
How Kirby Smart built Georgia into college football’s next dynasty
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Published
2 years agoon
By
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Mark Schlabach
CloseESPN Senior Writer
- Senior college football writer
- Author of seven books on college football
- Graduate of the University of Georgia
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Alex Scarborough
IT WAS FINALLY over. Staying on as Alabama’s defensive coordinator for a month after becoming the head coach at Georgia was more stressful than Kirby Smart had imagined. But a promise was a promise, and he kept it, reminding himself during sleepless nights that there was a light at the end of the tunnel. And it wasn’t a train, it was a jubilant Crimson Tide locker room in Arizona, having just beaten Clemson to win the national championship.
Smart’s hair was still wet from a postgame shower when a group of reporters crowded around him after the 45-40 victory on Jan. 11, 2016 — a 40-year-old getting ready to tackle his first head-coaching job, which happened to be at his alma mater. A bus was waiting. A private plane would take him to Athens, Georgia, early the next morning. He looked exhausted, happy and anxious all at once. It wasn’t a perfect ending, as one reporter suggested. “It would have been perfect if we shut ’em out,” Smart said.
His boss, Alabama coach Nick Saban, had the same fundamental aversion to satisfaction. For two former defensive backs, allowing 40 points was a mortal sin. But a win’s a win, and no one turns down a trophy. It was poignant, too. This was the end of 11 long years together. Smart seemed in awe of his mentor, specifically a “hell of a call” to go for an onside kick with the game tied in the fourth quarter, but more broadly what it took to win four championships since arriving in Tuscaloosa in 2007. “Nobody realizes how much mental effort, execution and ideas this guy puts into it,” Smart said. “He lives, sleeps and breathes football.”
Smart said he’d take wisdom from Saban. He’d also take the secrets to evaluating and recruiting at the highest level. In a word, it was everything.
Although it might have been stressful to pull double duty at Alabama, Smart said he thought winning a championship would help Georgia with national signing day rapidly approaching. Being on TV was valuable exposure. It creates momentum, he explained. “But at the end of the day,” he said, “you have to build your own [momentum]. You have to win yourself and you have to get good players and we have to build a good program.”
Saban could have his so-called 24-hour rule, enjoying the championship for one day before flushing it and moving on. Smart said he was giving himself only five hours before he moved on to the full-time job of turning Georgia into a playoff contender. Michail Carter, whom Smart visited days later, picked Georgia over Alabama, and the Bulldogs signed the No. 7 class in the country — a culmination of an all-out effort that began the moment Smart took the job. At his introductory news conference, Smart told reporters he wanted to use every minute he had toward recruiting. He then looked down at his watch and said, “As a matter of fact, I’m ready to go right now.”
Smart took what he learned under Saban, put his personal spin on it and created a powerhouse underpinned by toughness, competition and top-shelf talent. Fittingly, Georgia beat Alabama to win its first championship under Smart this past January. Fifteen players were drafted off that team, including a record-setting five first-round picks on defense, and nothing changed. The Bulldogs went undefeated during this year’s regular season, beat LSU by 20 points in the SEC championship game and advanced to play Ohio State in Saturday’s College Football Playoff Semifinal at the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl in Atlanta (8 p.m. ET, ESPN).
With Saban and the Crimson Tide sitting at two losses and outside the playoff, Smart appears to have built the sport’s next budding dynasty. One that is looking more like vintage Alabama than Alabama does right now — physically imposing, stingy on defense and possessing a relentless attitude that’s a reflection of its head coach.
Smart said players could expect a culture shock once he took over. He delivered that and so much more.
GEORGIA ATHLETIC DIRECTOR Greg McGarity didn’t need a primer on Smart when he was looking to replace Mark Richt as head coach late in 2015. They were already acquainted, and not just because Smart had gone to school at Georgia and was a running backs coach there in 2005. “I knew when he was recruiting against Georgia, for years and years the best players in the state were going to Alabama,” McGarity said. One of the top recruiters in the country, Smart had signed about two dozen players from his home state, including future NFL running backs Kenyan Drake and Alvin Kamara.
