UPDATE: Dodgerѕ’ ріtcherѕ roughed uр for 5 home runѕ іn loѕѕ to Natіonalѕ

ѕhoheі Ohtanі, Mookіe Bettѕ and Freddіe Freeman combіne for juѕt one hіt іn 12 at-batѕ, and the Dodgerѕ droр a 7-3 decіѕіon deѕріte hіttіng three ѕolo home runѕ

Starting pitcher Dustin May #85 of the Los Angeles Dodgers throws to the plate against the Washington Nationals in the first inning during a baseball game at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles on Saturday, June 21, 2025. (Photo by Keith Birmingham, Orange County Register/ SCNG)

LOS ANGELES — The Dodgers don’t always rely on the three former MVPs at the top of their lineup.

They have managed to win nine of their past 13 games despite modest contributions from that trio, players like Andy Pages and Will Smith stepping up in big ways.

They could have used them Saturday night, though.

Shohei Ohtani, Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman went a combined 1 for 12 with six strikeouts in a 7-3 loss to the Washington Nationals.

The Dodgers’ only runs in the loss were solo home runs by Pages, Smith and Teoscar Hernandez, continuing a breakout season for Pages and another All-Star season for Smith.

“It is tough, and they feel it, obviously,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said of trying to win with three slumping stars at the top of the lineup. “With their track record, their talent, they feel a responsibility to kind of get things going. Certainly, though, when you have nine guys in a lineup, it’s not just on them.

“But especially Freddie and Mookie, they’re grinding right now, trying to figure out some things with their swings.”

Ohtani was hitless in four at-bats, extending a 2-for-19 skid without an extra-base hit or a run scored in his past five games. Since being hit by a pitch for the first of two times during the San Diego series, he has struck out 10 times in 18 at-bats. He came up with runners on base twice Saturday and struck out both times.

“The last week, I think, yeah, he’s been struggling a little bit, chasing a little bit more,” Roberts said. “I wouldn’t think it’s related to (his return to) pitching. But as we keep going with this process, he keeps pitching. We’ll know more. But I don’t know that answer right now.”

After a heartening stretch from Betts following his return from a toe injury, he has slipped back into the doldrums – 5 for 33 over his past nine games.

Freeman has slipped from the top of the National League’s batting average leaderboard with his own 5-for-33 slump over his past nine games, with no extra-base hits and no RBIs in that stretch. He had the best chance of the trio to impact Saturday’s game in the fifth inning. He came up with runners on first and second against Nationals starter Jake Irvin but struck out.

Irvin struck out seven in his 5⅓ innings. Five of them were former MVPs.

“I can’t speak for anybody else, but can speak for myself. I haven’t been very good for a while,” Freeman said. “Just trying to figure it out, did the net drill many, many times the last few days, but still not clicking.”

Freeman said he’s been frustrated with his swing for “six weeks now. … The swing is still in Arizona, I think.” He was referring to an early May series against the Diamondbacks. Since then, Freeman has hit .279 while dealing with his surgically repaired ankle and a quadriceps muscle injury more recently.

“No aches. No pains. The only pain is the swing,” he said when asked.

It might not have mattered, given the way Dodgers pitchers gave up the longball on Saturday – 2,035 feet worth in all.

Right-hander Dustin May continued his season-long trend of making just enough mistakes to color an otherwise positive outing. He pitched into at least the sixth inning for the eighth time in his 14 starts and gave up just five hits. Three of them were home runs, however.

“Yeah, exactly,” May said of that assessment. “It’s not that I want to say I took a pitch off. But it’s like one or two pitches every outing is really killing me.”

After retiring nine of the first 10 batters, he gave up a monstrous 451-foot blast to James Wood leading off the fourth inning and another solo home run to Luis Garcia Jr. on the next pitch.

Two innings later, Nathaniel Lowe got May for the first of his two home runs in the game. In between, Jack Dreyer gave up a two-run home run to C.J. Abrams, the first home run Dreyer has allowed in his major-league career (now 39⅔ innings old).

“Honestly, I thought it was a really good outing (from May),” Roberts said.

“I’ve got no complaints. Obviously, he gave up a few solo homers. But I thought the efficiency of the pitching, the quality of pitches, the strike throwing, all that stuff, was great.”

Teoscar Hernandez led off the bottom of the ninth with a solo home run. But the Dodgers finished with seven hits and little energy offensively, other than the solo homers.

“There are days where you feel completely out of it. You don’t feel comfortable at the plate,” Pages said in Spanish. “I think today was one of those days for the team. We always go out every day and try to give our best. But there are times where, for some reason, things don’t happen. Just have to leave it at that, and tomorrow’s another day.”

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