#LALOVESOCTOBER: MATCHUP

LOS ANGELES DODGERS (91-71) at Washington Nationals (95-67) National League Division Series – Game 2 (LA leads, 1-0) LHP Rich Hill (12-5, 2.12) vs. RH...
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LOS ANGELES DODGERS (91-71) at Washington Nationals (95-67) National League Division Series – Game 2 (LA leads, 1-0) LHP Rich Hill (12-5, 2.12) vs. RHP Tanner Roark (16-10, 2.83) Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016 | 4:08 p.m. ET | Nationals Park | Washington, DC TV: FS1 | Radio: AM 570 (Eng.)/KTNQ 1020 AM (Span.)/AM 1540 (Kor.)/ESPN Radio #LALOVESOCTOBER: The Dodgers, champions of the National League West, continue their best-of-five National League Division Series with the East Division-champion Washington Nationals following a 4-3 win in the series opener last night. After today’s game, the Dodgers will fly back to Los Angeles for Game 3 Monday afternoon and Game 4 Tuesday, if necessary. A winner-take-all Game 5, if necessary, would be played in Washington Thursday. Los Angeles took the season series, 5-1, over Washington, including a 2-1 series win at Nationals Park. Prior to this year, the Dodgers and Nationals had never faced each other in the postseason, but Los Angeles did play the Montreal/Washington franchise in the 1981 NLCS, winning the five-game series, 3-2, en route to a World Series title. SEEMS LIKE ONLY YESTERDAY: Last night, the Dodgers picked up their first win in a Game 1 since the 2013 NLDS at Atlanta, snapping a threegame postseason series Game 1 skid. In Dodger postseason history, the club is 6-0 in series when winning Game 1 of a best-of-five set, advancing in the 1974 NLCS vs. Pittsburgh, 1978 NLCS vs. Philadelphia, 1981 NLCS vs. Montreal, 2008 NLDS vs. Chicago, 2009 NLDS vs. St. Louis and 2013 NLDS vs. Atlanta.

MATCHUP vs. NATIONALS All-Time vs. MON/WAS: LA leads series, 271-194 (14-13 at Nationals Park) All-Time Postseason vs. MON/WAS: 4-2 overall; LA won 1981 NLCS, 3-2 2016: LA won series, 5-1 (2-1 at Nationals Park) June 20 @LA: W, 4-1 W: Kershaw L: Petit S: Jansen June 21 @LA: W, 3-2 W: Coleman L: Roark S: Jansen June 22 @LA: W, 4-3 W: Hatcher L: Kelley July 19 @WAS: W, 8-4 W: Kazmir L: Lopez July 20 @WAS: L, 1-8 W: Gonzalez L: Norris July 21 @WAS: W, 6-3 W: Liberatore L: Strasburg S: Jansen NLDS G1, Oct. 7 @WAS: W, 4-3 W: Kershaw L: Scherzer S: Jansen A LOOK BACK: On this date in 1959, Larry Sherry pitched 5.0 scoreless innings in relief as the Dodgers clinched their first World Championship in Los Angeles with a 9-3 win over Chicago. On this date in 1957, Dodger President Walter O’Malley announced the club’s westward move to Los Angeles. Since then, the Dodgers have posted a .537 winning percentage, the best mark in the National League and second in the Majors to only the Yankees’ .559 mark. Also on this day in 2009, pinch-hitter Mark Loretta stroked a bases-loaded, walk-off single to give the Dodgers a 3-2 win over the Cardinals in Game 2 of the NLDS, marking the fourth game-ending hit in Los Angeles postseason history.

Corey Seager jump started the Dodger offense with a firstinning solo home run last night and became the youngest player in franchise history to homer in the postseason at 22 years, 163 days. Seager joined Mike Scioscia and Pete Reiser HILLTOPPERS: Dodger pitchers combined to set a single-season MLB as the only Dodgers to homer in a postseason game before record with 1,510 strikeouts, shattering the previous mark of 1,450 Ks their 23rd birthday. by the 2014 Indians. In addition to strikeouts, Los Angeles pitchers th Justin Turner continued his postseason surge last night, ranked among the big league leaders in ERA (3.70, 5 ), WHIP (1.19, nd nd going 2-for-3 with a two-run homer in the third inning. 2 ) and opponents’ batting average (.233, 2 ). Turner has hit safely in his last six postseason games - DON’T CALL IT A COMEBACK: The Dodgers led the National League including five multi-hit games - dating to 2015, going 12-for- with 46 regular-season comeback victories - the most in the Majors 22 (.545) with six doubles, a homer and six RBI in that span. behind only Texas’ 49. Kenley Jansen recorded the game’s final five outs last night, including three strikeouts, to pick up the longest postseason save for a Dodger since Jay Howell closed out Game 4 of the 1988 World Series at Oakland with 2.1 scoreless frames. Jansen’s five-out save tied for the longest of his career, also accomplishing the feat on April 13, 2016 vs. Arizona.

THE ‘PEN: The Dodger bullpen tossed 4.0 scoreless innings to close out last night’s win and, during the regular season, combined to set a franchise record with 590.2 innings pitched and 607 total appearances, both of which led the Majors. Despite the high-inning count, the bullpen excelled and was one of the best units in baseball, ranking among the MLB leaders in ERA (3.35, 2nd), opponents’ batting average (.221, 2nd), strikeouts (633, 1st) and WHIP (1.16, 2nd). Kenley KING OF THE HILL: Rich Hill, who was acquired with Josh Reddick from Jansen reached 100+ strikeouts (104) for the third time in his career, Oakland on Aug. 1 in exchange for three minor league pitchers, will while the team had three relievers with 80 or more Ks for the first make the second postseason start of his career, with his only previous time ever (also: Pedro Baez, 83 and Joe Blanton, 80). playoff experience coming in Game 3 of the 2007 NLDS with the Cubs, when he allowed three runs on six hits in 3.0 innings in a 5-1 loss to DIGGING THE LONGBALL: Yasmani Grandal and Justin Turner tied for the D-backs. He has only slightly more experience against the the team lead with 27 home runs, a career-best mark for both, while Nationals, against whom he’s gone 1-1 with a 4.34 ERA (9 ER/18.2 IP) Corey Seager (26) and Joc Pederson (25) made the 2016 Dodgers just in four career games (three starts), with his last appearance coming in the fourth team in franchise history to have four players with 25+ home runs: 2012 in relief. After making his Dodger debut on Aug. 24, Hill went 3-2 with a 1.83 ERA (7 ER/34.1 IP), a .182 opponents’ batting average and a 0.79 WHIP in six starts with Los Angeles, while posting a 12-5 overall record and a 2.12 ERA overall in 20 starts with Los Angeles and Oakland. Overall, among pitchers with 20 or more starts, Hill ranked second in ERA, behind only Kershaw, third in opponents’ batting average (.195) and fourth in WHIP (1.00).

1955: Roy Campanella / Carl Furillo / Gil Hodges / Duke Snider 1977: Dusty Baker / Ron Cey / Steve Garvey / Reggie Smith 1997: Eric Karros / Raul Mondesi / Mike Piazza / Todd Zeile 2016: Yasmani Grandal / Corey Seager / Justin Turner/ Joc Pederson The Dodgers combined to hit 189 home runs, their most since 2004 (203 HR), including seven grand slams - the third most in Los Angeles history, behind 2004 (10) and 2000 (9).

Grandal’s 27 home runs were the most by a MLB catcher this season and most by a Dodger backstop since Mike Piazza’s NEXT MAN UP: The Dodgers used a franchise record-tying 55 total 40 dingers in 1997. players and 31 different pitchers (both records originally set last year) on a club that saw 28 different players spend time on the DL, the most MR. DEPENDABLE: Adrián González reached 90 RBI for the 10th for any team in the last 30 years since at least 1987. consecutive season since 2007, becoming the only Major League IN THE FIELD: The Dodgers ranked third in the National League with a player to accomplish the feat. Behind González, Albert Pujols and .986 fielding percentage, behind the Giants (.988) and Nationals Miguel Cabrera are the only big-league hitters to post nine 90-RBI seasons in that span. (.988), while committing the third-fewest errors (80). UPCOMING SCHEDULE

Date/Time (PT)/Opponent

Probable Starters

TV/Radio

G3-Mon., Oct. 10 at LA; 1:08 pm# G4-Tues., Oct. 11 at LA; 2:05 pm*# G5-Thurs., Oct. 13 at WAS; 2:05 pm*#

LHP Gio Gonzalez (11-11, 4.57) vs. RHP Kenta Maeda (16-11, 3.48) TBD vs. TBD TBD vs. TBD

TV: MLB/FS1 Radio: AM 570 (Eng)/KTNQ 1020 AM (Span)/AM 1540 (Kor)/ESPN Radio TV: FS1 Radio: AM 570 (Eng)/KTNQ 1020 AM (Span)/AM 1540 (Kor)/ESPN Radio TV: FS1 Radio: AM 570 (Eng)/KTNQ 1020 AM (Span)/AM 1540 (Kor)/ESPN Radio *If necessary #Subject to change

CALL HIM ROY: Corey Seager, a top candidate to be the Dodgers’ 17th Rookie of the Year and first since Todd Hollandsworth in 1996, finished the season ranked among the NL leaders in hits (193, 2nd), runs (105, 5th), doubles (40, 7th), multi-hit games (57, T-2nd), extra-base hits (71, 7th), total bases (321, 4th), batting average (.308, 7th) and slugging percentage (.512, 10th). According to Stats, LLC, Seager is just the fourth rookie in the divisional era (since 1969) to rank in the NL’s Top 10 in batting average and slugging percentage, joining Dusty Baker (1972, ATL), Mike Piazza (1993, LA) and Albert Pujols (2001, STL). Seager’s 26 regular-season homers established a Dodger record for a shortstop, breaking the previous record of 22, held by Glenn Wright (1930). Seager’s 193 hits were the most by a big-league rookie since 2001, when Albert Pujols had 194 hits and Ichiro Suzuki knocked 242. Seager re-wrote the Los Angeles rookie record book in most offensive categories: Corey Seager’s Los Angeles Rookie Ranks (Since 1958) Category Hits Runs Doubles Home Runs RBI Average OBP SLG

# 193 105 40 26 72 .308 .370 .512

Rank 1st 1st 1st T-2nd 6th 2nd 2nd 3rd

ALL-STARS, AWARDS AND ACCOLADES: Kenley Jansen (first selection), Clayton Kershaw (sixth selection) and Corey Seager (first selection) were named to the National League All-Star team, with all three earning selections via player balloting. Seager was the youngest position player to be honored as an All-Star in franchise history and the third-youngest Dodger All-Star overall (at the time of their first selection), behind only Fernando Valenzuela and Ralph Branca. Kershaw was named the National League’s May Pitcher of the Month after going 5-0 with a 0.91 ERA (5 ER/49.2 IP) in six starts, including three complete games. Seager was selected as the NL’s June Rookie of the Month, batting .343 (35-for-102) with 20 runs, eight doubles, a triple, eight homers and 13 RBI in 28 games. Chase Utley was named the winner of the 11th annual Roy Campanella Award, which is given to the Dodger player who best exemplifies the spirit and leadership of the late Hall of Fame catcher, and is voted on by Los Angeles players and coaches. Adrián González was selected as the Dodgers’ Roberto Clemente Award nominee for the third time in his four full seasons with Los Angeles.

Leader(s)/Tie(s) The Dodgers have four finalists for Players Choice Awards: Seager Clayton Kershaw (NL Outstanding Pitcher), Corey Seager Seager (NL Outstanding Rookie), Rich Hill (NL Comeback Player) and Seager Justin Turner (Marvin Miller Man of the Year). Piazza (35, 1993); Pederson (26, 2015) Piazza (112, 1993) HOME SWEET HOME: The Dodgers went 53-28 (.654) at home, tying Piazza (.318, 1993) for the fifth-best mark in Los Angeles history and the second-best Piazza (.370, 1993) home mark in the National League this season, behind only the Cubs Piazza (.561, 1993); Mondesi (.516, 1994)

FOUR-PEAT: The Dodgers won the NL West for the fourth straight year, marking their 15th overall division title, as the club reached the postseason in four consecutive seasons for the first time in franchise history. Los Angeles is playing “October Baseball” for the seventh time in 11 years and for the 30th time in franchise history (21st time in LA). The Dodgers are the first team in NL West history to win the division in four consecutive seasons. The last MLB team to win four straight division titles was the Detroit Tigers (201114, AL Central) and the last NL club to do so was the Philadelphia Phillies, who won the NL East in five consecutive seasons from 2007-11. Dave Roberts, a top candidate for NL Manager of the Year, joined Tommy Lasorda (1977) as the only rookie managers ever to lead the Los Angeles Dodgers to a division title, while President of Baseball Operations Andrew Friedman and General Manager Farhan Zaidi assembled their second division champion in as many seasons with the club. The Dodgers won 90+ games for the fourth consecutive season, a feat that had only previously been accomplished once in franchise history, 1951-56 (6). THE ACE: Clayton Kershaw, who was selected to his sixth consecutive All-Star Game, went 11-2 with a 1.79 ERA (24 ER/121.0 IP) in 16 starts before going on the DL on July 1 (mild herniated disc, lower back), and posted a 1-2 record with a 0.96 ERA (3 ER/28.0 IP) in five starts after his return on Sept. 9. Among pitchers with 140.0 or more innings, Kershaw led the Majors with a 1.69 ERA, a .184 opponents’ batting average, a 0.72 WHIP and a 15.64 strikeout-to-walk ratio with 172 strikeouts against just 11 walks in 149.0 innings. THE FINISHING TOUCH: Kenley Jansen, who earned the first All-Star selection of his career in 2016, notched a career-high 47 saves (T-2nd, MLB), while ranking among the NL relief leaders in ERA (1.83, 2nd), opponents’ batting average (.150, 1st MLB), WHIP (0.67, 1st MLB), strikeouts (104, 5th) and strikeout-to-walk ratio (9.45, 1st).

(57-24, .704). With their Los Angeles-record 55-26 (.679) home mark last year, the Dodgers’ 108 home wins during the last two seasons are their most in LA history and are tied for the second most in franchise history for any two-year period (third time), behind only the 109 combined home wins in 1941-42.

YOUNG GUNS: The Dodgers are carrying seven rookies on their NLDS roster: Austin Barnes, Grant Dayton, Kenta Maeda, Corey Seager, Ross Stripling, Andrew Toles and Julio Urías. Were all seven to appear in the series, it would tie a franchise record for rookies used in a postseason series along with the 1953 World Series (Belardi, Gilliam, Hughes, Milliken, Podres, Thompson, Williams) and the 2006 NLDS (Billingsley, Broxton, Ethier, Kuo, Loney, Martin, Saito). The MLB record for most rookies used in a postseason series is 10, set by the 2013 St. Louis Cardinals (Source: Stats, LLC). In addition to Barnes, Dayton, Maeda, Stripling, Toles and Urías, Charlie Culberson will also be making the first postseason appearance of his career. The Dodgers’ 30 wins by rookies this season were the most for the club in a single season since 1952, when it set a franchise record with 51 wins by rookie pitchers (Source: Elias Sports Bureau). Los Angeles rookies combined to go 3025 with a 3.69 ERA (178 ER/433.2 IP) in 118 games (70 starts) this year. Kenta Maeda went 16-11 with a 3.48 ERA in 32 starts in a stellar rookie campaign, as he led the Dodgers in wins, innings (175.2), strikeouts (179) and starts. He posted the second-most wins ever by a Los Angeles rookie, behind only Rick Sutcliffe (17-10, 1979), and his 16 wins tied for the second most ever in a single-season by a Japanese pitcher, behind only Daisuke Matsuzaka’s 18 in 2008 with Boston (18-3). His 16 wins were the most by a MLB rookie since 2012, when Yu Darvish and Wade Miley both had 16 victories, while also ranking among the Majors’ top qualifying rookies in ERA (1st), opponents’ batting average (.229, 1st), strikeouts (2nd), innings (1st) and starts (32).

Los Angeles entered the season with Baseball America’s topDuring the campaign, Jansen also established new Dodger ranked farm system. franchise marks in saves, finishing the year with 189 after surpassing Eric Gagné (161), and strikeouts as a reliever, THE ONE AND ONLY: It was fitting that the Dodgers clinched their division championship with a walk-off victory on Sunday, Sept. 25: Vin with his 632 Ks eclipsing Jim Brewer’s mark of 604. Scully’s final home game. The Hall of Famer called his final game in THANK YOU FANS!: The Dodgers led MLB in attendance for the fourth the club’s season finale, Oct. 2 at San Francisco, retiring after 67 years consecutive season, finishing with 3,703,312 (45,720 average) and and 9,000+ Dodger games. The team thanked Scully for his service eight sellouts on the season. It’s the eighth-highest single-season with Vin Scully Weekend, which kicked off with an Appreciation Night attendance in Los Angeles history and the 15th highest in National on Sept. 23 with speakers including Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, League history. The Dodgers, who have reached three million in two-time Academy Award winner Kevin Costner, Hall of Famer Jaime attendance in 20 of the last 21 years, have topped the National League Jarrín, MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred, Dodger Chairman Mark in attendance 32 times since moving to Los Angeles in 1958, including Walter, Hall of Famer Sandy Koufax and Clayton Kershaw. leading the Majors 28 times in that span.