Beyond Smart’s connections, McGarity was impressed by his résumé — specifically how long he lasted working for the famously demanding Saban. While the Alabama staff was in a constant state of churn, Smart was a fixture for nine years.
When McGarity and Smart finally spoke face to face after the SEC championship game that December, there weren’t many unknowns. The meeting was more about determining fit, hearing Smart’s vision for the program and understanding the commitment it would require. “He knew what he needed,” McGarity said, “and it was our job to make that happen.”
At one point, Smart handed McGarity a flowchart containing all the positions and reporting responsibilities within the organization. The recruiting department would roughly double in size. The chart was so big and complex that it couldn’t fit on McGarity’s tablet. Positions were color-coded to distinguish salaried from hourly employees.
McGarity wasn’t put off by the dollar figures, though, not even when they lured offensive line coach Sam Pittman away from Arkansas by giving him a $525,000 raise and paying a $250,000 buyout. McGarity said he was determined to empower Smart, rather than being a “helicopter” AD questioning him at every turn. But he does remember looking over the flowchart and wondering, “What are all these people going to do?”
“Once you saw a recruiting weekend in action, you said, ‘I get it,'” McGarity said. It wasn’t just the number of people required to pull off Smart’s vision of an official visit that impressed McGarity but also the coordination that took place, all the way down to the janitorial staff. From the moment a player set foot on campus, he and his family had a Georgia representative with them the entire time — a driver, a tour guide, a coach. There were no large groups where someone could get lost or let their mind wander. Everything was personalized.
“I’m always gonna have a presence because I think it shows the players, it shows the people in the organization, that everything we do is important,” Smart said. “And if you’re not there and you’re not relevant, you know, what does that say you’re saying about that part of the organization? And I just think it’s too important to be involved.”
And everyone was called upon to pitch in. Jere Morehead, the school president, would give up his Saturday mornings to come talk to recruits. When Morehead couldn’t make it, McGarity, who retired in 2020, would step in.
Smart was a constant presence, displaying an outgoing personality that doesn’t often show up in interview settings. A former staff member said Smart has an uncanny ability to connect with players. A prankster, the staffer explained, “He’s messing around with everyone, all the recruits and their parents.”
Given a full year to forge relationships, in 2017 Georgia signed the No. 3-ranked class, according to ESPN, including future first-round picks Isaiah Wilson and Andrew Thomas. A year later, Smart and the Bulldogs finished No. 1. And it’s no coincidence that, since Smart’s arrival, no team has assembled a slate of mammoth defensive linemen like Georgia has.
Smart recalled going to the NFL combine as an assistant with the Miami Dolphins in 2006 and being told by Saban, “I want you to come here and sit by Bill.” To which Smart asked, “Bill who?” It was Belichick, whom Saban had worked with as defensive coordinator for the Cleveland Browns. Saban said to listen and learn. But as they followed Belichick, positioning themselves behind the defensive linemen getting ready to run the 40-yard dash, Smart was confused. “Why are we here?” he asked. “You can’t time the finish.” Saban explained, “No, Bill likes to look and see how big their ass is when they get down in the 40-yard stance because he wants to sign the biggest ass defensive linemen that he can.” Saban accounts for a number of critical factors when evaluating players: straight-line speed, short-area quickness, arm length, ankle and hip flexibility. But sometimes a big can is what’s required, “Because those ‘backers want to … be protected.”
Last year, Travon Walker was the No. 1 pick in the NFL draft and Jordan Davis and Devonte Wyatt also were first-rounders. Current junior tackle Jalen Carter is a potential No. 1 pick in 2023.
