to the
umpires out for Bobby Morgan. That was the greatest single play I've ever seen. So I've been fortunate to watch you play all those years, Willie. Yeah, there was Vin Scully on Willie May's eighty fifth birthday. We lose the great Mays tonight at ninety three years old. What a life, what a great player. And anybody that saw Willie Mays play, they swear by him. And what a special time right when the Dodgers were in Brooklyn,
the Giants were in New York, and the Yankees in the Bronx. Actually the Polo grounds were across the river in Harlem, so it was right there Giants and Yankees. But it was the Dodgers and Giants that had that unbelievable rivalry. And what a time in the fifties to have the three greatest center fielders at that time playing in the same vicinity of each other. Key Mantle for the Yankees, Willie Mays for the Giants, and Duke Snyder for the
Dodgers in Brooklyn. Just an unbelievable time, and that's why so many people call that the Golden Era, the Golden Age of baseball. But I kind of feel like there's a renaissance in baseball and its popularity in the last ten years. I know ESPN does not give baseball it's due because of business reasons and the contracts they have signed with other leagues, but they're ignoring the fact that baseball is more popular now than it ever has been in the last twenty
years. So I feel like baseball is in a great spot and there's a lot of great young players. But going back to Willie Mays in that time, just unbelievable to think that those three guys were playing center field for the three New York teams. Just an unbelievable time in baseball history. And Rick Mundy, we take him for granted in how much baseball he has seen from his days growing up in Santa Monica to being the first player ever drafted in
the amateur draft by Major League Baseball in nineteen sixty five. He has seen a lot of great players, and he played against a lot of great players, even though they were at the tail end of their careers, and one of them was Willie Mays. And here was Rick during tonight's broadcast talking about the great Willie Mays. So he had his first career home run off the
future Hall of Famer Warren Spawn nineteen fifty one. His final base hit came in Game two of the nineteen seventy three World Series, off of another future Hall of Famer, Rolly Fingers, two down and Hunter Goodman, finals went back. But I think his presence tim when you were around him, who was absolutely off the charts. What do you remember about the first time you were around him and in his presence, at least before he maybe even met him. Well, yeah, I saw him play against the Dodgers all the
time on television and would watch him when he come into Dodgers Stadium. I was amazed at what he could do, the fielding, the running, the throwing, the hitting. He just he put a different emphasis on the game, on how he played it. His instincts were spot on. His timing was impeccable. Pitch now to Goodman, He'll take inside. It's three and one a Hunter Goodman anything, I'm willing. He was never full of himself talk to Willie Mays, and he talked to you like he was just another
person. For he one goodman takes Paul four outside to out walk, and he was far from just another person. But as you watched them when you were growing up watching the Dodgers, Rick Monday a kid from Santa Monica. You know, then you got to play in the same game with him for the first time. Wait, what do you remember, Ay, There's a bouncing ball to second base off the bat of Jay Cave. Taylor grabs it and throws on to first. It's difficult to play the game and want to
take pictures at the same time. But you wanted to, didn't you. There's Rick Monday and Tim Nevertt on the call tonight, as we found out we lost the great Willie Mays at ninety three years old. So a big day in baseball and Dodger baseball world. Tonight the ten year anniversary of Clayton
Kershaw's no hitter. The Dodgers making history at Corus Field by coming back down seven runs in the ninth inning, a grand slam by Jason Hayward and a go ahead three run home run by ta Oscar Hernandez with the Dodgers down to their last strike brought them back to beat the Rockies tonight, eleven to nine. The Dodgers have won the first two games of this four game series in Denver, and Bobby Miller will be back on the mount for the Dodgers Tomorrow
night, making his first start since April tenth. Before he went on the IL, Bobby was one and one with an ERA of five forty. He has told me repeatedly how anxious he has been to get back and pitching in Major League Baseball. He'll get his chance tomorrow night at cors Field, going up against Ryan Feltner, who has not had a good year for the Rockies. He's one in six with an ERA of five seventy one. Morongo Casino Dodgers on Deck begins at four thirty tomorrow, with first pitch at five thirty.
Then I'll do it for us tonight on Dodger Talk. Thanks to Dwayne McDonald at Corsfield, Thanks to Colin Ye at our Burbank Studios, and thanks to you for listening. In case you missed any of the show, you can find it on the iHeartRadio app. Once again, the final score tonight, the Dodgers score seven runs in the ninth inning to come from behind and beat the Rockies eleven to nine. Coming up next Fox Sports Radio, Ben Maller at eleven o'clock. Have a great rest of your night. See you