Game 1 Starter - LHP Clayton Kershaw: 12-4, 1.63 ERA in 21 GS

Single-Game Highs 2016 Career 9.0 (3x, last: 5/23 vs. CIN) 9.0 (24x, last: 5/23/16 vs. CIN) 5 (4/26 vs. MIA) 9 (4/26/09 at COL) 14 (5/1/16 vs. SD) 15 (2x, last: 9/2/15 at SF) 2 (6/26 at PIT) 6 (2x, last: 4/7/10 at PIT) Career vs. Washington 2016 Career 1-0, 1.29 (1 ER/7.0 IP)-1 GS 10-2, 2.02 (20 ER/89.0 IP)14G/13GS 1-0, 1.29 (1 ER/7.0 IP)-1 GS 7-1, 1.75 (11 ER/56.2 IP)-8G --3-1, 2.51 (9 ER/32.1 IP)-6G/5GS -----

2016 Regular Season: IP Finished the regular season going 12-4 with a 1.69 ERA (28 ER/149.0 IP) and held ER SO the opposition to a .184/.204/.268 slashline in 21 starts BB Among pitchers with 140.0 or more innings, he led the Majors with a 1.69 ERA, a .184 opponents’ batting average, a 0.72 WHIP and a 15.64 strikeout-to-walk ratio with Totals 172 strikeouts against just 11 walks in 149.0 innings Made six consecutive starts with 10 or more strikeouts and one walk or less (April At LA 21-May 17), a modern MLB record At WAS In 11 road starts this season, he went 4-3 with a 2.31 ERA (19 ER/74.0 IP) and has SHO/CG held batters to a .216 average…struck out 86 against just seven walks Since returning from the disabled list on Sept. 9, he went 1-2 in five starts with a 1.29 ERA (4 ER/28.0 IP) and held opponents to a .182 average (18-for-99)…struck out 27 batters against just two walks, while posting a 0.71 WHIP Was placed on the DL from June 27-Sept. 9 with a mild herniated disc in his lower back...the Dodgers went 38-24 during his time on the DL Selected to his sixth consecutive All-Star Game, after going 11-2 with a 1.79 ERA (24 ER/121.0 IP) in 16 starts prior to the All-Star break, but did not play due to injury limited batters to a .185 average and posted a 0.73 WHIP, while striking out 145 batters against just nine walks Was named the NL’s May Pitcher of the Month, his sixth-career monthly honor (last: July 2015), after posting a 5-0 record with a 0.91 ERA (5 ER/49.2 IP) in six May starts…led the Majors in ERA (0.91, 5 ER/49.2 IP), strikeouts (65), innings (49.2) and WHIP (0.52), while topping the NL in opponents’ batting average (.145, 24-for-166) Career vs. Washington: Faced the Nationals once this season on June 20 at Dodger Stadium, allowing just one run on six hits in 7.0 innings, picking up the win in the Dodgers’ 4-1 victory…struck out eight and did not issue a walk on 106 pitches Has won his last eight starts against the Nationals dating to April 27, 2012, going 8-0 with a 0.88 ERA (6 ER/61.2 IP) and holding batters to a .154/.169/.222 slashline with 73 strikeouts against four walks…has a 10-2 overall career record with a 2.02 ERA (20 ER/89.0 IP) against Washington, while limiting the batters to a .190 average and posting a 0.89 WHIP Has not allowed a run in his last 15.0 innings at Nationals Park, where he has a 3-1 career record and a 2.51 ERA (9 ER/32.1 IP) in six games (five starts) Career Postseason: Went 1-1 with a 2.63 ERA (4 ER/13.2 IP) in two starts in last year’s NLDS vs. the Mets In 13 career postseason games (10 starts), he has gone 2-6 with a 4.59 ERA (33 ER/64.2 IP) and has limited the opposition to a .219 average

Game 2 Starter - LHP Rich Hill: 12-5, 2.12 ERA in 20 GS|3-2, 1.83 ERA in 6 GS w/LA

Single-Game Highs 2016 Career 8.0 (5/23 at SEA) 9.0 (2x, last: 9/25/15 vs. BAL) 4 (9/15 at ARI) 7 (4x, last: 6/30/09 vs. BOS) 10 (3x, last: 7/7 at HOU) 11 (2x, last: 6/7/07 at ATL) 4 (3x, last: 5/13 at TB) 5 (3x, last: 8/11/06 at COL) Career vs. Washington 2016 Career --1-1, 4.34 (9 ER/18.2 IP)-4G/3GS ------0-0, 3.18 (2 ER/5.2 IP)-1GS -----

2016 Regular Season: IP Finished the regular season with a 12-5 record and a 2.12 ERA (28 ER/149.0 IP) ER SO and held the opposition to a .195/.269/.261 slashline in 20 starts with the BB Athletics and the Dodgers…struck out 129 batters against 33 walks, posting a 10.52 strikeout per nine innings In five starts since joining the Dodgers, went 3-2 with a 1.83 ERA (7 ER/34.1 IP) Totals and a 0.79 WHIP…limited the opposition to a .182 average (22-for-121) and struck At LA At WAS out 39 batters against five walks SHO/CG In 10 starts on the road this season, he went 8-1 with a 1.89 ERA (13 ER/62.0 IP) and limited the opposition to a .179 average…struck out 77 batters against 16 walks, while posting a 0.89 WHIP Posted a career-best nine-game winning streak from May 7-September 10, going 9-0 with a 1.43 ERA (10 ER/63.0 IP) and a 0.83 WHIP in 11 starts…held the opposition to a .158 average Was acquired from the Oakland Athletics on Aug. 1 along with outfielder Josh Reddick…posted a 9-3 record with a 2.25 ERA in 14 starts with the Athletics, struck out 90 against 28 walks and limited opposing hitters to a .201 batting average with a 1.09 WHIP Prior to the trade, he led the American League (min. 75.0 IP) in ERA and home runs allowed per 9.0 innings (0.24, 2 HR/76.0IP), while ranking among the league’s best in opponents’ average (2nd), WHIP (9th) and strikeouts per 9.0 innings (10.66, 90 SO/76.0 IP) Was placed on the disabled list from July 20-Aug. 24 with a left middle finger blister Career vs. Washington: Did not face the Nationals this season…last faced Washington on June 8, 2012 as a member of the Red Sox, allowing just two hits and striking out one in 1.0 scoreless inning of relief Last started against Washington on May 22, 2009 at Nationals Park as a member of the Baltimore Orioles, allowing two runs on three hits in 5.2 innings of work and did not factor into the decision in the Orioles’ 4-2 victory…struck out six and walked four on 98 pitches In four games (three starts) against the Nationals, he has gone 1-1 with a 4.34 ERA (9 ER/18.2 IP) and has struck out 17 against six walks Career Postseason: Made his only postseason appearance in Game 3 of the 2007 NLDS as a starting pitcher for the Chicago Cubs against the Arizona Diamondbacks …suffered the loss after allowing three runs on six hits in 3.0 innings, while striking out three and walking two in the Cubs’ 5-1 defeat At 36 years old, he is the oldest pitcher to make a start for the Dodgers in the postseason since Greg Maddux (40 years, 176 days) started Game 3 of the 2006 NLDS against the New York Mets

Game 3 Starter – RHP Kenta Maeda: 16-11, 3.48 ERA in 32 GS

Single-Game Highs

2016 Career 2016 Regular Season: IP (SP) 7.0 (2x, last: 7/10 vs. SD) 7.0 (2x, last: 7/10 vs. SD) In his first big league season, he went 16-11 with a 3.48 ERA (68 ER/175.2 IP) in 32 ER 5 (2x, last: 10/2 at SF) 5 (2x, last: 10/2/16 at SF SO 13 (7/10 at SD) 13 (7/10/16 at SD) starts, while limiting the opposition to a .229 average and striking out 179 against BB 4 (2x, last: 8/23 vs. SF) 4 (2x, last: 8/23/16 vs. SF) 50 walks…his 32 starts are the most he has made in his professional career Career vs. Washington (previous: 31 in 2011 with Hiroshima) 2016 Career He posted the second-most wins ever by a Los Angeles rookie, behind only Rick Totals ----At LA ----Sutcliffe (17-10, 1979), and his 16 wins tied for the second most ever in a singleAt WAS ----season by a Japanese pitcher, behind only Daisuke Matsuzaka’s 18 in 2008 with SHO/CG ----Boston (18-3)…his 16 wins were the most by a MLB rookie since 2012, when Yu Darvish and Wade Miley both had 16 victories Ranks among the overall NL leaders in wins (16, T-5th), ERA (3.48, 14th), WHIP (1.14, 10th), strikeouts (179, 12th), strikeout per nine innings (9.17, 7th), strikeout-to-walk ratio (3.58, 12th), opponents’ batting average (.229, 11th), opponents’ on-base pct. (.291, 11th) and opponents’ slugging pct. (.359, 10th) Leads qualifying ML rookie starting pitchers in starts (32), wins (16), opponents’ batting average (.229), WHIP (1.14), innings pitched (175.2) and strikeout-to-walk ratio (3.58) In his Major League debut on April 6 at San Diego, he blasted a solo homer in his second big league at-bat, becoming the first Dodger to homer in his big league debut since shortstop Jose Offerman did so vs. the Montreal Expos on Aug. 19, 1990 and the first Dodger pitcher to homer in his Major League debut since Dan Bankhead vs. the Pittsburgh Pirates on Aug. 26, 1947…did not allow a run in his first two starts at San Diego and vs. Arizona before surrendering a run in the third inning of his third start on April 17, ending his streak at 14.0 innings to begin his career… Maeda’s scoreless streak tied Pedro Astacio (14.0 IP, 1992) for the third longest to begin a career in Los Angeles history, behind only Dave Stewart (18.1 IP, 1978-81) and Bob Welch (15.1 IP, 1978). Career vs. Washington: Will be facing Washington for the first time in his career…the Nationals were one of three NL teams that he did not face in 2016 In seven starts against NL East opponents, he went 4-3 with a 3.60 ERA (16 ER/40.0 IP) and struck out 32 batters against 11 walks Career Postseason: Will make his first career postseason appearance

43 LHP LUIS AVILAN: 2016 Regular Season: 3-0, 3.20 ERA – 27 G

2016

Single-Game Highs (as reliever) Career

2016

Single-Game Highs (as reliever) Career

Last Win: 9/22 vs. COL Last Loss: 9/9/15 at LAA Last Save: --IP 1.2 (7/20 at WAS) 3.2 (7/17/12 vs. SF) Career Postseason: 0-0, 0.00 ERA (0 ER/4.0 IP)- 6 G/W Los Angeles and Atlanta ER 3 (8/7 vs. BOS) 5 (4/14/14 at PHI) SO 3 (2x, last: 9/14 at NYY) 5 (7/17/12 vs. SF) Regular Season Career vs. WAS: 2-0, 2.73 ERA (8 ER/26.1 IP)-30 G BB 2 (4/24 at COL) 2 (10x, 4/24/16 at COL) Left-hander shuttled back and forth between the Dodgers and Triple-A Oklahoma City, IR/IRSc 26/7 194/42 logging seven different stints with Los Angeles Was 3-0 and fired 9.1 scoreless innings in his last 11 games since Aug. 31…overall, limited opposing hitters to a .176 batting average (12-for-68) with 28 strikeouts in 19.2 innings with the Dodgers Left-handers batted .200 (8-for-40) with no extra-base hits against him and righties hit .143 (4-for-31)…on the road, his ERA was 2.53 (3 ER/10.2 IP) and batters hit .216 (8-for-37)…stranded 19 of 26 inherited runners Worked 8.0 scoreless innings with nine strikeouts in September/October Has appeared in the postseason twice: The 2013 NLDS with Atlanta (4 games) and the 2015 NLDS with L.A. (2 games) Posted a 4.00 ERA (4 ER/9.0 IP), despite limiting the opposition to a .129 average (4-for-29) Worked a season-high 1.2 innings on July 20 at Washington…struck out three and retired all five batters faced Was 0-3 with four saves and a 4.24 ERA in 33 games with Triple-A Oklahoma City this year

52 RHP PEDRO BÁEZ: 3-2, 3.04 ERA - 73 G Last Game: Yest. at WAS, 0.2 IP-1 G Last Win: 7/29 at ARI Last Loss: 6/16 vs. MIL Last Save: --Career Postseason: 0-0, 13.50 ERA (5 ER/3.1 IP)- 5 G/W Los Angeles 2016 Postseason: 0-0, 0.00 ERA (0 ER/0.2 IP)-1 G Regular Season Career vs. WAS: 0-1, 6.14 ERA (5 ER/7.1 IP)-6 G

IP ER SO BB IR/IRSc

2.2 (7/8 vs. SD) 3 (3x, last: 8/19 at CIN) 3 (4x, last: 9/12 at NYY) 2 (2x, last: 8/28 vs. CHC) 27/12

2.0 (9x, last: 6/16 vs. MIL) 3 (4x, last: 8/19/16 at CIN) 4 (8/10/15 vs. WAS) 2 (5x, last: 8/28/16 vs. CHC) 73/28

Hard-throwing right-hander spent his second full year in the big leagues and made his second consecutive Opening Day roster with the Dodgers Limited opponents to a .195 batting average, which ranked 12th in the National League and was effective against both right-handed (.214, 37-for-173) and left-handed hitters (.160, 15-for-94) Ranked 12th in the NL with a 1.00 WHIP…was 3-1 and posted a 2.14 ERA (10 ER/42.0 IP) in 38 games at Dodger Stadium…limited batters to a .178 average at home Did not allow a hit and tossed 7.2 scoreless innings in seven extra-inning contests this year Had two dominating months: July (14.2 scoreless innings with a .064 opponents average (3-for-47) and September/October (11.2 scoreless/15 SO) Reeled off 15 consecutive scoreless appearances (17.1 IP) from July to Aug. 7…was 2-0 and limited batters to a .071 average (4-for-56) while walking two in that span Was sent to Double-A Tulsa for a week on Aug. 30…did not pitch for the Drillers Appeared in two games against the Nationals this year, giving up one run (a homer to Wilson Ramos) in 1.2 innings of work Tossed a season-high 2.2 innings on July 8 vs. San Diego…struck out three batters in a game four times Appeared in three games for the Dodgers in each of the last three National League Division series (2014-16)

55 RHP JOE BLANTON: 2016 Regular Season: 7-2, 2.48 ERA – 75 G

Single-Game Highs (as reliever)

2016 Career Last Game: Yest. at WAS, 0.2 IP, BB IP 2.0 (7x, last: 8/26 vs. CHC) 4.0 (5/16/15 vs. NYY) Last Win: 9/25 vs. COL Last Loss: 5/6 at TOR Last Save: 7/27/15 at CLE ER 3 (3x, last: 7/29 vs. ARI) 6 (8/13/13 at NYY) Career Postseason: 2-0, 3.95 ERA (18 ER/41.0 IP) in 11 games (six starts) w/OAK, PHI and LA SO 4 (2x, last: 5/21 at SD) 6 (8/15/15 at NYM) 2016 Postseason: 0-0, 0.00 ERA (0 ER/0.2 IP)-1 G BB 3 (9/16 at ARI) 4 (9/3/13 vs. TB) IR/IRSc 23/10 36/13 Regular Season Career vs. WAS: 3-4, 5.73 ERA (48 ER/75.1 IP) in 16 games (13 starts) Converted starter was signed to a one-year deal in the offseason and had one of the best years of his career in his late-inning relief role Ranked 10th in the NL with a .194 opponents’ batting average and 13th with a 1.01 WHIP Led the team with a career-high 75 appearances (T-8th, NL)…ranked 10th with a 2.48 ERA Was been tough on both righties (.198, 37-for-187) and lefties (.186, 18-for-97) Appeared in two games against the Nationals this season, allowing one run in 2.1 innings pitched Limited batters to a .180 average (25-for-139) away from home…in 14 games against the NL East, allowed just two runs in 16.0 innings (1.13 ERA) In close and late situations, held hitters to a .168 average (23-for-137)…came out of the gate strong, posting a 0.87 ERA (1 ER/10.1 IP) in 10 April contests…ended up ranking fifth on the Dodgers in innings (80.0 IP) and fourth in wins (7) Pitched a season-high 2.0 innings on seven different occasions, most recently on Aug. 26 vs. CHC…struck out a season-high four batters twice (May 11 and 21) Tossed scoreless relief in 10 of his last 11 outings (10.1 IP) from Sept. 3-Oct. 2…just giving up two runs on the final day of the season Has appeared in 10 different postseason series…made his postseason debut as a reliever in the 2006 ALDS for Oakland…started exactly one game for Philadelphia in the 2008 NLDS, NLCS and World Series…made two relief appearances in the 2009 NLDS…started one game in the 2009 NLCS, the 2009 World Series and the 2010 NLCS…came out of the bullpen in one game during the 2011 NLDS…Won Game 4 of the 2008 World Series and also hit a solo homer in that contest

75 LHP GRANT DAYTON: 0-1, 2.05 ERA-25 G

Single-Game Highs (as reliever)

2016 Career Last Game: Yest. at WAS, 0.2 IP, BB, K IP 2.0 (4x, last: 8/31 at COL) 2.0 (4x, last: 8/31 at COL) Last Win: --Last Loss: 8/18 at PHI Last Save: --ER 2 (8/18 at PHI) 2 (8/18 at PHI) Career and 2016 Postseason: 0-0, 0.00 ERA (0 ER/0.2 IP)-1 G w/LA SO 4 (8/6 vs. BOS) 4 (8/6/16 vs. BOS) Regular Season Career vs. WAS: --BB 1 (6x, last: 9/4 vs. SD) 1 (6x: 9/4/16 vs. SD) 28-year-old southpaw was recalled by the Dodgers on July 21and made his big league IR/IRSc 12/3 12/3 debut July 22 at STL with 2.0 scoreless innings…was then sent back to Triple-A Oklahoma City, before being recalled for the rest of the season on Aug. 4…tossed scoreless relief in 13 of his 15 games since Aug. 28 (2 R/13.1 IP) Limited opponents to a .149 batting avg, including a .140 mark vs. LHH (6-for-43) Has 39 strikeouts in 26.1 innings in 25 games…posted a 0.76 WHIP…never walked more than one batter in any outing Pitched a season-high 2.0 innings on four different occasions, including a four-strikeout performance on Aug. 6 vs. Boston Posted a 1.38 ERA (2 ER/13.0 IP) and struck out 22 batters at Dodger Stadium The Dodgers were 14-11 in his 25 appearances…did not allow a run in any of those 14 victories (14.2 IP, 23 Ks, 3 H, one extra-base hit) First batters were 2-for-24 (.083) with one double and one walk against him In 38 minor league appearances with Double-A Tulsa and Triple-A Oklahoma City, went 5-2 with five saves and a 2.42 ERA (14 ER/52.0 IP)

46 RHP JOSH FIELDS : 1-0, 4.63 ERA-37 G (w/ HOU & LA); 1-0, 2.79 ERA-22 G w/LA

Single-Game Highs (as reliever) 2016 Career 2.0 (10x, last; 5/12/16 at BOS) 2.0 (5/12 at BOS) 3 (4/6 at NYY) 5 (2x, last: 5/6/14 at DET) 3 (2x, last: 5/12 at BOS) 4 (4x, last: 5/1/15 at SEA) 1 (9x, last: 9/16 at ARI) 3 (9/18/13 vs. CIN) 23/3 87/19