From 2016 to 2018, Georgia spent $7 million on recruiting — $1.5 million more than any other public university in the Power 5, according to a USA Today Network study. And that’s not to mention the millions of dollars that went toward the kind of infrastructure recruits notice: new locker rooms, a new players lounge, a new indoor practice facility.
Robby Discher spent one season as a quality control coach at Georgia before taking the special teams coordinator job at Tulane. A former Group of 5 and FCS assistant, he marveled at the resources Smart had assembled. He singled out director of player personnel Matt Godwin for his skill in overseeing a robust recruiting operation. He called associate director of recruiting operations Angela Kirkpatrick a “stud.” He said director of recruiting relations David Cooper is incredible, working the phones day and night, connecting with prospects and coaches.
That’s all before you get to on-field assistants Smart hired, such as Dell McGee and Todd Hartley, who are some of the best recruiters in the country.
“I think it starts with him,” Discher said of Smart. “He’s a relentless recruiter. … He’s on you about it. If he asks [about a prospect], you better know.”
THERE’S A PHRASE Smart uses often to describe his job as a leader: confront and demand. Discher said Smart does a good job of setting a clear standard, whether it’s in recruiting or any other facet of the program. And, apparently, he misses nothing. “If a random guy on punt return should be inside of the guard and he’s head up on the guard, he sees it,” Discher said. “Not only is that player going to hear about it, so is the assistant coach. You can’t be soft and make it through that program.”
“He’s one of the smartest people I’ve ever met,” Discher added. “He’s incredibly intelligent, and he’s gonna be on your ass.”
During the summer of 2016 — a month before his first game as head coach — Smart visited the Athens Country Club and spoke to fans about what to expect: the health of the team, the transfers added during the offseason and how Saban had called Georgia one of the best jobs in college football. Smart laughed and said his old boss was pulling a fast one with that comment, setting him up for high expectations.
But then Smart got on the subject of movies, specifically the decision to show the team “Friday The 13th” and “Nightmare on Elm Street” before the last two scrimmages, and he gave a glimpse into the team psyche he was attempting to foster.
“That’s who we want them to be,” he said. “We want them to be scary. Just like the guy in the mask; you can’t kill him. He keeps coming back. As soon as you do kill them, well, here comes the sequel.”
Jeb Blazevich graduated and left Georgia after the 2017 season, but the former tight end kept a memento at his new job selling insurance. It was a printout of the Tuesday practice schedule, which he pinned to a wall in his office. So whenever he had a bad day, he said, he could turn to the schedule and remember old times.
“Especially in August,” he recalled, “we would all sit around and be like, ‘Well, boys, I just got chewed out at work, I screwed something up, client’s pissed. But it could be worse.'”
It could be Bloody Tuesday.
When Smart arrived, Tuesday stopped being just another practice during the week. It became a two-hour test asking, essentially, how tough can you possibly be? They’d run as a team and practice in full pads. It would be ones vs. ones, full go. No special teams, no red zone. No stopping to catch your breath while they change out personnel every 5 minutes. “No special situations, you’re just playing fast football,” Blazevich said. “A super physical day.”
It was a shock, too, because Monday — the first day of practice after a game on Saturday — was usually light. Tuesday was the “heaviest day” by far, Blazevich said, and every day after that tapered off in terms of intensity. Coaches would emphasize its importance, telling players they took care of them the rest of the week for a reason. “How you practice,” they’d say, “is how you play.”
“The whole day is about setting your jaw,” quarterback Stetson Bennett said. “It’s a mindset day. That’s when we go good on good, and we try to shove it up the defense and they try to spit it right back out. And it’s competitive, and we’re talkin’ trash, and Coach Smart’s on the microphone, and it’s almost like a game.”
Smart doesn’t need a microphone to get his point across, but boy oh boy does it add an exclamation point on things when his voice is booming out of a speaker. Last month, someone was able to record Smart from across the street when he ripped into cornerback Kelee Ringo ahead of Georgia’s game against Tennessee. “Kelee, all this finger-pointing bulls—?” Smart was heard saying. “Every other team in America, you know what they do? They say, ‘It’s his fault! It’s his fault! It’s his fault!’ Why do they get f—ing layups? Because people don’t concentrate!”
