Dodgers Starting Pitchers Set MLB Record For Lowest ERA In Championship Series
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Dodgers Starting Pitchers Set MLB Record For Lowest ERA In Championship Series
"Snell started off the Dodgers in Game 1 with eight shutout innings, allowing only one hit and striking out 10. Yamamoto followed the next day with nine innings of one-run ball, adding seven strikeouts. Back at Dodger Stadium for Game 3, Glasnow gave them 5.2 innings while allowing just one run and striking out eight. Then Shohei Ohtani had the greatest game in MLB history and tossed six shutout innings with 10 strikeouts, while also hitting three home runs."
"The starters combined to pitch 28.2 of the 36 total innings in the NLCS and allowed only two runs, giving them an ERA of 0.63 as a staff. That mark was the lowest in MLB history by a starting rotation in the NLCS or American League Championship Series, via Bob Nightengale of USA Today: The Dodgers starting rotation yielded a 0.63 ERA, the lowest in NLCS/ALCS history. - Bob Nightengale (@BNightengale) October 18, 2025"
Los Angeles Dodgers swept the Milwaukee Brewers in the National League Championship Series, reaching the World Series for the second consecutive season and 23rd time in franchise history. The starting rotation of Blake Snell, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Tyler Glasnow and Shohei Ohtani combined to pitch 28.2 of the 36 innings and allowed only two runs, producing a 0.63 ERA, the lowest NLCS/ALCS mark in MLB history. Starters surrendered nine hits and seven walks (0.56 WHIP), struck out 35 batters (11.2 K/9). Individual outings included Snell's eight shutout innings, Yamamoto's nine-inning one-run effort, Glasnow's 5.2 innings, and Ohtani's six shutout innings with 10 strikeouts and three home runs. Brewers manager Pat Murphy credited the Dodgers' dominant pitching and Will Smith.
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