Last Win: 8/7 vs. BOS Last Loss: 5/29/15 vs. CWS Last Save: 0/0/14 at SEA IP Career Postseason: 0-0, 10.80 ERA (2 ER/1.2 IP)-2 G W Houston ER Regular Season Career vs. WAS: 0-1, 9.00 ERA (1 ER/1.0 IP)-1 G SO BB Hard-throwing right-hander was acquired from Houston at the trade deadline in IR/IRSc exchange for minor leaguer Yordan Alvarez As a Dodger, went 1-0 with a 2.79 ERA (6 ER/19.1 IP) in 22 games…tossed scoreless relief in 10 of his last 11 games since Sept. 2 (1 ER/9.2 IP) Struck out 22 batters in 19.1 IP as a Dodger…the opposition hit .048 (1-for-21) against him with runners in scoring position and two out With the Dodgers, batters hit .188 against with RISP and lefties hit just .185 (5-for-27) with five singles Combined to allow only three of 23 inherited runners to score (13.0%) Went 1-0 with one save and a 1.65 ERA in 23 games with Houston’s Triple-A Fresno…appeared in two games for Houston in the ALDS vs. Kansas City last year

74 RHP KENLEY JANSEN: 3-2, 47 SV, 1.83 ERA - 71 G

Single-Game Highs (as reliever)

68 RHP ROSS STRIPLING: 5-9, 3.96 ERA – 22 G (14 GS)

Single-Game Highs (as reliever)

2016 Career Last Game: Yest. at WAS, 1.2 IP, H, 3 K (SV) 2.0 (11x, last: 7/10/13 at ARI) IP 1.2 (4/13 vs. ARI) Last Win: 6/19 vs. MIL Last Loss: 6/11 at SF Last Save: 10/7 at WAS (NLDS) ER 3 (8/10 vs. PHI) 5 (4/19/11 vs. ATL) Career Postseason: 0-0, 6 SV, 1.86 ERA (2 ER/9.2 IP)- 11 G W/LA SO 3 (10x, last: 9/17 at ARI) 4 (9x, last: 5/15/15 vs. COL) BB 2 (2x, last: 10/1 at SF) 2 (21x, last: 10/1/16 at SF) 2016 Postseason: 0-0, SV, 0.00 ERA (0 ER/1.2 IP)-1 G IR/IRSc 14/1 91/22 Regular Season Career vs. WAS: 1-0, 10 SV, 2.01 ERA (5 ER/22.1 IP)- 23 G Last night became the first Dodger since Jay Howell in 1988 (2.1 IP) to record a save while working the final five outs or more…his six saves are the most in Dodger postseason history Worked the final five outs just once in the regular season (April 13 vs. Arizona)…recorded three saves in which he worked more than 1.0 inning Tied with Zach Britton and Mark Melancon for second in the Majors with a career-high 47 saves, four behind Jeurys Familia (was 47 of 53 in save opportunities) Selected to his first-career All-Star game…tossed scoreless relief in 61 of 71 appearances Ranks second among NL relievers in ERA (1.83)…limiting opponents to a .150 batting average, which was the best in baseball…his 0.67 WHIP also ranked first in the Majors…recorded 104 Ks, which ranked third in the National League…walked just 11 batters…owned the best strikeout-to-walk ratio in the National League (9.45) Appeared in four games against the Nationals this season, allowing just two baserunners (1B, HBP) in 4.0 scoreless innings with three Ks…has made nine-career appearances at Nationals Park, going 3-for-3 in save opportunities and posting a 2.16 ERA (2 ER/8.1 IP) On June 21 vs. Washington, established new Dodger franchise marks in saves, finishing the year with 189 after surpassing Eric Gagné (161)…also set the franchise record for strikeouts as a reliever (632), eclipsing Jim Brewer’s mark of 604 Was the only Dodger to record a save this season…the first time that’s happened since the save became a statistic in 1969 Posted a 1.60 ERA (7 ER/39.1 IP) and held the opposition to a .111 average at Dodger Stadium this year Righties hit just .109 (13-for-119)…was strong against left-handers as well (.191, 22-for-115) Had a sub-2.00 ERA in every single month this season except for August (3.97)…recorded at least six saves in every month First batters hit .092 (6-for-65) with five walks against him…batters were just 2-for-25 (.080) against with runners in scoring position and two out Appeared in the 2013 NLDS and NLCS, the 2014 NLDS, the 2015 NLDS and the 2016 NLDS…in 11 postseason appearances, has been scored on in just one game, yielding two runs to the Cardinals in Game 5 of the 2013 NLCS (a Dodger victory)…has tossed 6.0 scoreless innings over the last three postseason campaigns

Last Win: 9/23 vs. COL Last Loss: 9/28 at SD Last Save: --2016 Career IP 4.0 (9/18 at ARI) 4.0 (9/18/16 at ARI) Career Postseason: --ER 2 (2x, last: 9/13 at NYY) 2 (2x, last: 9/13/16 at NYY) Regular Season Career vs. WAS: --SO 4 (3x, last: 9/28 at SD) 4 (3x, last: 9/28/16 at SD) Rookie right-hander made 14 starts for the Dodgers and eight relief appearances, BB 3 (9/18 at ARI) 3 (9/18/16 at ARI) which were all 2.0 innings or more…tossed a season-high 4.0 innings out of the pen on IR/IRSc 3/1 3/1 Sept. 18 at ARI, allowing just one run and recording four strikeouts Picked up the victory on Sept. 23 with 3.0 scoreless innings of relief Went gone 3-6 with a 4.52 ERA (38 ER/75.2 IP) in 14 starts and posted a 2-3 record with a 2.22 ERA (6 ER/24.1 IP) in eight relief appearances Limited opponents to a .250 batting average, including a .222 mark against lefties (38-for-171) In his Major League debut at AT&T Park on April 8, fired a season-high 7.1 innings of no-hit baseball, before being removed from the game…left leading 2-0, but ended up with the no-decision in an eventual Dodger loss…did not record his first big league win until May 13 at Dodger Stadium vs. St. Louis…allowed four runs in 5.0 innings Struck out a season-high six batters twice, including May 8 at Toronto, when he allowed just one run over 6.0 innings Overall, posted a 3.42 ERA (18 ER/47.1 IP) on the road, holding the opposition to a .232 average Split his time between the Dodgers and Triple-A Oklahoma City…was recalled to L.A. four different times this season…with the OKC Dodgers (5 games) and AZL Dodgers (1 start), went 0-3 with a 3.66 ERA (8 ER/19.2 IP0 in six games (five starts)…was on the 7-day DL at Triple-A from May 29-June 28 with lower body fatigue

7 LHP JULIO URÍAS: 5-2, 3.39 ERA – 18 G (15 GS)

Single-Game Highs (as reliever)

Last Win: 8/27 vs. CHC Last Loss: 6/12 at SF Las Save: --2016 Career Career Postseason: --IP 3.0 (8/3 at COL) 3.0 (8/3/16 at COL) ER 3 (8/3 at COL) 3 (8/3/16 at COL) Regular Season Career vs. WAS: 0-0, 3.00 ERA (3 ER/9.0 IP)- 2 GS 3 (2x, last: 8/13 vs. PIT) 3 (2x, last: 8/13/16 vs. PIT) Rookie phenom was recalled and made his Major League debut on May 27 at Citi SO BB 3 (8/13 vs. PIT) 3 (8/13/16 vs. PIT) Field…made 15 starts in May, June, July, August and September for Los Angeles…finished IR/IRSc 1/0 1/0 the season at Triple-A Oklahoma City going 5-1 with a 1.40 ERA (7 ER/45.0 IP) in 11 games (seven starts) Single-Game Highs (as starter) Made four different stints with the Dodgers…was rated ranked by MLB.com and Baseball 2016 Career America as the Dodgers’ No. 1 prospect and the second and fourth overall prospect in IP 6.0 (3x, last: 8/27 vs. CHC) Same as 2016 ER 5 (2x, last: 7/4 vs. BAL) Same baseball, respectively at the time of his call up 8 (2x, last: 8/27 vs. CHC) Same At 19-years-old (19 years, 289 days) became just the second teenager to start a game in SO BB 6 (6/28 at MIL) Same the Major Leagues this century, joining Felix Hernandez (19 years, 118 days), who debuted in 2005…the last Dodger teenager to appear in a game was Fernando Valenzuela, who made his debut out of the bullpen on Sept. 15, 1980 at 19 years, 319 days…the last Dodger younger than Urias to make a start was Dick Calmus, who took the mound at Dodger Stadium on Aug. 23, 1963 vs. Milwaukee at 19 years, 228 days. – Source: Stats, LLC. Won his first Major League game on June 28 at Milwaukee, allowing two runs in 6.0 innings…tossed 6.0 scoreless innings on Aug. 21 at Cincinnati and then allowed just one run over 6.0 innings vs. the Cubs in his next start on Aug. 27…also struck out a career-high tying eight batters in that contest Was unbeaten in his last 14 games (11 starts) since June 17…after the All-Star break, went 4-0 with a 1.99 ERA (9 ER/40.2 IP) in 10 games (seven starts) Made two starts against the Nationals in 2016…allowed two runs and six hits in 5.0 innings in a no-decision at Dodger Stadium on June 22…gave up one run in 4.0 innings on July 21 at Washington…the Dodgers won both starts Overall, held lefties to a .234 average (15-for-64)…the opposition hit .188 (13-for-69) with no home runs with runners in scoring position Allowed four runs in 7.2 innings in three relief appearances (4.70 ERA) Had 84 Ks against just 31 walks in 77.0 innings

15 AUSTIN BARNES – 5-for-32 (.156), 2B, 2 RBI in 21 G

2016

Single-Game Highs Career

2016

Single-Game Highs Career

Series vs. WSH: --H 1 (5x, last: 9/18 at ARI) 2 (7/20/15 at ATL) Vs. LHP/Vs. RHP: .222/.130 RISP: 2-for-7 (.286) HR ----RBI 1 (2x, last: 9/18 at ARI) 1 (3x, last: 9/18 at ARI) Last HR (games since): None As PH: 0-for-8 BB 2 (2x, last: 9/18 at ARI) 2 (2x, last: 9/18 at ARI) Career Postseason: Making first-career postseason appearance SB --1 (9/9/15 at LAA) 2016 Regular Season Notes: Hit Streak --2 (9/15-16/15) Spent the majority of the season with Triple-A Oklahoma City, but went 5-for-32 with a double and two RBI in 21 games in four stints with the Dodgers Made seven starts, five at catcher and two at second base…overall, appeared in nine games at catcher, seven at second base and one at third base withouth committing an error…allowed two stolen bases while catching Made his first-career Opening Day roster with the Dodgers With Triple-A Oklahoma City: At Triple-A, hit .295 with 22 doubles, five triples, six homers and 39 RBI in 85 games in his sixth professional season Posted a .380 on-base percentage, which would have ranked eighth in the Pacific Coast League if he had at-bats to qualify…batted .385 (30-for-78) with runners in scoring position Stole 18 bases, while only being caught three times Appeared in 63 games (62 starts) at catcher and 15 games (13 starts) at second base…threw out 12 of 48 attempted basestealers (25.0%)

6 CHARLIE CULBERSON – 19-for-67 (.269), 3 2B, HR, 7 RBI in 34 G

Series vs. WSH: 0-for-1, K, defensive sub. (10/7 – G1) H 3 (9/25 vs. COL) 3 (2x, last: 9/25/16 vs. COL) Vs. LHP/Vs. RHP: .313/.211 RISP: .417 (5-for-12) HR 1 (9/25 vs. COL) 1 (6x, last: 9/25/16 vs. COL) RBI 3 (4/15 vs. SF) 3 (2x, last: 4/15/16 vs. SF) Last HR (games since): 9/25 vs. COL (4 G) As PH: 3-for-10 (.300) BB 1 (5/16 vs. LAA) 2 (3x, last: 8/17/14 vs. CIN) Career Postseason: .000 (0-for-1) in 1 G SB 1 (5/9 vs. NYM) 2 (9/21/13 vs. ARI) 2016 Regular Season Notes: Hit Streak 6 (9/18-29) 10 (9/11-9/22/13) Batted .284 with three doubles, a homer and seven RBI in three stints with the Dodgers Over his final 12 games after Aug. 31, batted .370 (10-for-27) with three runs, a double, a homer and an RBI Fared well against lefties, going 15-for-48 (.313), while hitting just .211 (4-for-19) against righties Blasted a walk-off home run on Sept. 25 to clinch the NL West division title…was his first home run since Aug. 14, 2014 and his second-career walkoff home run (other: May 3, 2014, COL vs. NYM) Posted a .966 combined fielding percentage, appearing in 10 games (nine starts) at second base, four games (two starts) at third, 11 games (eight starts) at shortstop and two games at left field this season for the Dodgers In 70 games with Triple-A OKC this season, he hit .260 with 17 doubles, two triplse, four homers, 33 RBI and six stolen bases Made the Dodgers’ Opening Day roster, his second-career time doing so (also: 2014 with Colorado)

16 ANDRE ETHIER (L) – 5-for-24 (.208), 2B, HR, 2 RBI in 16 G

Single-Game Highs 2016 Career 1 (5x, last: 10/2 at SF) 5 (3x, 5/12/15 vs. MIA) 1 (9/23 vs. COL) 3 (6/26/09 vs. SEA) 1 (2x, last: 9/29 at SD) 6 (6/26/09 vs. SEA) 1 (2x, last: 9/27 at SD) 4 (2x, last: 9/17/10 vs. COL) --2 (8/29/08 at ARI) 2 (9/22-23) 30 (4/2-5/6/11)

Seris vs. WSH: --H HR Vs. LHP/Vs. RHP: .000/.217 RISP: 1-for-7 RBI Last HR (games since): 9/23 vs. COL (6 G) As PH: 4-for-11, HR (.364) BB Career Postseason: .234 (25-for-107), 6 2B, 3 HR, 8 RBI in 35 G SB 2016 Regular Season Notes: Hit Streak Spent the majority of the season on the disabled list with a broken right tibia, suffered on March 18 during a Spring Training game against Arizona when he fouled a ball off his leg Reinstated from the 60-day DL on Sept. 10 and went 5-for-24 (.208) in 16 games, including 12 pinch-hit appearances (4-for-11, .364, HR)…also appeared in four games (two starts) in left field Slugged his only homer of the season with pinch-hit solo shot in the fourth inning on Sept. 23 vs. Colorado, his fourth career pinch-hit homer Finished the season ranked among the all-time Los Angeles leaders in hits (1359, 7th), doubles (302, T-3rd with Karros), homers (160, 9th), RBI (684, 5th) and games (1433, 8th)…the only LA outfielder with more games played is Willie Davis (1,952) Began his minor league rehab on Aug. 25 and appeared in 11 games with Single-A Rancho Cucamonga (including two Cal. League playoff games), going 13-for-41 (.317) with nine runs, four doubles, a homer and four RBI

23 ADRIÁN GONZÁLEZ (L) – .285, 31 2B, 18 HR, 90 RBI in 156 G

2016

Single-Game Highs Career

Series vs. WSH: 0-for-4 (10/7 – G1) H 4 (5/28 at NYM) 6 (8/11/09 at MIL) Vs. LHP/Vs. RHP: .244/.303 RISP: .297 (43-for-145) HR 3 (8/23 at CIN) 3 (2x, last: 8/23/16 at CIN) RBI 8 (8/23 at CIN) 8 (8/23/16 at CIN) Last HR (games since): 9/28 at SD (2 G) As PH: 1-for-6 (.167) BB 3 (3x, last: 7/4 vs. BAL) 4 (6/19/09 vs. OAK) Career Postseason: .286 (26-for-91), 3 2B, 5 HR, 15 RBI in 24 G SB --1 (6x, last: 3/23/14 at ARI) Has hit safely in six of his last seven postseason games and in 19 of 24 career Hit Streak 17 (8/6-24) 18 (6/20-7/7/12) postseason contests Had just the 10th multi-homer game in Dodger postseason history in 2013 NLDS G5 vs. St. Louis, going 3-for-4 with three runs and two homers 2016 Regular Season Notes: Reached 90 RBI for the 10th consecutive season since 2007, becoming the only Major League player to accomplish the feat. Behind González, Albert Pujols and Miguel Cabrera are the only big-league hitters to post nine 90-RBI seasons in that span Batted .297 with runners in scoring position (43-for-145) and went 6-for-13 (.462) with the bases loaded, including a grand slam on July 24 at STL Collected his 400th career double on July 8 against the Padres (finished season with 415 2B) and hit career home run No. 300 on Aug. 7 off Boston’s Junichi Tazawa (finished season with 308 HR)…is one of seven active players with 400 doubles and 300 homers along with Adrian Beltre, Carlos Beltran, Albert Pujols, David Ortiz, Miguel Cabrera and Mark Teixeira Batted .412 (28-for-68) during his 17-game hitting streak from Aug. 6-24, which tied for the second longest streak of his career…had his best month of the season in August, when he hit safely in 23 of 28 games and batted. 330 with nine doubles, seven homers and 24 RBI Leads the Majors with 1,745 games played since 2006 and has not been placed on the disabled list during the course of his career Is the Dodgers’ nominee for the 2016 Roberto Clemente Award, his third nomination in four years Single-Game Highlights: Had a career day on Aug. 22 at Cincinnati, going 3-for-6 with a career high-tying three home runs (also: April 8, 2015 vs. SD) and a career-high eight RBI…the eight RBI tied for the second most in a single game in Los Angeles history with Ron Cey (7/31/74 at SD) and Yasmani Grandal (5/7/15 at MIL), behind only James Loney’s nine on Sept. 28, 2006 at COL Drove in the game-winner on Sept. 19 vs. San Francisco with an RBI double, his 10th career walk-off RBI Ejected from the game on June 29 at Milwaukee, fifth career ejection