“That was nothing,” Discher said. “That was a normal Tuesday.”
For the record, Ringo, who signed with Georgia in 2020, loves Tuesdays. He said it “molds you into a good player” and “gets you ready for Saturday.” They bring up Bloody Tuesday during pregame, he said, as a reminder to “impose our will and just be physical.”
Is it difficult to endure that kind of mental and physical toll every week? Of course it is. Ringo said he warns recruits all the time, “If you come to Georgia, it’s going to be hard. It’s going to be painful. There are going to be some days where it’s really hard to keep your chin up.”
Other coaches have adjusted to the current climate, not wanting to run off players who can easily leave via the transfer portal. It’s been suggested by the media and some of Saban’s former players that the 71-year-old is a kinder, gentler version of his younger self.
Smart is 46 and seems just as ready to run through a wall as he did during his playing days. Smart jumped higher than Ringo did for his game-sealing pick-six against Alabama during last year’s national championship game.
Being tough, being physical, practicing ones vs. ones, Bennett said, “It’s at the foundation of this place.”
Those Tuesday practices set the tone. Co-defensive coordinator Will Muschamp called them “a thing of beauty” and “the way you’re supposed to get after it.” Offensive lineman Sedrick Van Pran said it gets chippy and fights are common. But it’s OK. It’s like building calluses, he said. “It gets you acclimated to what they expect in the game, because honest, football isn’t easy.”
“We hit,” Smart said. “We promote toughness. And it’s not just by me. It’s done by the leaders on the team. And I think they embody that. They embrace that. And when you talk to people after you play ’em, they [say], ‘Man, y’all are a really physically tough team. And we respect that.'”
LOOKING BACK, the thing Blazevich appreciated about Smart was his consistency. There was a point during their first season in 2016, he said, when it felt as if the wheels were getting ready to come off. The Bulldogs had just lost to Vanderbilt and dropped to 4-3. The media was tearing them apart and everyone was dreading the bye week when Smart called a group of veteran players into his office.
Blazevich, who was part of the group, remembered Smart being calm and starting out by saying, “I know everyone’s scared.” But he said that nothing had changed just because they had lost a game. The bye week wouldn’t be altered. “That gave me a lot of confidence that, all right, we’re not just acting emotionally, we’re not figuring this thing out as we go,” Blazevich said. “Like, there is a plan in place that we can trust.”
They lost to Florida the next week but didn’t collapse. Instead, they went on to win four of their final five games, including beating TCU in the Liberty Bowl, which helped set the tone for the next season.
Despite starting 2017 off with nine straight wins and reaching No. 1 in the AP poll, Smart didn’t let off the gas. In fact, he pushed harder, worried about the effect of so much positive press.
On Mondays, Smart wanted to set the tone. So at the start of every practice, during stretch period, he played a song by The O’Jays. It was a little on the nose and way too old for the audience, but he dialed up “Back Stabbers.” Early on, there’s this passage:
Blades are long, clenched tight in their fist
Aimin’ straight at your back
And I don’t think they’ll miss
What they do? They smilin’ in your face
All the time, they want to take your place
The back stabbers (Back stabbers)
So that was the soundtrack the first time Georgia reached the playoff, beat Oklahoma in the Rose Bowl and lost to Alabama in the national championship game. Four years later, the Bulldogs got their revenge.
The song is still in rotation. Linebacker Jamon Dumas-Johnson said Smart plays it to remind them “They’re not with us.”
Bennett gladly recites all the ways in which “they” are wrong.
First, look at the defense, he said, which lost five first-round picks and hasn’t missed a beat.
