
"The Dodgers have allowed just one run in four consecutive playoff games between the NL Division Series against the Philadelphia Phillies and NL Championship Series against the Milwaukee Brewers. During that stretch, they've also allowed no more than four hits in any of the games. With those stats, the Dodgers are the first team in MLB postseason history to pitch four consecutive games while allowing one or fewer runs along with four or fewer hits, according to Sarah Langs of MLB.com: The Dodgers are the first team in postseason history to allow 1 or 0 runs and 4 hits or fewer in 4 consecutive games h/t @JayCat11 - Sarah Langs (@SlangsOnSports) October 17, 2025"
"In addition, the Dodgers pitching staff has walked fewer than five batters each of those games, while striking out seven or more. No pitching staff in history, during the regular season or postseason, has previously had a stretch of four straight games achieving all those marks, via OptaStats: In each of the last 4 games, the Dodger pitching staff has: allowed 1 or 0 runsallowed fewer than 5 hitsallowed fewer than 5 walksstruck out 7+ batters No other MLB team in the modern era has done that in 4 straight games at any point, regular season or postseason. pic.twitter.com/it5Pi2JY38 - OptaSTATS (@OptaSTATS) October 17, 2025"
The Los Angeles Dodgers pitching staff allowed one run or fewer in four straight playoff games while permitting no more than four hits in each contest. The streak spanned the NL Division Series versus the Phillies and the NL Championship Series versus the Brewers. The staff also walked fewer than five batters and recorded at least seven strikeouts in each of those games, a combination not previously recorded in four consecutive games in the modern era, regular season or postseason. Blake Snell, Yoshinobu Yamamoto and Tyler Glasnow anchored the run, with Glasnow delivering six shutout innings to start it.
Read at Dodger Blue
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