9 YASMANI GRANDAL (S) – .228, 14 2B, 3B, 27 HR, 71 RBI in 126 G

Single-Game Highs

2016 Career Series vs. WSH: 2-for-4, K (10/7 – G1) H 5 (7/8 vs. SD) 5 (7/8/16 vs. SD) Vs. LHP/Vs. RHP: .224/.229 RISP: .247 (24-for-97) HR 3 (7/8 vs. SD) 3 (7/8/16 vs. SD) Last HR: 9/22 vs. COL (7 G) As PH: 2-for-12 (.167) RBI 6 (7/8 vs. SD) 8 (5/7/15 at MIL) BB 3 (2x, last: 8/7 vs. BOS) 3 (6x, last: 8/7/16 vs. BOS) Career Postseason: .214 (3-for-14), 2 RBI in 4 G SB 1 (7/29 vs. ARI) 1 (4x, last: 7/29/16 vs. ARI) 2016 Regular Season Notes: Hit Streak 9 (7/29-8/9) 9 (7/29-8/9/16) Set career-best marks in runs (49), hits (89), homers (27), RBI (72) and slugging percentage (.477) in 126 games…led the Dodgers with 64 walks Topped Major League catchers in home runs…his 27 homers were the fifth most by a Los Angeles catcher behind only Mike Piazza’s 1993, 1995, 1996 and 1997 seasons…averaged 411.6 feet per home run, the ninth highest in the Majors according to ESPN’s Home Run Tracker Posted a .267/.376/.581 slashline in 69 games after July 1, going 58-for-217 with six doubles, a triple, 20 homers and 43 RBI, after hitting just .179 (31-for-173) in his first 57 games through June 30 In 68 home games, posted a .278(55-for-198)/.378/.621 slashline with 20 of his 27 home runs, while hitting just .177 (34-for-192) in 58 road games Appeared in 115 games (106 starts) at catcher and four games (two starts) at first base this season…his 3.72 catcher ERA this season ranked fourth in the Majors…threw out 16 of 59 attempted basestealers (21.3%) Batted .448 (13-for-29) with four homers and 10 RBI during a career-best nine-game hitting streak from July 29-Aug. 9 Opened the season on the disabled list with right forearm soreness…reinstated on April 12 Single-Game Highlights: Homered from both sides of the plate on Sept. 22 vs. Colorado, becoming the first Dodger to do so since Orlando Hudson on July 12, 2009, the second of which was his second-career grand slam off Boone Logan, which turned a 4-3 deficit into a 7-4 lead in the seventh inning Notched the third walk-off RBI of his career with a bases-loaded walk on June 19 vs. Milwaukee Established career highs in hits (5), homers (3) and runs (3, tied mark for the third time) on July 8 vs. San Diego, going 5-for-5 with six RBI in the Dodgers’ 10-6 victory…according to the Elias Sports Bureau, Grandal is the 10th player since 1920, the first year MLB started keeping track of RBI, to go 5-for-5 or better with at least three homers and six RBI in a game…the only other player to have a game like that as a catcher was Victor Martinez for the Indians in 2004 (5-for-5, 3 HR, 7 RBI) and the only other Dodger to do it was Shawn Green at Milwaukee in 2002 (6-for-6, 4 HR, 7 RBI)…in Dodger history, only Grandal, Roy Campanella (Aug. 26 1950) and Mike Piazza (June 29, 1996) have had three-homer games as a catcher

47 HOWIE KENDRICK – .255, 26 2B, 2 3B, 8 HR, 40 RBI in 146 G

2016

Single-Game Highs Career

Series vs. WSH: 1-for-2, PH, defensive sub. (10/7 – G1) H 4 (5x, last: 9/2 vs. SD) 5 (8/25/10 vs. TB) Vs. LHP/Vs. RHP: .234/.264 RISP: .235 (23-for-98) HR 1 (8x, last: 8/16 at PHI) 2 (6x, last: 4/18/14 at DET) RBI 3 (2x, 8/16 at PHI) 5 (2x, last: 9/20/09 at TEX) Last HR: 8/16 at PHI (41 G) As PH: 3-for-16 (.188) BB 3 (8/29 at COL) 3 (2x, last: 8/29/16 at COL) Career Postseason: .210 (17-for-81), 2 2B, 3B, 2 HR, 6 RBI in 21 G SB 1 (10x, last: 9/12 at NYY) 2 (6x, 5/11/14 at TOR) 2016 Regular Season Notes: Hit Streak 16 (7/4-24) 18 (6/20-7/19/11) Showed his versatility in the field and batted .255 with eight homers and 40 RBI in his second season with the Dodgers, while setting a career high with 50 walks Posted a .984 combined fielding percentage, appearing in games at first base (11 G, 7 GS), second base (32 G, 23 GS), third base (17 G, 14 GS) and left field (94 G/79 GS)…made one start as the DH this season…entering 2016, had played almost exclusively at second base, appearing in only 78 games at first base, one game at third base and 26 games in the left field in the Majors Joins Hi Myers (1917) as the only Dodgers in franchise history to appear in 10+ games at first base, second base, third base and the outfield in the same season (Source: Stats, LLC)…on May 4, became the first Dodger to appear in left field, third base and second base in a game since at least 1913 Recorded a 16-game hitting streak from July 4-24, during which he batted .377 (26-for-69) with seven doubles, three homers and nine RBI…ranked fifth in the NL with a .344 July batting average (32-for-93) in 24 games Led the team with 10 stolen bases, reaching double-digit steals for the seventh time in the last nine years since 2008 Tied for the National League lead (along with Joey Votto) with five games with 4+ hits Opened the season on the DL with a strained left calf…reinstated on April 12

31 JOC PEDERSON (L) – .246, 26 2B, 25 HR, 68 RBI in 137 G

Single-Game Highs 2016 Career 3 (4x, last: 9/10 at MIA) 3 (8x, last: 8/17/16 vs. PHI) 2 (3x, last: 9/10 at MIA) 2 (4x, last: 9/10/16 at MIA) 4 (7/29 vs. ARI) 4 (2x, last: 7/29/16 vs. ARI) 3 (2x, last: 9/22 vs. COL) 3 (8x, last: 9/22/16 vs. COL) 1 (6x, last: 9/17 at ARI) 1 (10x, last: 9/17/16 at ARI ) 5 (3x, last: 9/5-9/12) 7 (5/30-6/4/15)

Series vs. WSH: 0-for-2, 2 K (10/7 – G1) H Vs. LHP/Vs. RHP: .125/.269 RISP: .281 (27-for-96) HR RBI Last HR: 9/28 at SD (3 G) As PH: 1-for-13, HR (.077) BB Career Postseason: 0-for-8 in 6 G SB 2016 Regular Season Notes: Hit Streak In his second full big league season, posted a .847 OPS, batting .246 with 26 doubles, 25 homers and 68 RBI in 137 games Finished the season strong, ranking fifth in the Majors with a 1.081 OPS in September, when he batted .286 (18-for-63), with a .430 on-base percentage, a .651 slugging percentage, 12 runs, two doubles, seven homers and 15 RBI in 25 games Posted a .260/.380/.520 slashline in 62 second-half games, going 46-for-177 with 10 doubles, 12 homers and 35 RBI RBI Excelled out of the eight hole in the Dodger lineup, where he hit .317 (32-for-101) with a .420 OBP and a .703 SLG in 37 games (33 starts) Tied for 10th among NL outfielders with 25 home runs…according to ESPN’s Home Run Tracker, averaged 412.1 feet per home run, the seventhlongest in the Majors…led the Dodgers and ranked 14th in the Majors with a 93.2 average exit velocity (Source: Baseball Savant) Placed on the DL from July 1-19 with a sprained right AC joint, suffered in a collision with the outfield wall June 28 at Milwaukee Single-Game Highlights: Registered three multi-homer games: May 17 vs. LAA, June 14 at ARI and Sept. 10 at MIA Tied a career high (second time) with four RBI on July 29 at Arizona

66 YASIEL PUIG – .263, 14 2B, 2 3B, 11 HR, 45 RBI in 104 G

Single-Game Highs

2016 Career Series vs. WSH: 0-for-0, 2 IBB, defensive sub. (10/7 – G1) H 3 (5x, last: 7/31 vs. ARI) 4 (6x, last: 6/10/15 vs. ARI) Vs. LHP/Vs. RHP: .261/.265 RISP: .301 (25-for-83) HR 1 (11x, last: 9/21 vs. SF) 2 (6/4/13 vs. SD) RBI 3 (4x, last: 9/21 vs. SF) 5 (3x, last: 8/11/15 vs. WAS) Last HR: 9/21 vs. SF (9 G) As PH: 3-for-16, HR (.188) BB 2 (2x, last: 9/4 vs. SD) 3 (3x, last: 6/28/15 at MIA) Career Postseason: .281 (16-for-57), 2B, 2 3B, 5 RBI in 18 G SB 1 (5x, last: 7/19 at WSH) 2 (3x, last: 5/2/14 at MIA) 2016 Regular Season Notes: Hit Streak 6 (2x, last: 6/29-7/4) 16 (4/30-5/17/14) Hit .263 with 11 homers and 45 RBI in 104 games in his fourth MLB season After being recalled on Sept. 2, batted .281 (16-for-57) with 10 runs, four doubles, four homers and 11 RBI…finished the season by hitting safely in eight of his 10 games, going 10-for-27 (.370) with five runs, three doubles, a hoemr and five RBI Batted .301 with RISP (25-for-83), .314 with runners on base (50-for-159) and went 4-for-11 (.364) with the bases loaded Registed six outfield assists in 95 games (81 starts) Optioned to Triple-A Oklahoma City on Aug. 2, where he hit .348 (24-for-69) with 12 runs, three doubles, a triple, four homers and 12 RBI in 19 games…recalled by the Dodgers on Sept. 2 Placed on the disabled list from June 3-21 with a strained left hamstring…after returning from the DL on June 21, posted a .297/.371/.486 slashline in his final 51 games, going 44-for-148 with 10 doubles, six homers and 25 RBI Single-Game Highlights: Gave the Dodgers a walk-off win over the Nationals on June 22, as his single and error on centerfielder Michael Taylor allowed Howie Kendrick to score and Puig to touch them all in a 4-3 win over Washington Had one of the most memorable defensive plays of the year on April 22 at Colorado, when he threw Trevor Story out at third base from the warning track as he tried to stretch a fifth-inning double into a triple

11 JOSH REDDICK (L)-.281, 10 HR, 37 RBI in 115 G/.258, 2 HR, 9 RBI in 47 G w/LA

Single-Game Highs

51 CARLOS RUÍZ –.264, 3 HR, 15 RBI in 62 G/.278 (10-for-36) in 14 G w/LA

Single-Game Highs

2016 Career Series vs. WSH: 0-for-3, K (10/7 – G1) H 4 (2x, last: 7/2 vs. PIT) 4 (6x, last: 7/2/16 vs. PIT) Vs. LHP/Vs. RHP: .155/.322 RISP: .241 (20-for-83) HR 1 (10x, last: 9/24 vs. COL) 3 (8/9/13 at TOR) RBI 5 (9/24 vs. COL) 6 (5/16/14 at CLE) Last HR (G Since): 9/24 vs. COL (4 G) As PH: 2-for-8 (.250) BB 2 (2x, last: 7/15 vs. TOR) 3 (2x, last: 8/2/13 vs. TEX) Career Postseason: .211 (8-for-41), 2B, 2 HR, 2 RBI in 12 G SB 1 (7x, last: 9/18 at ARI) 2 (2x, last: 9/24/15 vs. TEX) Has hit safely in five of his last six postseason games, batting .300 (6-for-20) with a Hit Streak 7 (8/29-9/9) 12 (4/22-5/4/15) double, a home run and an RBI since Oct. 5, 2013 2016 Regular Season Notes: In 155 combined games, hit .281 with 17 doubles, 10 homers and 37 RBI with the Dodgers and Athletics, including a .258 mark (40-for-155) with two homers and nine RBI in 47 games with Los Angeles After a slow start to his Dodger career, hitting just .161(14-for-87) in 25 August games, Josh Reddick tied for the Major League lead with a .400 September batting average (26-for-65) in 20 games Ranked sixth among MLB right fielders with six defensive runs saved according to FanGraphs Batted .322 (97-for-301) against right-handed pitchers, the eighth best mark in the Majors (min. 300 AB) Acquired from the Oakland Athletics on Aug. 1 with Rich Hill in exchange for minor league right-handed pitchers Jharel Cotton, Grant Holmes and Frankie Montas…in 68 games with Oakland this season, he posted a .296/.368/.449 slashline with 11 doubles, one triple, eight homers and 28 RBI Hit the fourth career grand slam of his career on Sept. 24 vs. COL with a seventh-inning blast off Christian Bergman…went 3-for-4 with a season-high five RBI in the game

2016 Career Series vs. WSH: --H 3 (3x, last: 8/7 at SD) 4 (10x, last: 4/27/15 at STL) Vs. LHP/Vs. RHP: .271/.260 RISP: .190 (8-for-42) HR 1 (3x, last: 4/27 at WSH) 1 (68x, last: 4/27/16 at WSH) Last HR (G Since): 4/27 at WSH (53 G) As PH: 1-for-5 (.200) RBI 2 (4x, last: 9/29 at SD) 7 (5/2/12 at ATL) BB 2 (3x, last: 8/13 vs. COL) 3 (3x, last: 8/18/14 vs. SEA) Career Postseason: .254 (36-for-142), 8 2B, 3B, 4 HR, 15 RBI in 46 G SB 1 (3x, last: 8/10 at LAD) 1 (24x, last: 8/10/16 at LAD) Was a member of the 2008 World Series-champion Philadelphia Phillies…gave the Hit Streak 8 (7/2-7/28) 11 (7/8-7/25/11) Phillies a walk-off win in Game 3 vs. Tampa Bay with an infield single in their 5-4 win In 11 career World Series games, has a .353/.488/.706 slashline, going 12-for-34 with four doubles, a triple, two homers and five RBI in the 2008-09 Fall Classics 2016 Regular Season Notes: Combined to hit .264 with eight doubles, three homers and 15 RBI in 62 games with the Dodgers and Phillies, including a .278 mark (10-fro-36) in 14 games with Los Angeles Over his last 34 games after June 23, batted .311 (32-for-103) with a .418 OBP, five doubles and eight RBI Has caught 15 of 36 (41.7%) would-be base stealers in 56 games (55 starts) at catcher Acquired by Dodgers on Aug. 25 after 11 seasons with the Phillies in exchange for A.J. Ellis and minor leaguers RHP Tommy Bergjians and OF Joey Curletta…spent 11 seasons with Philadelphia…batted .261 with three homers and 12 in 48 games with the Phillies

5 COREY SEAGER (L) – .308, 40 2B, 5 3B, 26 HR, 72 RBI in 157 G

Single-Game Highs 2016 Career 4 (3x, last: 8/22 at CIN) 4 (4x, last: 8/22/16 at CIN ) 3 (6/3 vs. ATL) 3 (6/3/16 vs. ATL) 4 (6/5 vs. ATL) 4 (6/5/16 vs. ATL) 2 (6x, last: 8/28 vs. CHC) 3 (9/11/15 at ARI) 1 (2x, last: 9/14 at NYY) 1 (4x, last: 9/14/16 at NYY) 19 (6/16-7/6) 19 (6/16/16-7/6/16)

Series vs. WSH: 1-for-4, 2 R, HR, RBI (10/7 – G1) H Vs. LHP/Vs. RHP: .250/.334 RISP: .295 (33-for-112) HR RBI Last HR (G Since): 9/25 vs. COL (5 G) As PH: 1-for-6 (.167) BB Career Postseason: .200 (4-for-20), 2B, HR, RBI in 6 G SB Blasted his first career postseason home run with a solo shot in the first inning in Hit Streak yesterday’s contest, becoming the youngest Dodger in franchise history to hit a postseason home run (22 years, 163 days old)…his homer was just the fifth ever in the postsesason by a Dodger shortstop (also: 1949 and 1952, Pee Wee Reese; 2008, Rafael Furcal; 2013, Hanley Ramirez) 2016 Regular Season Notes: A top candidate to be the Dodgers’ 17th Rookie of the Year and first since Todd Hollandsworth in 1996, finished the season ranked among the NL leaders in hits (193, 2nd), runs (105, 5th), doubles (40, 7th), multi-hit games (57, T-2nd), extra-base hits (71, 7th), total bases (321, 4th), batting average (.308, 7th) and slugging percentage (.512, 10th) Selected as the Dodgers’ Hank Aaron Award nominee, which recognizes the most outstanding offensive performer in each league According to Stats, LLC, is just the fourth rookie in the divisional era (since 1969) to rank in the NL’s Top 10 in batting average and slugging percentage, joining Dusty Baker (1972, ATL), Mike Piazza (1993, LA) and Albert Pujols (2001, STL) His 26 homers established a Dodger record for a shortstop, breaking Corey Seager’s Los Angeles Rookie Ranks (Since 1958) the previous record of 22, held by Glenn Wright (1930). Category # Rank Leader(s) His 193 hits were the most by a big-league rookie since 2001, when Hits 193 1st Seager Albert Pujols had 194 hits and Ichiro Suzuki knocked 242. Runs 105 1st Seager Re-wrote the Los Angeles rookie record book in most offensive Doubles 40 1st Seager categories (see chart at right) HR 26 T-2nd Piazza (35, 1993); Pederson (26, 2015) Topped Major League rookies in games played, hits, runs, doubles, RBI RBI 72 6th Piazza (112, 1993) (T-1st), multi-hit games (57) and walks (54), while ranking among the AVG .308 2nd Piazza (.318, 1993) second with 26 homers OBP .370 2nd Piazza (.370, 1993) Became just the fifth Dodger to post a 25-homer/40-double season, SLG .512 3rd Piazza (.561, 1993); Mondesi (.516, 1994) joining Raul Mondesi (1997), Eric Karros (1999), Andre Ethier (2009) and Adrián González (2014) Batted .295 with RISP (33-for-112) and hit .333 with runners on base (85-for-255, 7th NL) Posted a .334/.391/.557 slashline vs. right-handers, going 144-for-431 with 21 of his 26 home runs…his average vs. RHP was the fourth-best in MLB Named to the National League All-Star team and participated in the HR Derby, becoming the youngest position player to be honored as an All-Star in franchise history at 22 years, 69 days old (previous: Pete Reiser: 22 years, 113 days) and the third-youngest Dodger All-Star overall (at the time of their first selection), behind only Fernando Valenzuela and Ralph Branca…became just the second Dodger rookie shortstop to be selected to the AllStar game (last: Bill Grabarkewitz, 1970), and the first Los Angeles shortstop to be named an All-Star since Rafael Furcal in 2010 Posted the second-longest hitting streak by a rookie in Los Angeles history, behind only Tommy Davis’ 20-game run from July 30-Aug. 20, 1960, and batted .392 (31-for-79) with 10 doubles, two triples, two homers and five RBI during his career-best 19-game hitting streak from June 16-July 6 Named NL’s June Rookie of the Month, batting .343 (35-for-102) with 20 runs, eight doubles, a triple, eight homers and 13 RBI in 28 games Joined with his brother Kyle (30 HR) to become the first set of brothers with 25+ homers each in the same season Single-Game Hightlights: On June 3 vs. Atlanta, launched three solo home runs for his first career three-homer game, becoming the first Dodger rookie to do so…he also was the first rookie shortstop in MLB history to have a three-homer game and the sixth youngest player overall to accomplish the feat Registered four multi-homer games: May 15 vs. St. Louis (2 HR), June 3 vs. Atlanta (3 HR), June 5 vs. Atlanta (2 HR) and Aug. 8 vs. Philadelphia (2 HR) Knocked in a career-high four runs on June 5 vs. Atlanta, going 3-for-5 with two runs and two homers Finished a double shy of the cycle in the Dodgers’ division-clinching win over the Rockies on Sept. 25, and extended the game twice with game-tying hits: an RBI triple in the seventh inning and a solo homer in the ninth