“You know, that’s why you recruit good players,” he said. “They just come in, and now all these guys on defense are hungry because everybody [during the] preseason is tellin’ ’em that they’re not gonna be this, they’re not gonna do that.”
Now look at the offense. “Everybody on offense is hungry and ready to go,” Bennett said, “because everybody said, ‘Oh, well, the only reason you won last year was because of your all-world defense,’ as if that’s some sort of slight to our championship ring.” Now look at the entire team. “We’re hungry,” Bennett said. “We’re sittin’ over here and sayin’, ‘Oh, you’re saying that about us. Really? Blah, blah, blah.'” Talking to players, there’s no sense of entitlement. There’s no letdown. Dumas-Johnson said they enjoy feeling like underdogs. They enjoy the feeling of disrespect — all because they weren’t ranked No. 1 at the beginning of the season. No. 1 in the preseason was, of course, Alabama, which seemed to play not to lose. At one point, Saban questioned his team’s emotion, wondering why players had stopped chanting in the tunnel before games as they had in the past. Alabama used to have an edge, manufacturing it through competition and slights in the media, real or imagined. But that edge appears to have dulled in recent years, with the Tide struggling to put away teams late (see: losses at Tennessee and LSU) and playing down to competition (see: Texas A&M and Texas). The edge belongs to Georgia now. Jim Nagy runs the Senior Bowl, which is equal parts college all-star game and NFL draft showcase. When he watches Georgia, he sees the Alabama blueprint in action — the high-end talent, specifically on defense. Saban used to load up on big, strong linemen, Nagy said, but now it appears Smart has “cornered the market on those guys.” There’s even a parallel on offense. Remember when Alabama used to have game-manager quarterbacks and multiple bruising running backs? It’s flipped to where that’s now Georgia with the ultimate blue-collar QB in Bennett and a trio of hard-nosed backs in Kenny McIntosh, Daijun Edwards and Kendall Milton. “You’ve gotten full recruiting classes that have cycled through now, right? And they’re just building on each other,” Nagy said. “So the culture is established. There’s a hunger there. I think where Alabama kind of ran into it was after they’d won a bunch — and this is just hearing this from the coaches on the staff there — after they’d won multiple national championships, they would have kids come on the recruiting visits and see all the trophies and then they would sign. And part of them felt like they already helped win those trophies when they didn’t. I don’t think there’s that, um, what’s the word I’m trying to use?” Entitlement? “Right,” he said. “I don’t think there’s that entitlement yet in the Georgia program. I think they still seem like a hungry group.” When Smart left Alabama seven years ago, he didn’t carry those four championships out the door and onto the plane to go home. No one at Georgia inherited that success the moment he arrived in Athens. All he got from beating Clemson was momentum in recruiting. All he got from Saban was a blueprint. And even then it was his job to build on both and make them his own. He did that and so much more. Even former Florida and South Carolina coach Steve Spurrier — a constant thorn in the Bulldogs’ side who once joked that he liked playing them early in the season because he could count on 2-3 players being suspended — had to admit that Georgia will be “hard to catch.” They’re so much bigger along the line of scrimmage than they were in the past, he said, and every year they’re around the top of the recruiting rankings. Last week, Georgia landed a seventh consecutive top-three signing class. “They’re a big, good-looking team,” Spurrier said. “Kirby’s done an excellent job with their attitude and the way they play, the way they prepare each week. They don’t get full of themselves. They get ready to play every week, and they have a plan, and plan is to win ’em all. And, so far, they’re on schedule to do that.”
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Sports
‘Awesome feeling’: Briscoe notches third Cup win
Published
7 hours agoon
June 23, 2025By
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Associated Press
Jun 22, 2025, 08:19 PM ET
LONG POND, Pa. — Chase Briscoe got the cold facts when the third-generation driver’s career took an unexpected turn, leaving his lame-duck NASCAR team for the sport’s most coveted available seat with powerhouse Joe Gibbs Racing.
