Handling the San Diego Sluggers
Manny Machado, Hunter Renfroe, Wil Myers. All are capable of blasting a home run off of the Western Metal building in left field at Petco Park. All also have been ice cold at times this season.
Luckily for the Dodgers, this is one of those stretches.
Machado’s last 14 games have netted him just 2 doubles, 1 home run, and 6 walks. Renfroe’s two August home runs are the fewest he’s totaled for any full month this season. Myers has 13 strikeouts in his last 10 games.
Long story short, the guys the Dodgers should be worried about following the righty-Yankee power surge are less than threatening at the moment. But it doesn’t take much to set any of this trio off, especially Machado and Renfroe.
The stocky outfielder has two 9-homer months under his belt this season, with 31 on the year, while Machado had a June for the ages, in which 11 of his 33 hits left the yard. So the Dodgers need to be careful, especially after allowing home runs in three straight games to Aaron Judge, who had two home runs in August coming into Dodger Stadium last Friday.
If the Dodgers are to limit the home run output of these three, they’ll need their righties, who did not pitch against the Yankees. Buehler, Maeda, and May all will need to keep their fastballs above the belt and their curves below a set of buckled knees in order to avoid any damage.
Renfroe actually has very similar numbers to Sanchez, in terms of season-long home run output (31 for Renfroe, 29 for Sanchez), the number of fastballs they see (46.8% vs. 46.7%), their HR/FB rates (25.0% vs. 25.7%), and swinging strike rates (13.2% vs 13.4%). If the Dodgers can limit him, which they’ve struggled to do before, that would be a step in the right direction.
And while Judge and Machado are (inconveniently) less similar than Renfroe and Sanchez, both righties have long swings and a lot of power potential, and shutting down Machado would be akin to stopping any of the big sluggers on the major playoff contenders in both leagues.