60 ANDREW TOLES (L)– .314, 9 2B, 3B, 3 HR, 16 RBI – 48 G

Single-Game Highs

2016 Career Series vs. WSH: 1-for-2, R (10/7 – G1) H 3 (2x, last: 8/31 at COL) 3 (2x, last: 8/31/16 at COL) Vs. LHP/Vs. RHP: .231/.326 RISP: .333 (7-for-21) HR 1 (3x, last: 8/31 at COL) 1 (3x, last: 8/31/16 at COL) Last HR (G Since): 8/31 (G2) at COL (18 G) As PH: 8-for-21 (.381) RBI 5 (8/31 at COL) 5 (8/31/16 at COL) BB 1 (8x, last: 9/20 vs. SF) 1 (8x, last: 9/20/16 vs. SF) Career Postseason: .500 (1-for-2) in one game SB 1 (7/16 at ARI) 1 (7/16/16 at ARI) 2016 Regular Season Notes: Hit Streak 4 (7/31-8/23) 4 (7/31-8/23/16) Hit .314 with nine doubles, a triple, three homers and 16 RBI in 48 games in two stints with the Dodgers in his first big-league action…the Dodgers went 31-17 when he appeared in the game Went 8-for-21 (.381) with three doubes, a triple and two RBI as a pinch-hitter…posted a .435 OBP as a pinch-hitter, drawing a walk and a hit by pitch Hitting .364 with runners on base (16-for-44) and .333 with RISP (7-for-21) Has appeared at all three outfield positions for the Dodgers, with 18 G (13 GS) in left field, 9 G (3 GS) in center field and 8 G (7 GS) in right field…recorded three outfield assists Hit his first big league home run with a two-run shot off Josh Smith on Aug. 22 at Cincinnati Made his Major League debut on July 9 vs. San Diego with a start at center field and recorded his first big league hit with a double in his first at-bat on the first pitch…became the first Dodger to double on their first Major League at-bat since Adrian Beltre (June 24, 1998) Single-Game Highlights: Down to their last out in the second game of their Aug. 31 doubleheader at Colorado, put the Dodgers ahead with his ninth-inning grand slam, his first-career slam…finished a triple shy of the cycle, going 3-for-4 with a walk and a five RBI Started the Dodgers’ ninth-inning rally on Sept. 19 against the Giants with a pinch-hit single before scoring the tying run In the Minors: Had a meteoric rise to the Majors after starting the year in Single-A, combining to post a .331/.374/.511 slashline in 82 minor league games with Single-A Rancho Cucamonga, Double-A Tulsa and Triple-A Oklahoma City in his fourth minor league season…went 107-for-323 with 27 doubles, three triples, seven homes and 38 RBI…was successful on 23 of 34 stolen base attempts in the minors Recongized as the Double-A Texas League Player of the Week for the period ending June 19 Signed by the Dodgers as a minor league free agent on Sept. 23, 2015 and was not in 2016 Major League Spring Training with the club

10 JUSTIN TURNER – .275, 34 2B, 3 3B, 27 HR, 90 RBI in 151 G

Single-Game Highs

2016 Career Series vs. WSH: 2-for-3, HR, 2 RBI, HBP (10/7 – G1) H 3 (8x, last: 9/29 at SD 4 (5x, last: 7/20/15 at ATL) Vs. LHP/Vs. RHP: .209/.305 RISP: .325 (40-for-123) HR 2 (2x, last: 7/21/16 at WSH) 2 (4x, last: 7/21/16 at WSH) Last HR (G Since): 9/12 at NYY (12 G) As PH: 3-for-8 (.375), HR RBI 5 (7/21 at WSH) 5 (2x, last: 7/21/16 at WSH) BB 3 (9/4 vs. SD) 3 (2x, last: 9/4 vs. SD) Career Postseason: .500 (12-for-24), 6 2B, HR, 6 RBI in eight games SB 1 (4x, last: 9/24 vs. COL) 1 (22x, last: 7/23/16 at STL ) Slugged his first career postseason home run with a two-run shot in the third inning Hit Streak 10 (7/30-8/9) 11 (8/26-9/11/11) in yesterday’s contest Has hit safely in his last six postseason games, including five multi-hit games, as he has gone 12-for-22 (.545) with three runs, six doubles, a homer and six RBI since Oct. 9, 2015…has reached base safely at least twice in those six games, which is the third-longest streak in Dodger postseason history, trailing only Manny Ramirez (nine games, 2008-09) and Pee Wee Reese (seven games, 1949-52) In 2015 NLDS vs. New York, went 10-for-19 with two runs, six doubles and four RBI in five games…his six doubles were the most ever in a Division Series and tied for the most in any postseason series along with Hideki Matsui (NYY, 2004 ALCS) and Pete Fox (DET, 1934 World Series)…his 10 hits were the most ever by a Dodger in a Division Series 2016 Regular Season Notes: Set career highs in runs (79), hits (153), doubles (34), triples (3), homers (27), RBI (90) and games played (151) in his third season with Los Angeles…tied with Adrián González for the Dodger team RBI lead Ranked 12th in the NL with a .305 batting average vs. right-handed pitchers (117-for-384), with 22 of his 27 homers coming off righties Hit .325 with runners in scoring position – the 13th-best mark in the NL – and hit .300 with runners on base (76-for-253) Got off to a slow start, but posted a .307/.356/.577 slashline over his final 91 games after June 13, going 108-for-352 with 25 doubles, 22 homers and 69 RBI…in that span, ranked among the NL leaders in average (15th), doubles (10th), homers (T-6th), slugging percentage (5th) and RBI (T-3rd)…hit only .221 (45-for-204) during his first 60 games through June 12 Knocked in at least one run in six consecutive games from Sept. 14-19, the longest RBI streak of the season by a Dodger and also tying for the second longest run of his career Appeared in 144 games (138 starts) at third base and one game at first base…committed only nine errors and ranked fourth among NL third basemen with a .972 fielding percentage Is a finalist for the Players Choice Award for the Marvin Miller Man of the Year Single-Game Highlights: Tied a career high (also: May 15 at HOU) with five RBI on July 21 at Washington, going 2-for-3 with a walk and two homers – a two-run shot in the first inning and a three-run blast in the third inning, both off Stephen Strasburg Registered his third-career walk-off RBI with an RBI single on June 17 vs. Milwaukee to give the Dodgers a 3-2 win in 10 innings

26 CHASE UTLEY (L) – .252, 26 2B, 3 3B, 14 HR, 52 RBI in 138 G

2016

Single-Game Highs Career

Series vs. WSH: 1-for-4, RBI, 2 K (10/7 – G1) H 6 (7/6 vs. BAL) 6 (7/6/16 vs. BAL) Vs. LHP/Vs. RHP: .154/.273 RISP: .276 (24-for-87) HR 2 (2x, last: 8/16 at PHI) 2 (23x, last: 8/16/16 at PHI) RBI 5 (2x, last: 8/16 at PHI) 6 (2x, last: 9/2/10 at COL) Last HR (G Since): 9/28 at SD (3 G) As PH: 1-for-11 (.091) BB 2 (8x, last: 9/27 at SD) 3 (10x, last: 8/5/14 vs. HOU) Career Postseason: .263, (45-for-171), 7 2B, 3B, 10 HR, 26 RBI in 50 G SB 1 (2x, last: 9/12 at NYY) 2 (6x, last: 4/9/13 vs. NYM) Helped lead the Phillies to a 2008 World Series title, driving in nine runs in 14 games Hit Streak 7 (4/17-24) 35 (6/23-8/3/06) Among active players, his 10 homers rank eighth and his 26 RBI tie for 15th 2016 Regular Season Notes: Batted .252 with 26 doubles, 14 homers and 52 RBI in 138 games in his 14th MLB season and second with the Dodgers Started 112 games at the leadoff spot (114 total games), batting .264 (125-for-473) with a .329 on-base percentage…prior to this season had only made 11 starts at the leadoff spot in 13 big-league seasons Blasted four leadoff home runs (five in his career), the most for a Dodger since Rafael Furcal’s six in 2006 His 565 plate appearances this season without grounding into a double play is the most in Dodger franchise history, surpassing Pete Reiser, who went 537 without a GIDP in 1942…he is the only qualifying big leaguer to not ground into a double play in 2016…only four big leaguers in history have had more plate appearances in a season without grounding into a double play: Augie Galan (1935 CHC, 748 PA), Craig Biggio (1997 HOU, 744 PA) and Dick McAuliffe (1968 DET, 658 PA) Batting .297 with runners on base (46-for-155) and hitting .276 with RISP (24-for-87)…with the bases loaded went 4-for-5 with a double, a walk and two grand slams (May 28 at NYM, Aug. 16 at PHI) Posted a .989 fielding percentage in 134 games (118 starts) at second base and also appeared in one game at third base Among second basemen, he ranks among the active leaders (primary career position) in hits (1777, 3rd), doubles (381, 2nd), triples (53, 1st), home runs (250, 2nd) and RBI (977, 2nd) Reached 1000 career runs on June 22 and ranks 12th among active players with 1,042 career runs scored…hit his 250th career home run with a leadoff shot on Sept. 28 at San Diego off Luis Perdomo Named the winner of the 11th annual Roy Campanella Award, which is given to the Dodger player who best exemplifies the spirit and leadership of the late Hall of Fame catcher, and is voted on by Dodger players and coaches Single-Game Highlights: Returning to Philadelphia for the first time since last year’s trade (Aug. 19, 2015), blasted two home runs which drew curtain calls from the crowd at Citizens Bank Park with a solo homer in the fifth inning and a grand slam in the seventh inning In his first games in New York since the 2015 NLDS, went 4-for-9 with a double, two homers and nine RBI during a three-game series, May 27-29…on May 28, hit a solo homer in the sixth inning and followed it up with a grand slam in the seventh inning Had a career-high six hits (6-for-7, 2 2B) in a 6-4, 14-inning loss to the Orioles on July 6…the six hits tied a franchise record (9th time, last: Shawn Green, May 23, 2002 at MIL)

Player Ethier Gonzalez Grandal Kendrick Pederson Puig Reddick Ruiz Seager Turner Utley

RHP Tanner Roark – 0-1, 3.48 ERA (4 ER/10.1 IP) in 3 G (1 GS) AVG AB H 2B 3B HR .000 1 0 0 0 0 .500 4 2 1 0 1 .200 5 1 0 0 1 .143 7 1 0 0 0 .667 3 2 1 0 0 .400 5 2 0 0 0 .333 3 1 0 0 0 .182 11 2 1 0 0 .333 3 1 0 0 0 .000 4 0 0 0 0 .077 13 1 0 0 0

Player Barnes Culberson Ethier Gonzalez Grandal Kendrick Pederson Puig Reddick Ruiz Seager Toles Turner

G 1 6 5 6 5 5 5 3 3 6

2016 vs. WSH (Reg. Season Only) AVG AB H HR RBI .333 3 1 0 1 .182 22 4 0 2 .250 16 4 2 4 .333 18 6 0 0 .235 17 4 1 3 .313 16 5 0 1 .125 16 2 2 2 .500 12 6 1 1 .250 4 1 0 0 .292 24 7 3 7

Utley

5

.350

20

7

1

4

G 4 53 58 16 18 14 17 3 12 3 3 3 45 18 1

Career vs. WSH (Reg. Season Only) AVG AB H HR .200 5 1 0 .254 185 47 6 .301 216 65 9 .163 43 7 2 .354 65 23 0 .209 43 9 1 .246 61 15 1 .273 11 3 0 .264 386 10 13 2 .500 12 6 1 .250 4 1 0 .270 126 34 4

RBI 1 29 32 6 2 3 11 0 53 1 0 18

.264

97

647

17 1

19

vs. LAD RBI BB 0 0 1 0 3 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

SO 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 2 0 1 2

G 3 22 23 9 12 5 10 56 3 22

Career at Nationals Park (Reg. Season Only) AVG AB H HR RBI .250 4 1 0 1 .250 88 22 2 14 .375 88 33 4 15 .160 25 4 1 3 .370 46 17 0 2 .182 22 4 0 2 .242 33 8 0 6 .275 193 53 7 21 .250 4 1 0 0 .309 68 21 2 7

’16 Multi-Hit Games (Reg. Season Only) 2+ H 3+ H 4+ H 0 0 0 4 1 0 0 0 0 42 11 1 16 4 2 29 10 5 24 4 0 21 5 0 31 9 2 13 3 0 57 17 3 7 2 0 48 8 0

59

.235

34

213

50

5

30

10

1

2016 HR Breakdown (Reg. Season Only) By Location By Direction Runners On… Situational Multi-HR G Player HR Vs. LHP Vs. RHP Home Road LF LCF CF RCF RF 0 1 2 3 Last Slam Lead Off PH Walk-Off 2+ HR 3+ HR Barnes Culberson 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 Ethier 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 6/10/12 0 1 0 0 0 Gonzalez 18 2 16 6 12 2 2 2 4 8 11 3 3 1 7/24/16 0 0 0 2 1 Grandal 27 4 23 20 7 4 2 8 4 9 16 4 6 1 9/22/16 0 0 0 2 1 Kendrick 8 0 8 3 5 1 0 1 3 3 5 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Pederson 25 1 24 13 12 1 0 4 6 1 17 8 0 0 5/1/15 0 1 0 3 0 Puig 11 6 5 6 5 3 2 1 2 3 7 1 3 0 6/6/13 0 1 0 0 0 4 Reddick 10 0 10 5 5 0 0 0 5 5 6 2 1 1 9/24/16 0 0 0 0 0 Ruiz 3 2 1 1 2 2 1 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Seager 26 5 21 18 8 3 1 7 7 8 17 6 3 0 0 0 0 4 1 Toles 3 1 2 1 2 1 0 0 0 2 0 2 0 1 8/31/16 0 0 0 0 0 Turner 27 5 22 11 16 10 7 5 0 5 15 8 4 0 0 1 0 2 0 Utley 14 2 12 4 10 1 0 1 3 9 9 3 0 2 8/16/16 4 0 0 2 0 Totals 189 37 152 101 88 37 23 3 31 6 117 4 2 7 9/24/16 6 6 3 16 3 Opponent 165 56 109 68 97 59 28 2 21 3 10 4 1 3 9/27/16 4 6 4 4 0 4 4 4 1 sDodgers’ Back-to-Back HR (9): Toles/Segedin, Seager/Gonzalez, 5 2 3 1 8 Opponents’ Back-to-Back HR (4): Heyward/Bryant, 6/2 at CHC; Revere/Werth, Gonzalez/Grandal, 8/22 vs. CIN; Puig/Grandal, 7/4 vs. BAL; Grandal/Kendrick, 7/20 at WSH; LeMahieu/Gonzalez, 8/3 at COL; Ellsbury/Gregorius, 9/13 at NYY 7/8 vs. SD; Gonzalez/Hernandez, 8/7 vs. BOS; Seager/Turner, 9/5 vs. ARI; Seager/Turner, 9/10 at MIA; Pederson/Ethier, 9/23 vs. COL

Player Avilan Baez Blanton Dayton Fields Hill Jansen Kershaw

W-L-S 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-3 1-0-0

2016 vs. WSH (Reg. Season Only) ERA G/GS ER IP 0.00 2/0 0 1.2 5.40 2/0 1 1.2 3.86 2/0 1 2.1 0.00 4/0 0 4.0 1.29 1/1 1 7.0

Maeda Stripling Urías

0-0-0

3.00

2/2

3

9.0

HR 0 1 0 0 0

W-L-S 2-0-0 0-1-0 3-4-0 0-1-0 1-1-0 1-0-10 10-2-0

Career vs. WSH (Reg. Season Only) ERA G/GS ER IP 2.73 30/0 8 26.1 6.14 6/0 5 7.1 5.73 16/13 48 75.1 9.00 1/0 1 1.0 4.34 4/3 9 18.2 2.01 23/0 5 22.1 2.02 14/13 20 89.0

0

0-0-0

3.00

2/2

3

9.0

HR 0 3 11 0 3 2 8

W-L-S 1-0-0 0-1-0 1-3-0 0-0-0 1-0-3 3-1-0

0

0-0-0

Career at Nationals Park (Reg. Season Only) ERA G/GS ER IP 1.93 16/0 3 14.0 12.00 3/0 4 3.0 6.53 8/7 29 40.0 3.18 1/1 2 5.2 2.16 9/0 2 8.1 2.51 6/5 9 32.1 2.25

1/1

1

4.0

HR 0 2 4 1 1 4 0

Player Brett Anderson (60-day DL) Brett Anderson Mike Bolsinger Louis Coleman Carl Crawford Andre Ethier (60-day DL) Casey Fien Yimi Garcia (60-day DL) Yasmani Grandal Alex Guerrero Chris Hatcher (60-day DL) Kiké Hernandez Rich Hill Scott Kazmir Howie Kendrick Clayton Kershaw (60-day DL) Adam Liberatore Brandon McCarthy (60-day DL) Brandon McCarthy Frankie Montas (60-day DL) Bud Norris Joc Pederson Yasiel Puig Josh Ravin (60-day DL) Josh Ravin Hyun-Jin Ryu (60-day DL) Hyun-Jin Ryu (60-day DL) Trayce Thompson (60-day DL) Chin-hui Tsao (60-day DL) Scott Van Slyke Scott Van Slyke (60-day DL) Alex Wood (60-day DL)

Injury herniated disc surgery blister, left index finger left oblique strain right shoulder fatigue lower back tightness broken right tibia right elbow tendonitis right biceps soreness right forearm soreness left knee contusion strained left oblique left ribcage inflammation left middle finger blister neck inflammation strained left calf mild disc herniation left elbow inflammation Tommy John surgery right hip stiffness rib resection surgery mild mid-back strain sprained right AC joint strained left hamstring left radius fracture right triceps soreness left shoulder surgery elbow tendonitis lower back tightness right triceps strain low back irritation right wrist irritation posterior elbow impingement