The message was clear at JGR — home of five Cup driver titles and a perennial contender to win another one.
“You don’t make the playoffs,” Briscoe said, “you don’t race in this car anymore.”
The Toyotas were better at JGR, sure. So were the championship standards set by Joe Gibbs and the rest of the organization.
“It’s been a lot of work,” Briscoe’s crew chief James Small said. “From where he came from, there wasn’t much accountability. Nobody was holding his feet to the fire. That’s probably been a big wake-up call for him.”
Briscoe’s eyes are wide open now, a first-time winner for JGR and, yes, he is indeed playoff bound.
Briscoe returned to victory lane Sunday at Pocono Raceway, stretching the final drops of fuel down the stretch to hold off Denny Hamlin for his third career Cup victory and first with his new race team.
“I’ve only won three races in the Cup Series, right? But this is by far the least enjoyable just because it’s expected now,” Briscoe said. “You have to go win. Where at SHR, you really felt like you surprised the world if you won.”
Briscoe raced his way into an automatic spot in NASCAR’s playoffs with the win and gave the No. 19 Toyota its first victory since 2023 when Martin Truex Jr. had the ride. Briscoe lost his job at the end of last season at Stewart-Haas Racing when the team folded and he was tabbed to replace Truex — almost a year to the day for his win at Pocono — in the four-car JGR field.
Hamlin, who holds the track record with seven wins, appeared on the brink of reeling in Briscoe over the final, thrilling laps only to have not enough in the No. 11 Toyota to snag that eighth Pocono win.
“It was just so hard to have a guy chasing you, especially the guy that’s the greatest of all time here,” Briscoe said.
Briscoe made his final pit stop on lap 119 of the 160-lap race, while Hamlin — who returned after missing last week’s race following the birth of his son — made his final stop on 120. Hamlin’s team radioed to him that they believed Briscoe would fall about a half-lap short on fuel — only for the first-year JGR driver to win by 0.682 seconds.
“The most nervous I get is when two of our cars are up front,” Gibbs said.
Gibbs now has Hamlin, Bell and Briscoe in the playoff field.
“It’s definitely more work but it’s because they’re at such a high level,” Briscoe said. “Even racing with teammates that are winning has been a big adjustment for me.”
Briscoe, who won an Xfinity Series race at Pocono in 2020, raced to his third career Cup victory and first since Darlington in 2024.
Briscoe has been on bit of a hot streak, and had his fourth top-10 finish over the last six races, including a seventh-place finish in last week’s ballyhooed race in Mexico City.
He became the 11th driver to earn a spot in the 16-driver field with nine races left until the field is set and made a winner again of crew chief James Small. Small stayed on the team through Truex’s final winless season and Briscoe’s winless start to this season.
“It’s been a tough couple of years,” Small said. “We’ve never lost belief, any of us.”
Hamlin finished second. Ryan Blaney, Chris Buescher and Chase Elliott completed the top five.
Briscoe, raised a dirt racer in Indiana, gave JGR its 18th Cup victory at Pocono.
“I literally grew up racing my sprint car video game in a Joe Gibbs Racing Home Depot uniform,” Briscoe said. “To get Coach in victory lane after them taking a chance on me, it’s so rewarding truthfully. Just a big weight off my shoulders. I’ve been telling my wife the last two weeks, I have to win. To finally come here and do it, it has been a great day.”
The race was delayed 2 hours, 10 minutes by rain and the conditions were muggy by the time the green flag dropped. Briscoe led 72 laps and won the second stage.
Briscoe wrote before the race on social media, “Anybody going from Pocono to Oklahoma City after the race Sunday?” The Pacers fan — he bet on the team to win the NBA title — wasn’t going to make it to Game 7 of the NBA Finals.
He’ll certainly settle for a ride to victory lane.
CLEAN RACE
Carson Hocevar made a clean pass of Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and two feuding drivers battled without incident on restarts as they appeared to race in peace after a pair of recent wrecks on the track threatened to spill into Pocono.
