CLAYTON KERSHAW struck out eight batters in five innings as the Dodgers won their third straight game on Sunday (Flickr/David Slaughter).
The MLB wild card standings are of special interest to baseball fans now, as the final weeks of the season wind down. The Dodgers are in a unique spot: if they finish as they are now – just one game behind the Giants – they will get a post-season playoff spot, but have to start that with a one-game “sudden death” contest against the other NL wild card team, which could be the St. Louis Cardinals (79-69), Cincinnati Reds (77-73) or Philadelphia Phillies (76-73).
More likely is the Halos – losers of three straight through Sunday – will go quietly, triggering talk of whether manager Joe Maddon is really the man who belongs in the dugout. Let the finger-pointing begin!
Dodgers schedule: Idle Monday, then start a three-game series in Colorado Tuesday through Thursday, then three games at Arizona Friday to Sunday.
Angels schedule: Starting a four-game series in Anaheim against the Houston Astros Monday. Then the Mariners are in town Friday to Sunday.
Rams getting their kicks; Bolts got kicked
The Chargers fell to 1-1 on a heart-breaking 20-17 loss to the Dallas Cowboys on a 56-yard field goal by former Rams placekicker Greg Zuerlein as time ran out. The Bolts got a good, but not great performance from young QB Justin Herbert, who passed for 338 yards and one score, but was intercepted twice. Next up: the Chargers will visit Kansas City (1-1) on Sunday.
Bruins’ bubble burst? Trojans back on horse
They made it close, rallying to only lose by three, but the UCLA football team’s 40-37 defeat at the hands of Fresno State may have taken a quite a lot of the air out of the feeling that “the Bruins are back.”
Speaking of the Trojans (also unranked) they could do a lot to reclimb that ladder on Saturday when they host Oregon State (2-1). USC bounced back from the loss to Stanford with a 45-14 blowout win over Washington State.
The final out: “I need a beer,” said Rams coach Sean McVay after the team rallied to win Sunday’s game in the last 142 seconds.
“Sports Monday” is written by Pete Zarustica.