Date On April 4 August 21 March 25 August 3 April 9 March 25 July 17 April 23 March 25 March 25 July 20 June 28 July 20 August 23 March 25 June 27 July 30 Feb. 19 August 14 Feb. 21 August 1 June 29 June 3 March 25 August 14 March 25 July 9 July 10 May 22 April 10 August 8 May 31

Date Off August 14 September 22 May 18 September 2 April 26 September 10 August 16

Games Missed 116 28 40 27 15 140 24 144 April 12 7 May 31 (DFA) 52 66 July 31 26 August 24 20 September 23 29 April 12 7 September 9 62 August 19 17 July 3 83 September 25 39 June 12 63 August 19 15 July 19 16 June 21 17 May 2 (placed on restricted list) 26 September 2 17 July 7 87 72 71 117 June 3 49 50 September 20 98

Record 65-51 19-11 21-19 15-12 9-6 79-61 13-11 81-63 4-3 27-25 38-28 16-10 11-9 18-11 4-3 38-24 9-8 46-37 24-15 33-30 8-7 10-6 11-6 13-13 9-8 48-39 42-30 41-30 70-47 24-25 29-21 58-40

GENERAL Longest Winning Streak ........................................... 6 Longest Winning Streak, Home .............................. 10 Longest Winning Streak, Road ................................. 3 Longest Losing Streak............................................... 6 Longest Losing Streak, Home ................................... 6 Longest Losing Streak, Road ..................................... 4 Longest Game, Innings ........................................... 17 Longest Game, Time ........................................... 5:47 Longest Nine-Inning Game, Time ........................ 4:02 Shortest Game, Time .......................................... 2:07 Largest Crowd, Home...................................... 53,621 Largest Crowd, Road ....................................... 47,156 Smallest Crowd, Home .................................... 38,858 Smallest Crowd, Road ..................................... 13,226 Largest Winning Margin ......................................... 15 Largest Losing Margin ............................................ 10 Largest Deficit Overcome to Win ............................. 6 Largest Lead Lost ..................................................... 6 Most Errors .............................................................. 3 Most Consecutive Games, No Error ......................... 8 Most Double Plays .......................................... 4 Most Players Used ........................................ 24

June 17-June 22 June 17-July 4 3x: Aug. 4-August 17 April 25-April 30 April 25-April 30 May 18-May 21 May 22 at SD May 22 at SD (17) 2x; Last: August 22 at CIN May 1 vs. SD Sept. 20 vs. SF May 7 at TOR May 10 vs. NYM May 4 at TB April 4 at SD 2x; Last: August 20 at CIN Aug. 31 (Game 2) at COL April 24 at COL April 19 at ATL 2x: July 9-July 21 May 23 vs. Cincinnati Sept. 18 at ARI

DODGERS RECORD WHEN… (CONT.) Extra Innings ......................................... 6-8 vs. American League ......................... 10-10 Comeback Wins ................................ 46-29 Crowds over 50,000 .............................. 6-6 First-Half Record ............................... 51-40 First Game of Series .......................... 22-30 Series (W-L-T) ................................ 29-17-6 Dodgers Homer ................................ 69-34 Playing Errorless ............................... 54-42 After an off day .................................. 7-10

TEAM PITCHING Most Runs Allowed, Game ..................................... 12 Most Runs Allowed, Inning ...................................... 7 Fewest Hits Allowed, Game ..................................... 1 Most Hits Allowed, Game ...................................... 18 Most Home Runs Allowed, Game............................. 5 Most Home Runs Allowed, Inning ............................ 2 Most Strikeouts, Game .......................................... 19 Most Walks Issued, Game ...................................... 11

2x; Last: August 3 at COL 2x; Last: 6th, Sept. 30 at SF May 31 at CHC August 20 at CIN August 3 at COL 10x; Last: 7th, Sept. 14 at NYY May 21 at SD (Wood, 13) August 13 vs. PIT

INDIVIDUAL PITCHING Most Innings Pitched, Starter ................................... 9 Most Innings Pitched, Reliever .............................. 4.0 Fewest Hits, Complete Game ................................... 2 Most Strikeouts, Starter, Game .............................. 14 Most Strikeouts, Reliever, Game .............................. 5 Most Home Runs Allowed, Game............................. 4 Most Consec. Scoreless IP, Starter ...................... 23.1 Most Consec. Scoreless IP, Reliever .................... 22.1 Longest Winning Streak ........................................... 9 Longest Losing Streak............................................... 3

3x; Last: Kershaw, May 23 vs. CIN 2x; Last: Stripling, Sept. 18 at ARI 2x; Last: Kershaw, May 23 vs. CIN Kershaw, May 1 vs. SD Hatcher, June 2 at CHC Stewart, August 3 at COL Kershaw, May 17-29 Liberatore, May 20-July 22 Kershaw, May 1-June 20 4x; Last: Kazmir, June 30-Aug. 10

TEAM BATTING Most Runs, Game................................................... 18 Most Runs, Game, Both Teams .............................. 27 Most Runs, Inning .................................................... 8 Most Hits, Game .................................................... 21 Most Hits, Game, Both Teams ................................ 35 Fewest Hits, Game ................................................... 1 Most Hits, Inning ...................................................... 6 Most Doubles, Game ............................................... 7 Most Triples, Game .................................................. 1 Most Home Runs, Game .......................................... 7 Most Home Runs, Game, Both Teams ...................... 7 Most Home Runs, Inning .......................................... 4 Most Consecutive Games, Home Run .................... 14 Most Consecutive Games, No Homer ...................... 4 Most Total Bases, Game ........................................ 42 Most Extra-Base Hits, Game ..................................... 9 Most Walks, Game ................................................. 10 Most Strikeouts, Game .......................................... 18 Most Stolen Bases, Game ........................................ 5 Most Left on Base, Game ....................................... 16 Most Double Plays Hit Into, Game ........................... 4

August 22 at CIN August 22 at CIN August 16 at PHI August 22 at CIN August 22 at CIN 3x; Last: Aug. 25 vs. SF 2x; Last: 1st, Sept. 21 vs. SF 2x; Last: Sept. 29 at SD 21x; Last: Sept. 29 at SD August 22 at CIN 3x; Last: August 22 at CIN 2x; Last: 5th, Sept. 5 vs. ARI June 10-June 24 3x; Last: Sept. 29- Oct. 2 August 22 at CIN 2x; July 31 vs. ARI April 24 at COL July 6 vs. BAL June 4 vs. ATL July 6 vs. BAL May 23 at CIN

STARTING LINEUPS BY POSITION (Dodgers’ record when he starts) C Grandal (61-45), Ellis (23-19), Barnes (2-3), Ruiz (5-4) 1B Gonzalez (84-62), Grandal (0-2), Kendrick (4-3), Van Slyke (2-2), Segedin (1-2) 2B Utley (68-50), Hernandez (2-3), Kendrick (13-10), Barnes (1-1), Taylor (2-3), Culberson (5-4) 3B Turner (80-58), Hernandez (0-1), Kendrick (7-7), Culberson (1-1), Taylor (1-1), Segedin (2-3) SS Seager (83-66), Culberson (5-3), Hernandez (0-1), Taylor (3-1) LF Kendrick (45-34), Crawford (8-10), Van Slyke (4-5), Thompson (8-5), Hernandez (12-10), Venable (1-0), Segedin (3-0), Toles (9-4), Puig (1-1), Ethier (0-2) CF Pederson (65-49), Thompson (13-13), Toles (2-1), Van Slyke (1-0), Puig (0-2), Hernandez (10-6) RF Puig (43-34), Thompson (15-7), Van Slyke (1-7), Venable (1-1), Walters (0-1), Toles (6-1), Reddick (23-15), Segedin (2-4), Hernandez (0-1) P Kershaw (17-4), Kazmir (15-11), Maeda (19-13), Wood (3-7), Stripling (6-8), Bolsinger (2-4), Urias (10-5), Tepesch (0-1), Stewart (3-2), Norris (5-4), McCarthy (5-4), Ryu (0-1), Anderson (1-2), Hill (3-3), De Leon (2-2) DH Hernandez (1-0), Turner (0-2), Kendrick (0-1), Crawford (1-2), Gonzalez (2-0), Ethier (1-0)

INDIVIDUAL BATTING Most At-Bats, Game ................................................ .9 Utley, May 22 at SD Most Hits, Game ...................................................... 6 Utley, July 6 vs. BAL Most Doubles, Game ............................................... 3 Seager, July 17 at ARI Most Triples, Game .................................................. 1 21x; Last: Segedin, Sept. 29 at SD Most Home Runs, Game ................................................... 3 3x; Last: Gonzalez, Aug. 22 at CIN Most Total Bases, Game ........................................ 14 Grandal, July 8 vs. SD Most Extra-Base Hits, Game ..................................... 3 8x; Last: Grandal, Sept. 22 vs. COL Most Runs Scored, Game ......................................... 4 Utley, August 22 at CIN Most RBI, Game ....................................................... 8 Gonzalez, August 22 at CIN Most Walks, Game ................................................... 3 11x; Last: Pederson, Sept. 22 vs. COL Most Stolen Bases, Game ........................................ 3 Thompson, June 4 vs. ATL Most Consecutive Games, Hit ................................ 19 Seager, June 16-July 6 Most Consecutive Games, Home Run ...................... 3 2x; Last: Grandal, Sept. 3-Sept. 5 Most Consecutive Games, Run................................. 7 Pederson, July 23-31 Most Consecutive Games, RBI.................................. 6 Turner, Sept. 14-Sept. 19 DODGERS BY DAY, MONTH, INNING Monday (10-7), Tuesday (16-8), Wednesday (12-14), Thursday (8-9), Friday (11-15), Saturday (179), Sunday (17-9) April (12-13), May (16-12), June (16-12), July (15-9), Aug. (15-13), Sept. (17-10) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 X DODGERS 105 62 85 83 90 76 89 66 58 11 OPPONENT 92 69 60 68 78 90 69 71 30 11 DODGERS DEFENSIVELY CATCHER CS Carlos Ruiz 15 Austin Barnes 0 Yasmani Grandal 16

SBA 36 2 75

CS% 40.0% 0% 21.3%

PB 2 0 10

Total 725 638

PickOffs 0 0 1

CATCHER ERA: Ruiz – 3.96, Barnes – 6.30, Grandal – 3.71 OUTFIELD ASSISTS: Puig (6), Kendrick (5), Hernandez (4), Thompson (2), Pederson (3), Reddick (3), Toles (3)

BY BATTING ORDER (Dodgers’ record when in that spot) 1 Utley (66-46), Hernandez (8-10), Puig (1-0), Kendrick (15-14), Turner (0-1), Pederson (1-0) 2 Seager (71-47), Puig (4-3), Kendrick (4-5), Hernandez (4-1), Turner (5-11), Taylor (0-1), Reddick (1-3), Toles (1-0), Culberson (1-0) 3 Turner (68-41), Puig (2-2), Gonzalez (9-7), Kendrick (1-2), Seager (8-16), Thompson (2-3) 4 Gonzalez (68-43), Turner (7-7), Kendrick (3-5), Pederson (2-0), Grandal (1-1), Thompson (1-2), Puig (3-5), Van Slyke (1-3), Reddick (5-5) 5 Puig (17-13), Van Slyke (1-3), Kendrick (13-9), Seager (1-1), Grandal (21-16), Thompson (19-7), Pederson (5-5), Gonzalez (9-12), Taylor (1-0), Hernandez (3-1), Segedin (0-3), Reddick (1-0), Ruiz (1-1) 6 Crawford (3-1), Pederson (21-17), Thompson (8-9), Grandal (17-18), Hernandez (3-6), Kendrick (9-5), Puig (5-4), Seager (1-1), Van Slyke (2-0), Taylor (1-2), Reddick (16-6), Ruiz (3-2), Segedin (11), Utley (1-0) 7 Pederson (18-12), Hernandez (3-4), Van Slyke (3-5), Ellis (6-7), Thompson (4-2), Seager (1-1), Kendrick (18-9), Crawford (0-4), Grandal (13-10), Puig (11-7), Toles (8-4), Segedin (4-1), Reddick (0-1), Ruiz (0-1), Barnes (1-0), Ethier (1-2), Culberson (0-1) 8 Ellis (16-12), Barnes (2-4), Culberson (9-6), Pederson (18-15), Thompson (1-2), Seager (0-1), Crawford (6-4), Hernandez (4-0), Puig (1-3), Grandal (9-2), Kendrick (6-6), Van Slyke (1-3), Venable (2-1), Taylor (5-2), Toles (6-2), Walters (0-1), Segedin (3-4), Utley (1-3), Ruiz (1-0) 9 Kershaw (15-4), Kazmir (14-11), Maeda (19-12), Wood (3-6), Stripling (5-7), Culberson (1-1), Crawford (0-3), Ellis (1-0), Thompson (1-0), Bolsinger (2-3), Urias (10-4), Tepesch (0-1), Stewart (3-2), Norris (5-4), McCarthy (5-4), Ryu (0-1), Anderson (1-2), Hill (3-3), De Leon (1-2), Toles (20), Utley (0-1) NUMBER OF LINEUPS USED: 120 DODGERS BIG INNINGS (FIVE OR MORE) Date Opponent Inning Runs 4/4 @SD 6th 5 4/10 @SF 1st 5 th 4/14 ARI 7 5 th 4/24 @COL 9 5 rd 6/18 MIL 3 6 7/15 @ARI 4th 5 7/24 @STL 1st 6 7/29 ARI 7th 5 8/8 PHI 1st 5 8/16 @PHI 7th 8 8/22 @CIN 5th 6 th 8/31 (Gm. 2) @COL 9 5 th 9/5 ARI 5 6 th 9/18 @ARI 6 6 st 9/21 SF 1 5 9/22 COL 7th 5 9/24 COL 7th 6

Opponent Scores First ...................... 38-49 Trail After 6 Innings .......................... 11-54 Trail After 7 Innings ............................ 7-57 Trail After 8 Innings ............................ 5-61 Tied After 8 Innings ............................ 11-7 Scoring 4 or More............................. 67-17 Allowing 4 or More........................... 25-56 Less Hits Than Opponent .................. 17-51 Getting 10 or more hits ................... 44-14 Two-Run Games .............................. 16-14

Final Score W, 15-0 L, 6-9 W, 5-2 W, 12-10 W, 10-6 W, 13-7 W, 9-6 W, 9-7 W, 9-4 W, 15-5 W, 18-9 W, 10-8 W, 10-2 L, 9-10 (12) W, 9-3 W, 7-4 W, 14-1

Date

OPPONENTS’ BIG INNINGS (FIVE OR MORE) Opponent Inning Runs

4/7 4/24 4/26 5/18 6/25 6/29 7/29 8/3 8/5 8/14 8/29 8/31 (Gm.2) 9/15 9/30

@SF @COL MIA @LAA @PIT @MIL ARI @COL BOS PIT @COL @COL @ARI @SF

8th 8th 6th 5th 6th 2nd 7th 1st 8th 1st 7th 1st 6th 6th

Date 4/8 6/12 6/29 7/7 9/18

Umpire Jeff Kellogg Mike Muchlinski Dan Bellino Pat Hoberg Ryan Blakney

Date 5/10 6/7 6/17 6/19 6/22 9/19 9/25

Opp. NYM COL MIL MIL WSH SF COL

PITCHER PICKOFFS: Urias (6), Wood (2), Hill (2), McCarthy (2), Howell (1), Kazmir (1), Hatcher (1), Liberatore (1), Anderson(1), Dayton (1), De Leon (1), Avilan (1) DODGERS RECORD WHEN… Dodgers Score First ........................... 53-22 Lead After 6 Innings ............................71-8 Lead After 7 Innings ............................73-3 Lead After 8 Innings ............................75-3 Tied After 7 Innings ........................... 11-11 Scoring 3 or Less ............................... 24-54 Allowing 3 or Less ............................. 66-15 More Hits than Opponent ................. 66-18 Equal Hits as Opponent .........................8-2 One-Run Games ................................ 22-20

Shutouts .......................................... 15-12 With Designated Hitter ......................... 5-5 Wins in Last At Bats .......................... 18-13 Doubleheaders ..................................... 1-1 Second-Half Record .......................... 40-31 Last Game of the Series ................... 33-19 Series Sweeps (LA-Opp) ........................ 7-3 Dodgers hit 2+ homers....................... 42-9 Pitcher Makes Quality Start ............. 46-14 Times batted around in inning .............. 10

DODGER EJECTIONS Player/Coach Dave Roberts Justin Turner Adrian Gonzalez Dave Roberts Joc Pederson

5 5 5 5 5 5 7 5 5 5 5 5 5 7

Final Score L, 6-12 W, 12-10 L, 3-6 L, 1-8 L, 1-6 L, 0-7 W, 9-7 L, 2-12 L, 0-9 L, 3-11 L, 1-8 W, 10-8 L, 3-7 L, 3-9

Reason Arguing balls and strikes Arguing balls and strikes Arguing balls and strikes Arguing balls and strikes Arguing balls and strikes

WALK-OFF VICTORIES Score Play 3-2 Thompson pinch-hit solo homer off Robles 4-3 Thompson pinch-hit solo homer off Estevez 3-2 (10) Turner RBI single off Jeffress 2-1 Grandal drew bases-loaded walk off Thornburg 4-3 Puig scored on single off Kelley and E8 2-1 Gonzalez RBI double off Strickland 4-2 (10) Culberson solo home run off Logan

REPLAY CHALLENGE RECORD: 19 (Overturned) – 16 (Stands/Confirmed)

GM 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91

Date 4/4 4/5 4/6 4/7 4/8 4/9 4/10 4/11 4/12 4/13 4/14 4/15 4/16 4/17 4/18 4/19 4/20 4/21 4/22 4/23 4/24 4/25 4/26 4/27 4/28 4/29 4/30 5/1 5/2 5/3 5/4 5/5 5/6 5/7 5/8 5/9 5/10 5/11 5/12 5/13 5/14 5/15 5/16 5/17 5/18 5/19 5/20 5/21 5/22 5/23 5/24 5/25 5/26 5/27 5/28 5/29 5/30 5/31 6/1 6/2 6/3 6/4 6/5 6/6 6/7 6/8 6/9 6/10 6/11 6/12 6/13 6/14 6/15 6/16 6/17 6/18 6/19 6/20 6/21 6/22 6/23 6/24 6/25 6/26 6/27 6/28 6/29 6/30 7/1 7/2 7/3 7/4 7/5 7/6 7/7 7/8 7/9 7/10 7/11 7/12 7/13 7/14