Stenhouse’s threat to beat up his racing rival l after last weekend’s race in Mexico City but cooler heads prevailed back in the United States. Hocevar finished 18th and Stenhouse 30th.
OUCH
There was a minor scare on pit road when AJ Allmendinger struck a tire in the carrier’s hand with his right front side and sent it flying into the ribs of another team’s crew member in the pit ahead of him. JonPatrik Kealey, the rear tire changer on Shane van Gisbergen‘s race team, was knocked on all fours but finished work on van Gisbergen’s pit stop.
BRAKE TIME
Bubba Wallace, Michael McDowell and Riley Herbst all had their races spoiled by brake issues.
“It was a scary feeling for sure,” Herbst said. “I was just starting to get tight, just a bad adjustment on my part. Getting into [turn] one, the brakes just went to the floor. A brake rotor exploded, and I was along for the ride.”
UP NEXT
NASCAR heads to Atlanta. Christopher Bell won the first race at the track this season in March.
Sports
Ohtani strikes out 2 but sticks to 1-inning plan
Published
9 hours agoon
June 23, 2025By
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Alden GonzalezJun 22, 2025, 08:31 PM ET
Close- ESPN baseball reporter. Covered the L.A. Rams for ESPN from 2016 to 2018 and the L.A. Angels for MLB.com from 2012 to 2016.
LOS ANGELES — Shohei Ohtani‘s second start saw him record his first two strikeouts, but he did not advance beyond the first inning despite throwing only 18 pitches — a sign of how careful the Los Angeles Dodgers are being with his pitching progression.
“That was the original plan,” Ohtani, speaking through an interpreter, said after the Dodgers’ 13-7 win over the Washington Nationals on Sunday. “I look forward to adding more and more pitches.”
Ohtani worked around a wild pitch and a dropped popup from outfielder-turned-shortstop Mookie Betts to throw a scoreless top of the first inning, while making his second start in seven days. He struck out the game’s third batter, Luis Garcia Jr., on a sweeper that dropped toward his shoe-tops, then executed a tight, arm-side slider to strike out Nathaniel Lowe and end the inning. Ohtani’s fastball topped out at 98.8 mph after reaching triple digits in his pitching debut Monday.
Ohtani, who called his own pitches through a PitchCom device, said he was “able to relax much better” in his second outing. The biggest improvement, Ohtani added, was “the way my body moves when I pitch.”
“It’s something that I worked on with the pitching coaches, and I felt a lot better this time.”
Offensively, Ohtani went 2-for-19 with nine strikeouts in the five days between his starts. Ohtani has remained at the leadoff spot on his start days, which has meant rushing to put on his helmet, elbow pad and batting gloves in the middle of the first inning, then walking toward the batter’s box without hardly being able to take any practice swings.
In his pitching debut Monday, that was followed by a strikeout. The same occurred Sunday. But his bat came alive later in the game, after the Dodgers had finally broken through against Nationals starter Michael Soroka. With the bases loaded, no outs and his team leading by a run in the seventh, Ohtani laced a 101.3 mph bases-clearing triple to break open the game. An inning later, he added a two-run homer — his National League-leading 26th — on a ball that just barely made it over the fence in left-center.
“He’s a unicorn,” Dodgers rookie catcher Dalton Rushing said. “He does it all.”
The Dodgers have considered moving Ohtani out of the leadoff spot on his start days, particularly at home, to avoid the shorter preparation time before his first plate appearance. But they are adamant about continuing to be methodical with his pitching progression. He’ll make his third start at some point in the next six to eight days and could extend into the second inning then, but it’ll be a while until he is built up like a traditional starting pitcher again.
“It’s going to be a gradual process,” Ohtani said. “I want to see improvements with the quality of the pitches that I’m throwing and then also increasing the amount of pitches.”
Sports
With Rutschman out, O’s lose Handley in collision
Published
10 hours agoon
June 23, 2025By
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ESPN News Services
Jun 22, 2025, 11:05 AM ET
Baltimore Orioles catcher Adley Rutschman will be out through the All-Star break, and the team lost another catcher when Maverick Handley left Sunday’s 4-2 loss to the New York Yankees in the second inning following a collision at the plate with Jazz Chisholm Jr.
Rutschman suffered a left oblique strain that landed him on the injured list for the first time in his career. Interim manager Tony Mansolino described Rutschman’s injury as “mild” but added that the team doesn’t want to do anything to aggravate the problem and keep the two-time All-Star out longer.
Mansolino said Rutschman will be out through the All-Star break, which is July 14-17, before the Orioles return to play at the Tampa Bay Rays on July 18.
“He’s dealt with it fine,” Mansolino said. “He wants to play. He’s kind of going stir crazy. I think the fact that it is mild in nature probably makes it a little harder for him. We all know abdominal and oblique injuries, if you push those things, they can get really ugly, and instead of being three or four weeks, it could be three months.
“… In his mind he probably thinks he can possibly go out there, but obviously, we know medically that’s not the smart thing to do for him right now.”
Rutschman began feeling pain Friday during batting practice before he was scratched from that day’s lineup then placed on the 10-day injured list Saturday after undergoing an MRI.
With two outs in the second Sunday, DJ LeMahieu lined a single to left field and Chisholm scored from second base. Colton Cowser‘s throw was up the third-base line. Handley moved to his left for the throw, arriving for the ball at the same time as Chisholm. The Yankees third baseman tried to veer to the inside to avoid contact, but his elbow appeared to hit Handley in the head.
After Mansolino and trainer Scott Barringer checked him out, Handley was replaced by Gary Sanchez.
“He got hit pretty hard,” Orioles manager Tony Mansolino was quoted as saying by the Mid-Atlantic Sports Network. “We haven’t seen a collision like that at the plate, probably, since all the new rules came in. So we’re evaluating him right now, full body, every part of it. We’ll have more information tomorrow. … We’re evaluating everything right now, so nothing official on concussion protocol. There’s obviously a chance that that happens. We’ll have more information tomorrow on him.”
Infielder Jordan Westburg will also be out for at least a few days because of a sprained left index finger sustained even though he wore a sliding mitt.
Westburg injured his finger while stealing second base in Saturday’s 9-0 loss to the New York Yankees.
“Actually the sliding mitt that’s supposed to protect his hand, that’s the one that he did it,” Mansolino said. “Doesn’t know how he did it. It’s been the same mitt that he’s used for a couple years, talking about it this morning. Kind of crazy that he hurt his finger. That’s what those things are for.”
Mansolino said X-rays were negative and that the Orioles are hoping that Westburg misses only two or three days.
Rutschman, 27, is hitting .227 with eight homers and 20 RBIs in 68 games this season. He has been among the more durable catchers in the majors. After playing 113 games following his debut in May 2022, he appeared in 154 games in 2023 and 148 last season.
Westburg missed more than a month with a left hamstring strain before returning June 10. The 26-year-old is hitting .229 with seven homers and 17 RBIs in 34 games this season. He had 10 hits in his first 25 at-bats before going hitless in his next 14.
First baseman Ryan Mountcastle (strained right hamstring) also is on the injured list along with outfielders Tyler O’Neill (left shoulder impingement) and Jorge Mateo (left shoulder inflammation).
Right-hander Yennier Cano was optioned to Triple-A Norfolk after striking out the side in the seventh inning Saturday, and right-hander Yaramil Hiraldo was recalled from the Tides on Sunday.
“It starts ultimately with the amount of innings that we’ve had covered here recently with the bullpen,” Mansolino said. “We need a fresh arm. You have a limited amount of bullpen guys that have options.”
The Associated Press and Field Level Media contributed to this report.
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