Opp. W/L, Score @SD W, 15-0 @SD W, 3-0 @SD W, 7-0 @SF L, 6-12 @SF L, 2-3 (10) @SF W, 3-2 (10) @SF L, 6-9 OFF DAY ARI L, 2-4 ARI W, 3-1 ARI W, 5-2 SF W, 7-3 SF L, 3-4 SF W, 3-1 OFF DAY @ATL L, 1-8 @ATL W, 5-3 (10) @ATL W, 2-1 (10) @COL L, 5-7 @COL W, 4-1 @COL W, 12-10 MIA L, 2-3 MIA L, 3-6 MIA L, 0-2 MIA L, 3-5 SD L, 1-5 SD L, 2-5 SD W, 1-0 OFF DAY @TB W, 10-5 @TB L, 5-8 OFF DAY @TOR L, 2-5 @TOR W, 6-2 @TOR W, 4-2 NYM L, 2-4 NYM W, 3-2 NYM L, 3-4 NYM W, 5-0 STL W, 8-4 STL W, 5-3 STL L, 2-5 LAA L, 6-7 LAA W, 5-1 @LAA L, 1-8 @LAA L, 4-7 @SD L, 6-7 @SD L, 2-3 @SD W, 9-5 (17) CIN W, 1-0 CIN W, 8-2 CIN W, 3-1 OFF DAY

Rec. 1-0 2-0 3-0 3-1 3-2 4-2 4-3

Home Road 1-0 2-0 3-0 3-1 3-2 4-2 4-3

4-4 5-4 6-4 7-4 7-5 8-5

0-1 1-1 2-1 3-1 3-2 4-2

4-3 4-3 4-3 4-3 4-3 4-3

8-6 9-6 10-6 10-7 11-7 12-7 12-8 12-9 12-10 12-11 12-12 12-13 13-13

4-2 4-2 4-2 4-2 4-2 4-2 4-3 4-4 4-5 4-6 4-7 4-8 5-8

4-4 5-4 6-4 6-5 7-5 8-5 8-5 8-5 8-5 8-5 8-5 8-5 8-5

14-13 5-8 14-14 5-8

9-5 9-6

14-15 15-15 16-15 16-16 17-16 17-17 18-17 19-17 20-17 20-18 20-19 21-19 21-20 21-21 21-22 21-23 22-23 23-23 24-23 25-23

9-7 10-7 11-7 11-7 11-7 11-7 11-7 11-7 11-7 11-7 11-7 11-7 11-8 11-9 11-10 11-11 12-11 12-11 12-11 12-11

@NYM L, 5-6 @NYM W, 9-1 @NYM W, 4-2

25-24 26-24 27-24 27-25 28-25 28-26 28-27 29-27 30-27 31-27 31-28 32-28 32-29

13-12 13-12 13-12 13-12 13-12 13-12 13-12 14-12 15-12 16-12 16-13 17-13 17-14

12-12 13-12 14-12 14-13 15-13 15-14 15-15 15-15 15-15 15-15 15-15 15-15 15-15

33-29 33-30 33-31 33-32 34-32 35-32 35-33 36-33 37-33 38-33 39-33 40-33 41-33

17-14 17-14 17-14 17-14 17-14 17-14 17-15 18-15 19-15 20-15 21-15 22-15 23-15

16-15 16-16 16-17 16-18 17-18 18-18 18-18 18-18 18-18 18-18 18-18 18-18 18-18

41-34 41-35 41-36 42-36 43-36 43-37 44-37 45-37 46-37 47-37 48-37 48-38 48-39 48-40 49-40 50-40 51-40

23-15 23-15 23-15 23-15 23-15 23-15 23-15 24-15 25-15 26-15 27-15 27-16 27-17 27-18 28-18 29-18 30-18

18-19 18-20 18-21 19-21 20-21 20-22 21-22 21-22 21-22 21-22 21-22 21-22 21-22 21-22 21-22 21-22 21-22

@CHC L, 0-2 @CHC W, 5-0 @CHC L, 1-2 @CHC L, 2-7 ATL W, 4-2 ATL W, 4-0 ATL W, 12-6 COL L, 1-6 COL W, 4-3 COL L, 0-1 OFF DAY @SF W, 3-2 @SF L, 4-5 @SF L, 1-2 @ARI L, 2-3 @ARI W, 7-4 @ARI W, 3-2 MIL L, 6-8 MIL W, 3-2 (10) MIL W, 10-6 MIL W, 2-1 WSH W, 4-1 WSH W, 3-2 WSH W, 4-3 OFF DAY @PIT L, 6-8 @PIT L, 1-6 @PIT L, 3-4 @PIT W, 5-4 @MIL W, 6-5 @MIL L, 0-7 @MIL W, 8-1 COL W, 5-0 COL W, 6-1 COL W, 4-1 BAL W, 7-5 BAL L, 1-4 BAL L, 4-6 (14) SD L, 0-6 SD W, 10-6 SD W, 4-3 SD W, 3-1 OFF DAY ALL STAR GAME OFF DAY OFF DAY

5-8 5-8 5-8 5-9 6-9 6-10 7-10 8-10 9-10 9-11 9-12 10-12 10-12 10-12 10-12 10-12 10-12 11-12 12-12 13-12

Pos. GB T1 T1 1 (+1.0) T1 2 (-1.0) T1 2 (-1.0) 2 (-1.0) 2 (-2.0) 2 (-1.0) T1 (+0.5) T1 (+1.0) T1 (+0.5) 1 (+0.5) 2 (-1.0) T1 (+0.5) 1 (+1.0) 1 (+1.5) 1 (+0.5) 1 (+1.5) 1 (+2.5) 1 (+1.5) 1 (+1.5) 1 (+0.5) T1 (+0.5) T1 (+0.5) T1 (+0.5) T1 (+1.5) 2 (-0.5) 2 (-0.5) 2 (-0.5) T1 (+0.5) T2 (-1.0) 2 (-1.0) T1 (+1.0) T1 (+1.0) 1 (+1.0) T1 (+1.0) T1 (+1.5) T1 (+1.5) T1 (+1.5) 2 (-1.0) T2 (-1.5) T2 (-1.5) T2 (-2.5) T2 (-2.5) T2 (-3.5) 3 (-4.5) 3 (-4.5) 2 (-4.5) 2 (-4.5) 2 (-4.5) 2 (-3.0) 2 (-4.5) 2 (-4.5) 2 (-4.5) 2 (-4.5) 2 (-4.5) 2 (-4.5) 2 (-5.5) 2 (-5.5) 2 (-4.5) 2 (-3.5) 2 (-4.0) 2 (-3.0) 2 (-4.0) 2 (-4.0) 2 (-3.0) 2 (-4.0) 2 (-5.0) 2 (-6.0) 2 (-6.0) 2 (-6.0) 2 (-6.5) 2 (-6.5) 2 (-6.5) 2 (-6.5) 2 (-5.5) 2 (-5.5) 2 (-5.5) 2 (-6.0) 2 (-7.0) 2 (-7.0) 2 (-8.0) 2 (-7.0) 2 (-6.0) 2 (-6.0) 2 (-6.0) 2 (-6.0) 2 (-5.0) 2 (-5.0) 2 (-5.0) 2 (-5.0) 2 (-6.0) 2 (-6.5) 2 (-6.5) 2 (-6.5) 2 (-6.5) 2 (-5.5) 2 (-5.5) 2 (-5.5)

Win/Loss/Save Kershaw/Ross Kazmir/Shields/Jansen Maeda/Cashner Heston/Wood Casilla/Blanton Hatcher/Kontos/Jansen Cueto/Coleman/Casilla

Att. 44,317 28,329 30,054 41,940 41,742 41,224 41,656

Clippard/Hatcher/Ziegler Wood/De La Rosa/Jansen Howell/Delgado/Jansen Kershaw/Bumgarner Cueto/Kazmir/Casilla Maeda/Samardzija/Jansen

53,279 44,244 40,879 53,449 53,409 48,911

Weber/Wood Blanton/Grilli/Jansen Hatcher/Ogando/Jansen Qualls/Hatcher/McGee Maeda/Chatwood/Jansen Blanton/McGee/Jansen Chen/Stripling/Ramos Koehler/Kershaw/Ramos Nicolino/Kazmir/Urena Fernandez/Maeda/Ramos Buchter/Hatcher Rea/Stripling/Rodney Kershaw/Pomeranz

14,160 16,087 18,431 37,153 42,179 35,962 44,954 41,102 38,909 44,009 49,686 45,740 49,271

Kazmir/Moore/Jansen Ramirez/Wood/Colome

14,116 13,226

Floyd/Blanton/Storen Kershaw/Dickey Hatcher/Storen/Jansen Matz/Kazmir/Familia Jansen/Robles

42,304 47,156 46,665 42,186 38,858 Syndergaard/Maeda/Familia 40,970 Kershaw/Colon 41,765 Stripling/Wacha/Jansen 46,716 Kazmir/Martinez/Jansen 48,459 Leake/Howell/Rosenthal 51,350 Shoemaker/Maeda/Salas 39,583 Kershaw/Weaver 42,514 Tropeano/Bolsinger 44,006 Alvarez/Stripling/Smith 45,007 Quackenbush/Jansen 31,836 Hand/Tsao 40,221 Stripling/Perdomo 43,100 Kershaw/Finnegan 42,519 Bolsinger/Wright 42,278 Kazmir/Straily/Jansen 44,855 Familia/Baez Maeda/Verrett

43,462 42,227 Liberatore/Familia/Jansen 42,287 Wood, T./Wood, A/Rondon 41,470 Blanton/Richard 34,681 Lester/Bolsinger 36,426 Kendricks/Urias 37,422 Maeda/Teheran/Jansen 46,366 Kershaw/Norris/Jansen 47,126 Kazmir/Wisler 47,950 Chatwood/Bolsinger 38,964 Jansen/Estevez 40,525 Rusin/Maeda/McGee 41,324 Kershaw/Casilla/Jansen Stratton/Jansen Peavy/Urias/Casilla Greinke/Bolsinger/Ziegler Maeda/Bradley/Jansen Kershaw/Corbin/Jansen Smith/Kazmir/Jeffress Baez/Jeffress Hatcher/Anderson Jansen/Thornburg Kershaw/Petit/Jansen Coleman/Roark/Jansen Hatcher/Kelley

41,208 41,358 41,583 21,374 23,458 27,729 44,183 44,998 44,112 45,931 44,712 42,307 43,776

Feliz/Tepesch/Melancon Locke/Maeda Kuhl/Kershaw/Melancon Kazmir/Liriano/Jansen Urias/Anderson/Jansen Guerra/Stewart Maeda/Davies Norris/De La Rosa Kazmir/Bettis McCarthy/Gray/Jansen

28,226 33,590 32,228 26,925 33,819 26,566 33,029 43,644 46,608 41,836 Blanton/Despaigne/Jansen 47,378 Tillman/Maeda/Britton 45,373 Givens/Hatcher/Britton 40,899 Ryu/Pomeranz 44,759 Baez/Cashner 43,588 McCarthy/Perdomo/Jansen 48,411

Maeda/Friedrich/Jansen 42,801

GM 92 93 94 957 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162

Date Opp. W/L, Score 7/15 @ARI W, 13-7 7/16 @ARI L, 1-2 7/17 @ARI L, 5-6 7/18 OFF DAY /19 @WSH W, 8-4 7/20 @WSH L, 1-8 7/21 @WSH W, 6-3 7/22 @STL L, 3-4 (16) 7/23 @STL W, 7-2 7/24 @STL W, 9-6 7/25 OFF DAY 7/26 TB W, 3-2 7/27 TB L, 1-3 7/28 OFF DAY 7/29 ARI W, 9-7 7/30 ARI L, 2-4 7/31 ARI W, 14-3 8/1 OFF DAY 8/2 @COL L, 3-7 8/3 @COL L, 2-12 8/4 @COL W, 4-2 8/5 BOS L, 0-9 8/6 BOS W, 3-0 8/7 BOS W, 8-5 8/8 PHI W, 9-4 8/9 PHI W, 9-3 8/10 PHI L, 2-6 8/11 OFF DAY 8/12 PIT L, 1-5 8/13 PIT W, 8-4 8/14 PIT L, 3-11 8/15 OFF DAY 8/16 @PHI W, 15-5 8/17 @PHI W, 7-2 8/18 @PHI L, 4-5 8/19 @CIN L, 2-9 8/20 @CIN L, 11-1 8/21 @CIN W, 4-0 8/22 @CIN W, 18-9 8/23 SF W, 9-5 8/24 SF W, 1-0 8/25 SF L, 0-4 8/26 CHC L, 4-6 8/27 CHC W, 3-2 8/28 CHC W, 1-0 8/29 @COL L, 1-8 8/30 @COL PPD: RAIN 8/31 (1)@COL L, 0-7 8/31 (2)@COL W, 10-8 9/1 OFF DAY 9/2 SD L, 2-4 9/3 SD W, 5-1 9/4 SD W, 7-4 9/5 ARI W, 10-2 9/6 ARI W, 5-2 9/7 ARI W, 3-1 9/8 OFF DAY 9/9 @MIA L, 1-4 9/10 @MIA W, 5-0 9/11 @MIA L, 0-3 9/12 @NYY W, 8-2 9/13 @NYY L, 0-3 9/14 @NYY W, 2-0 9/15 @ARI L, 3-7 9/16 @ARI W, 3-2 9/17 @ARI W, 6-2 9/18 @ARI L, 9-10 9/19 SF W, 2-1 9/20 SF L, 0-2 9/21 SF W, 9-3 9/22 COL W, 7-4 9/23 COL W, 5-2 9/24 COL W, 14-1 9/25 COL W, 4-3 9/26 OFF DAY 9/27 @SD L, 1-7 9/28 @SD L, 5-6 9/29 @SD W, 9-4 9/30 @SF L, 3-9 10/1 @SF L, 0-3 10/2 @SF L, 1-7

Rec. 52-40 52-41 52-42

Home 30-18 30-18 30-18

Road 22-22 22-23 22-24

Pos. (GB) Win/Loss/Save Att. 2 (-5.5) Norris/Corbin 30,639 2 (-5.5) Delgado/Fien 38,399 2 (-5.5) Ray/Maeda/Barrett 29,459 2 (-5.5) 2 (-4.5) Kazmir/Lopez 38,747 2 (-4.5) Gonzalez/Norris 34,050 2 (-4.0) Liberatore/Strasburg/Jansen 38,585 2 (-4.0) Maness/Norris 41,915 2 (-4.0) Maeda/Leake 45,477 2 (-3.0) Kazmir/Mayers/Jansen 41,423 2 (-2.5) 2 (-2.5) Norris/Archer/Jansen 46, 960 2 (-2.5) Moore/McCarthy/Colme 43,576 2 (-2.0) 2 (-1.0) Baez/Curtis/Jansen 50,966 2 (-2.0) Shipley/Kazmir/Barrett 49,540 2 (-2.0) Coleman/Corbin 42,380 2 (-2.0) 2 (-2.0) Gray/McCarthy 32,607 2 (-2.0) Anderson/Stewart 28,682 2 (-2.0) Maeda/Chatwood/Jansen 31,117 2 (-2.0) Wright/Kazmir 52,728 2 (-2.0) Stripling/Rodriguez/Save 47,696 2 (-1.0) Chavez/Price/Jansen 50,640 2 (-1.0) Urias/Eflin 48,370 T-1 (+9.0) Maeda/Velasquez 42,859 2 (-1.0) Araujo/Kazmir 41,098 2 (-1.0) 2 (-1.0) Nova/Stripling/Watson 47,438 2 (-1.0) Urias/Cole/Jansen 40,563 2 (-1.0) Kuhl/Anderson 43,468 2 (-1.0) 1 (+0.5) Maeda/Velasquez 28,118 1 (+1.5) Kazmir/Thompson 21,137 1 (+0.5) Mariot/Dayton/Gomez 29,187 2 (-0.5) Adleman/Norris 28,184 2 (-0.5) Finnegan/Anderson 29,735 1 (+0.5) Urias/DeSclafani 28,752 1 (+1.0) Chavez/Bailey 15,690 1 (+2.0) Maeda/Bumgarner/Jansen 46,899 1 (+3.0) Hill/Cueto/Jansen 43,957 1 (+2.0) Moore/Stripling 53.297 1 (+1.0) Wood/Liberatore/Chapman 48,609 1 (+2.0) Urias/Hammel/Jansen 49,522 1 (+2.0) Blanton/Cahill/Jansen 44,745 1 (+1.5) Gray/Maeda 24,308 1 (+2.0)

53-42 53-43 54-43 54-44 55-44 56-44

30-18 30-18 30-18 30-18 30-18 30-18

23-24 23-25 24-25 24-26 25-26 26-26

57-44 57-45

31-18 31-19

26-26 26-26

58-45 58-46 59-46

32-19 32-20 33-20

26-26 26-26 26-26

59-47 59-48 60-48 60-49 61-49 62-49 63-49 64-49 64-50

33-20 33-20 33-20 33-21 34-21 35-21 36-21 37-21 38-22

26-27 26-28 27-28 27-28 27-28 27-28 27-28 27-28 27-28

64-51 65-51 65-52

38-23 39-23 38-24

27-28 27-28 27-28

66-52 67-52 67-53 67-54 67-55 68-55 69-55 70-55 71-55 71-56 71-57 72-57 73-57 73-58

38-24 38-24 38-24 38-24 38-24 38-24 38-24 39-24 40-24 40-25 40-26 41-26 42-26 42-26

28-28 29-28 29-29 29-30 29-31 30-31 31-31 31-31 31-31 31-31 31-31 31-31 31-31 31-32

73-59

42-26

31-33

1 (+1.5)

74-59

42-26

32-33

74-60 75-60 76-60 77-60 78-60 79-60

42-27 43-27 44-27 45-27 46-27 47-27

32-33 32-33 32-33 32-33 32-33 32-33

79-61 80-61 80-62 81-62 81-63 82-63 82-64 83-64 84-64 84-65 85-65 85-66 86-66 87-66 88-66 89-66 90-66

47-27 47-27 47-27 47-27 47-27 47-27 47-27 47-27 47-27 47-27 48-27 48-28 49-28 50-28 51-28 52-28 53-28

32-34 33-34 33-35 34-35 34-36 35-36 35-37 36-37 37-37 37-38 37-38 37-38 37-38 37-38 37-38 37-38 37-38

90-67 90-68 91-68 91-69 91-70 91-71

53-28 53-28 53-28 53-28 53-28 53-28

37-39 37-40 38-40 38-41 38-42 38-43

1 (+1.5) 1 (+2.0) 1 (+2.0) 1 (+2.0) 1 (+3.0) 1 (+4.0) 1 (+4.0) 1 (+5.0) 1 (+5.0) 1 (+4.0) 1 (+4.0) 1 (+3.0) 1 (+4.0) 1 (+4.0) 1 (+5.0) 1 (+4.0) 1 (+4.0) 1 (+5.0) 1 (+5.0) 1 (+6.0) 1 (+5.0) 1 (+6.0) 1 (+6.0) 1 (+7.0) 1 (+7.0) 1 (+8.0) 1 (+8.0) 1 (+7.0) 1 (+7.0) 1 (+7.0) 1 (+6.0) 1 (+5.0) 1 (+4.0)

Anderson/Stripling Avilan/Ottavino/Jansen

24,790

Hand/Liberatore/Maurer

48,911

Hill/Perdomo

47,590 46,441 41,820 42,457 44.352

De Leon/Quckenbush/Jansen

Maeda/Greinke Stripling/Miller/Jansen

Stewart/Ray/Jansen

22,683

Warren/Stripling/Betonces

22,940 20,933 20,188 32,058 32,615

Avilan/Betances/Jansen

30,254

Bradley/Hill/Corbin Maeda/Greinke/Jansen Stewart/Miller Koch/Stripling Blanton/Lopez Cueto/Hill/Romo Maeda/Moore Avilan/Logan/Jansen Stripling/Gray/Jansen Kershaw/Bettis Blanton/Logan

27,126 28,211 38,255 26,159 43,435 53,621 45,983 48,344 52,320 53,299 51,962

Fernandez/Kershaw/Ramos

Hill/Koehler Urena/Maeda/Ramos De Leon/Mitchell

Clemens/Maeda 27,376 Perdomo/Stripling/Maurer 29,471 Anderson/Friedrich 35,804 Bumgarner/McCarthy 41,359 Blach/Kershaw/Romo 41,320 Moore/Maeda 41,455

NLDS vs. WASHINGTON G1 10/7 @WSH W, 4-3

1-0

---

1-0

----

DAYS IN… 1st Place (or tied): 76 2nd Place (or tied): 93 3rd Place (or tied): 2 4th Place (or tied): 0 5th Place: 0

Kershaw/Scherzer/Jansen 43,915

April 3

April 3

April 9 April 10 April 12 April 14 April 15 April 21 April 23 April 25 April 26 May 2 May 7 May 12 May 18 May 19 May 23 May 26 May 27 May 28 May 31 June 3 June 4 June 5 June 8 June 12 June 13 June 14 June 19 June 21 June 22 June 24 June 25 June 28 June 29 June 30 July 1 July 3 July 5 July 7 July 8 July 16 July 19 July 20 July 21 July 22 July 23 July 31 Aug. 1

Aug. 2 Aug. 3

Aug. 4 Aug. 6 Aug. 7 Aug. 8 Aug. 9 Aug. 12 Aug. 14 Aug. 16 Aug. 19 Aug. 21 Aug. 23 Aug. 24 Aug. 25

Aug. 26 Aug. 29 Aug. 30 Aug. 31 Sept. 2 Sept. 4 Sept. 5 Sept. 6 Sept. 7 Sept. 9 Sept. 10 Sept. 11 Sept. 19 Sept. 20 Sept. 22 Sept. 23 Sept. 25

Selected the contract of infielder Charlie Culberson; recalled RHP Ross Stripling; optioned LHP Luis Avilan to Triple-A Oklahoma City; reassigned IF Rob Segedin; placed LHP Brett Anderson (60-day, herniated disc surgery), RHP Mike Bolsinger (15-day, left oblique strain, retroactive to March 25), OF Andre Ethier (15-day, broken right tibia, retroactive to March 25), IF/OF Alex Guerrero (15-day, left knee contusion, retroactive to March 25), C Yasmani Grandal (15-day, right forearm soreness, retroactive to March 25), IF Howie Kendrick (15-day, strained left calf, retroactive to March 25), RHP Josh Ravin (15-day, left radius fracture, retroactive to March 25) and LHP Hyun-Jin Ryu (15-day, left shoulder surgery, retroactive to March 25) on the DL. Announced Opening Day Roster: Pitchers (12): Pedro Baez, Joe Blanton, Louis Coleman, Yimi Garcia, Chris Hatcher, J.P. Howell (L), Kenley Jansen, Scott Kazmir (L), Clayton Kershaw (L), Kenta Maeda, Ross Stripling, Alex Wood (L), Catchers (2): Austin Barnes, A.J. Ellis Infielders (5): Charlie Culberson, Adrian Gonzalez (L), Corey Seager (L), Justin Turner, Chase Utley (L) Outfielders (4): Carl Crawford (L), Joc Pederson (L), Yasiel Puig, Scott Van Slyke, Trayce Thompson Infielder/Outfielder (2): Kiké Hernandez, Scott Van Slyke. Placed OF Carl Crawford on the 15-day disabled list (lower back tightness); recalled INF Micah Johnson from Triple-A Oklahoma City Acquired minor league OF James Ramsey and INF Zach Walters from the Cleveland Indians in exchange for cash considerations; to make room on the 40-man roster, the Dodgers moved RHP Josh Ravin and OF Andre Ethier to the 60-day disabled list; optioned INF Micah Johnson to Triple-A Oklahoma City Reinstated C Yasmani Grandal and INF Howie Kendrick from the 15-day DL; placed INF/OF Scott Van Slyke on the 15-day disabled list (low back irritation, retroactive to April 10). Recalled LHP Adam Liberatore from Triple-A Oklahoma City; placed RHP Chris Hatcher on the paternity list Reinstated RHP Chris Hatcher from the paternity list; optioned INF/C Austin Barnes to Triple-A Oklahoma City Recalled LHP Luis Avilan from Triple-A OKC; placed RHP Louis Coleman on the Bereavement List Placed RHP Yimi Garcia on the 15-day disabled list (right biceps soreness); recalled RHP Zach Lee from Triple-A Oklahoma City Reinstated RHP Louis Coleman from the Bereavement List; optioned LHP Luis Avilan to Triple-A Oklahoma City Reinstated OF Carl Crawford from the 15-day disabled list; optioned RHP Zach Lee to Triple-A Oklahoma City Placed RHP Josh Ravin on the restricted list Claimed RHP Casey Fien from the Minnesota Twins; placed LHP Hyun-Jin Ryu on the 60-day disabled list (shoulder surgery) Outrighted RHP Casey Fien to Triple-A Oklahoma City, removing him from the 40-man roster Reinstated RHP Mike Bolsinger from the 15-day disabled list; optioned INF Charlie Culberson to Triple-A Oklahoma City Selected the contract of RHP Chin-hui Tsao from Triple-A Oklahoma City; optioned RHP Mike Bolsinger to Triple-A Oklahoma City Recalled RHP Mike Bolsinger and LHP Luis Avilan from Triple-A Oklahoma City; optioned RHP Ross Stripling to Triple-A OKC; placed RHP Chin-hui Tsao on the 15-day disabled list with a right triceps strain (retroactive to May 22) Optioned LHP Luis Avilan to Triple-A Oklahoma City Selected the contract of LHP Julio Uriás from Triple-A Oklahoma City; to create room on the 40-man roster, transferred RHP Yimi Garcia (right biceps soreness) to the 60-day disabled list Selected the contract of RHP Casey Fien from Triple-A Oklahoma City; optioned LHP Julio Urias to Triple-A OKC; designated OF James Ramsey for assignment Designated INF/OF Alex Guerrero assignment; placed LHP Alex Wood on the 15-day disabled list (left posterior elbow impingement); recalled LHP Julio Urias from Triple-A OKC Reinstated INF/OF Scott Van Slyke from 15-day disabled list; placed OF Yasiel Puig on 15-day disabled list (strained left hamstring) Outrighted OF James Ramsey to Triple-A Oklahoma City Recalled C/INF Austin Barnes from Triple-A Oklahoma City; designated OF Carl Crawford for assignment Released INF/OF Alex Guerrero from the roster Reinstated RHP Frankie Montas (rib resection surgery) from the 60-day disabled list and optioned him to Triple-A Oklahoma City Released OF Carl Crawford from the roster Signed OF Will Venable to a one-year contract; optioned C/INF Austin Barnes to Triple-A Oklahoma City Recalled RHP Carlos Frias from Triple-A Oklahoma City; optioned RHP Mike Bolsinger to Triple-A OKC; acquired INF Chris Taylor from Seattle in exchange for RHP Zach Lee Reinstated OF Yasiel Puig from the 15-day disabled list (strained left hamstring); optioned RHP Carlos Frias to Triple-A Oklahoma City Claimed RHP Layne Somsen from the New York Yankees; transferred RHP Chin-hui Tsao (right triceps strain) to the 60-day disabled list Selected the contract of RHP Nick Tepesch from Triple-A Oklahoma City; designated OF Will Venable for assignment Recalled INF Chris Taylor from Triple-A Oklahoma City; designated RHP Nick Tepesch for assignment Claimed INF Cole Figueroa from the Pittsburgh Pirates and optioned him to Triple-A Oklahoma City Selected the contract of RHP Brock Stewart from Triple-A Oklahoma City, placed INF/OF Kiké Hernández on the disabled list with left ribcage inflammation (retroactive to June 28) and transferred LHP Alex Wood (left posterior elbow soreness) to the 60-day DL Acquired RHP Bud Norris, minor league OF Dian Toscano, PTBNL (RHP Alec Grosser) and cash consideration from the Atlanta Braves in exchange of minor league LHP Philip Pfeifer and RHP Caleb Dirks…designated LHP Ian Thomas for assignment to make room on the 40-man roster Placed LHP Clayton Kershaw on the 15-day disabled list with mild disc herniation (retroactive to June 27); placed OF Joc Pederson on 15-day disabled list with a sprained right AC joint (retroactive to June 29); activated RHP Bud Norris; selected the contract of OF Will Venable from Triple-A Oklahoma City; designated RHP Layne Somsen for assignment to make room on the 40-man roster Reinstated RHP Brandon McCarthy from the 60-day disabled list; optioned RHP Brock Stewart to Triple-A Oklahoma City; outrighted RHP Yaisel Sierra and RHP Layne Somsen to create room on the 40man roster; released LHP Ian Thomas from the roster Optioned LHP Julio Uriás to Triple-A Oklahoma City; recalled LHP Luis Avilan from Triple-A OKC Reinstated LHP Hyun-Jin Ryu from the 60-day disabled list and recalled RHP Carlos Frias from Triple-A Oklahoma City; designated OF Will Venable for assignment and sent LHP Luis Avilan to Triple-A OKC Selected the contract of OF Andrew Toles from Triple-A Oklahoma City and optioned RHP Carlos Frias to Triple-A OKC; designated Cole Figueroa for assignment to create room on the 40-man roster Placed OF Trayce Thompson on the 15-day disabled list with lower back tightness; recalled INF/OF Zach Walters from Triple-A Oklahoma City Reinstated OF Joc Pederson from the 15-day disabled list and recalled LHP Luis Avilan from Triple-A Oklahoma City; placed RHP Casey Fien (retroactive to July 17) and Hyun-Jin Ryu (retroactive to July 9) on the 15-day disabled list with elbow tendonitis Recalled INF Charlie Culberson from Triple-A Oklahoma City; placed RHP Chris Hatcher on the 15-day disabled list with a strained left oblique Recalled LHP Julio Urías from Triple-A Oklahoma City and selected the contract of LHP Grant Dayton from OKC; optioned OF Zach Walters and INF Charlie Culberson to Triple-A OKC to create room on the roster; transferred RHP Chris Hatcher (left oblique strain) to the 60-day disabled list Recalled INF/C Austin Barnes from Triple-A Oklahoma City; optioned LHP Julio Urías to Triple-A OKC Recalled RHP Ross Stripling from Triple-A Oklahoma City; optioned LHP Grant Dayton to Triple-A OKC Reinstated INF/OF Kiké Hernandez from the 15-day disabled list; optioned INF/C Austin Barnes to Triple-A Oklahoma City Acquired OF Josh Reddick and LHP Rich Hill from the Athletics in exchange for minor league RHPs Jharel Cotton, Grant Holmes and Frankie Montas; acquired RHP Jesse Chavez and cash considerations from the Blue Jays in exchange for RHP Mike Bolsinger; acquired RHP Josh Fields from the Astros in exchange for minor league INF Yordan Alvarez; to create room on the 40-man roster, the Dodgers transferred LHP Hyun-Jin Ryu (left elbow tendinitis) to the 60-day disabled list Activated OF Josh Reddick and RHP Jesse Chavez; placed LHP Rich Hill on the 15-day disabled list retroactive to July 18 (left middle finger blister); to create room on the active roster, sent RHP Josh Fields, RHP Ross Stripling and OF Yasiel Puig to the minors Recalled RHP Brock Stewart, LHP Julio Urías and RHP Josh Fields from Triple-A Oklahoma City; placed RHP Louis Coleman (right shoulder fatigue) and LHP Adam Liberatore (left elbow inflammation, retroactive to July 30) on the 15-day disabled list; optioned OF Andrew Toles to Triple-A OKC; reinstated RHP Josh Ravin from the restricted list and optioned to Triple-A OKC; transferred LHP Clayton Kershaw (mildly herniated disc) to the 60-day disabled list (retroactive to June 27) Recalled LHP Grant Dayton from Triple-A Oklahoma City; optioned RHP Brock Stewart to Triple-A OKC Recalled RHP Ross Stripling from Triple-A Oklahoma City; placed RHP Bud Norris on the 15-day disabled list with a mild mid-back strain (retroactive to Aug. 1) Selected the contract of INF/OF Rob Segedin from Triple-A Oklahoma City; optioned INF Chris Taylor to Triple-A OKC; to create room on the 40-man roster, transferred OF Trayce Thompson to the 60-day disabled list (retroactive to July 10) Recalled RHP Josh Ravin from Triple-A Oklahoma City; placed RHP Joe Blanton on the Bereavement List Recalled INF Chris Taylor from Triple-A Oklahoma City; placed OF/INF Scott Van Slyke on the 15-day disabled list with right wrist irritation (retroactive to Aug. 8) Reinstated RHP Joe Blanton from the Bereavement List; optioned LHP Luis Avilan to Triple-A Oklahoma City Reinstated LHP Brett Anderson from the 60-day disabled list and recalled RHP Brock Stewart from Triple-A Oklahoma City; placed RHP Brandon McCarthy (right hip stiffness) and RHP Josh Ravin (right triceps soreness) on the 15-day disabled list and designated OF Zach Walters for assignment Reinstated RHP Casey Fien from the 15-day disabled list (right elbow tendonitis); optioned RHP Brock Stewart to Triple-A Oklahoma City; released INF/OF Zach Walters from the roster Reinstated RHP Bud Norris and LHP Adam Liberatore from the 15-day disabled list; optioned RHP Casey Fien and RHP Ross Stripling to Triple-A Oklahoma City Recalled OF Andrew Toles from Triple-A Oklahoma City; optioned INF Chris Taylor to Triple-A OKC Recalled LHP Luis Avilan, INF Charlie Culberson and RHP Ross Stripling from Triple-A Oklahoma City; placed LHP Brett Anderson (blister, left index finger – retroactive to Aug. 21) and LHP Scott Kazmir (neck inflammation) on the 15-day disabled list; optioned RHP Josh Fields to Triple-A OKC Reinstated LHP Rich Hill from the 15-day disabled list (left middle finger blister); placed INF/OF Rob Segedin on the paternity list Acquired C Carlos Ruiz and cash considerations from the Philadelphia Phillies in exchange for C A.J. Ellis, minor league pitcher Tommy Bergjans and a player to be named later or cash considerations; selected the contract of C Shawn Zarraga from Triple-A Oklahoma City and reinstated INF/OF Rob Segedin from the paternity list; optioned LHP Luis Avilan to Triple-A OKC; transferred OF/INF Scott Van Slyke to the 60-day disabled list (right wrist irritation, original DL date: Aug. 8) Recalled RHP Brock Stewart from Triple-A Oklahoma City and activated C Carlos Ruiz; optioned C Shawn Zarraga to Triple-A Oklahoma City and RHP Kenta Maeda to the Rookie-level AZL Dodgers Recalled RHP Kenta Maeda from Rookie-level AZL Dodgers; optioned RHP Brock Stewart to Double-A Tulsa Recalled RHP Casey Fien from Triple-A Oklahoma City; optioned RHP Pedro Báez to Double-A Tulsa Recalled LHP Luis Avilan from Triple-A Oklahoma City as 26th man for doubleheader Reinstated RHP Louis Coleman (right shoulder fatigue) and RHP Josh Ravin (right triceps soreness) from the 15-day disabled list; recalled C/INF Austin Barnes, RHP Josh Fields and OF Yasiel Puig from Triple-A Oklahoma City Selected the contract of RHP José De León from Triple-A Oklahoma City Recalled LHP Luis Avilan from Triple-A Oklahoma City Recalled RHP Pedro Báez from Double-A Tulsa Recalled RHP Brock Stewart from Double-A Tulsa Reinstated LHP Clayton Kershaw from the 60-day disabled list (mild disc herniation; retroactive to June 27); recalled RHP Carlos Frias from Triple-A Oklahoma City and placed him on the 60-day disabled list (right oblique strain) Reinstated OF Andre Ethier from the 60-day disabled list (broken right tibia; retroactive to March 25); designated RHP Casey Fien for assignment to create room on the 40-man roster Outrighted RHP Casey Fien to Triple-A Oklahoma City Recalled INF Micah Johnson from Triple-A Oklahoma City Reinstated LHP Alex Wood from 60-day disabled list (posterior impingement in left elbow); to create room on the 40-man roster, designated RHP Bud Norris for assignment Reinstated LHP Brett Anderson from the 15-day disabled list (blister, left index finger – retroactive to Aug. 21) Reinstated LHP Scott Kazmir from the 15-day disabled list (neck inflammation); recalled INF Chris Taylor from Triple-A Oklahoma City Reinstated RHP Brandon McCarthy from the 15-day disabled list (right hip stiffness)