'A good message.' Why celebrating Clayton Kershaw's retirement gave Dodgers mental 'reset.'
Los Angeles Times

'A good message.' Why celebrating Clayton Kershaw's retirement gave Dodgers mental 'reset.'

LOS ANGELES — As Dodgers players packed in for Clayton Kershaw's retirement news conference last Thursday, Freddie Freeman waved the Kershaw family to a row of seats at the front of the room. He wanted Kershaw's wife, Ellen, and their four kids in front of the pitcher right when he sat down at the dais at Dodger Stadium. How else, Freeman joked, could they get the future Hall of Famer to cry? ...

Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw acknowledges the crowd after leaving the game in the fifth inning which could be the final home game of his career against the San Francisco Giants at Dodger Stadium on Sept. 19, 2025, in Los Angeles.

Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times/TNS


LOS ANGELES — As Dodgers players packed in for Clayton Kershaw's retirement news conference last Thursday, Freddie Freeman waved the Kershaw family to a row of seats at the front of the room.

He wanted Kershaw's wife, Ellen, and their four kids in front of the pitcher right when he sat down at the dais at Dodger Stadium.

How else, Freeman joked, could they get the future Hall of Famer to cry?

Turned out, in a 14-minute address announcing his retirement from baseball at the end of this season, Kershaw did get choked up from behind the mic. But, it happened first when he addressed his teammates. They, he told him, were who he was going to miss most.

"The hardest one is the teammates, so I'm not even going to look at you guys in the eye," Kershaw said, his eyes quickly turning red. "Just you guys sitting in this room, you mean so much to me. We have so much fun. I'm going to miss it."

"The game in and of itself, I'm going to miss a lot, but I'll be OK without that," he later added. "I think the hard part is the feeling after a win, celebrating with you guys. That's pretty special."

Days later, that message continues to reverberate.

For the Dodgers, it served as a reminder and a reset.

Since early July, the team had lived in a world blanketed by frustration and wracked with repeated misery. Many players were hurt or uncharacteristically slumping. The team as a whole endured an extended sub-.500 skid. Behind inconsistent offense and unreliable bullpen pitching, a big division lead dwindled. Visions of 120-win grandeur were meekly dashed.

Amid that slump, the club's focus drifted. From team production to individual mechanics. From collective urgency to internal dissatisfaction.

"Everyone on this team has been so busy this year trying to perfect their craft," third baseman Max Muncy said, "that sometimes we forget about that moment of just hanging out and enjoying what we're going through. "

Or, as Kershaw put it after his final regular-season Dodger Stadium start on Friday, "the collective effort to do something hard together."

"All that stuff is just so impactful, so meaningful," Kershaw explained.

And if it had gone missing during the depths of mostly difficult summer months, Kershaw's retirement has thrust it back to the forefront.

"I do think it helps reset," Muncy said. "Over the course of seven, eight months, you see each other every day and sometimes you take that a little bit for granted … It's not something that anyone forgot. But sometimes you need a refresher. I think that was a good moment for it."

Don't mistake this as a "Win one for Kersh!" attitude. The Dodgers insisted they needed no extra motivation to defend their title, even after what's been a turbulent repeat campaign.

But, players and coaches have noted recently, their efforts this year have sometimes felt misplaced. The togetherness they lauded during last year's championship march hadn't always been replicated. A pall was cast over much of the second half.

"When you're not winning games, it's not fun," veteran infielder Miguel Rojas said earlier this month. "But at the end of the day, we gotta put all that aside. … We have to come here and enjoy ourselves around the clubhouse, regardless of the situation."

The Dodgers did that and more this past weekend, when a celebration of Kershaw — which included nearly team-wide attendance at his Thursday news conference, several on-field ovations Friday, and Kershaw's address to Dodger Stadium on Sunday — was accompanied by three wins out of four against the San Francisco Giants.

"Watching him get choked up when he started talking about the teammates — it was just a crazy feeling in that room," pitcher Tyler Glasnow recounted from Thursday's announcement.

Added Muncy: "You hear when he talks about the stuff he's gonna miss the most, the stuff that he enjoys the most: It's being a part of the team. It's being with the guys. It's being in the clubhouse.

"To hear a guy like him just reinforce that, I think it's a good message for a lot of people to hear."

In Muncy's estimation, the Dodgers have "seen a reflection of that out on the field" of late, having moved to the verge of a division title (their magic number entering play Tuesday was three with a 10-4 record over the last two weeks.

"There's been more of an effort to try and enjoy the moments," Muncy said. "Make sure we're still getting our work in, but try to enjoy the moments."

The Dodgers made a similar transformation last October, when they used their first-round bye week to build the kind of cohesion they had lacked in previous postseason failures — one the team credited constantly in its eventual run to the World Series.

Kershaw's retirement might've provided a similar spark, highlighting the significance of such intangible dynamics while lifting the gloom that had clouded the team's last two months.

"There's obviously been a lot of things to point [to this season], as far as adversities, which all teams go through," Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. "But I think that as we've gotten to the other side of it … guys have stuck together and they've come out of it stronger, which a lot of the times, that's what adversity does."

More adversity, of course, figures to lie ahead.

The Dodgers ended the weekend on a sour note, with Blake Treinen suffering the latest bullpen implosion in a 3-1 loss on Sunday. They'll still enter the playoffs in a somewhat unsettled place, needing to navigate around a struggling relief corps and overcome a hand injury to catcher Will Smith.

It means, like last year, their path through October is unlikely to be smooth.

That, after a second half full of frustrations, they'll have to lean on a culture Kershaw emphasized, and praised, repeatedly over the weekend.

"To have a group of guys in it together, and kind of understanding that and being together, being able to have a ton of fun all the time, is really important," Kershaw said. "The older I've gotten, the more important [I've realized] it is. Like, you can't just go through your day every day and go through the emotions. You just can't. It's too hard, too long to do that."

"You gotta have Miggy doing the mic on the bus. You gotta have Kiké. You gotta have all these guys that are able to keep us having fun and energized every single day. That's what this group is, and it's been a blast."

____

Recommended for You

'A good message.' Why celebrating Clayton Kershaw's retirement gave Dodgers mental 'reset.'
Los Angeles Times

'A good message.' Why celebrating Clayton Kershaw's retirement gave Dodgers mental 'reset.'

News
Gilgo Beach killer suspect Rex Heuermann to face one trial
UPI

Gilgo Beach killer suspect Rex Heuermann to face one trial

News
Trump picks Miami location for his future presidential library
UPI

Trump picks Miami location for his future presidential library

News
Nexstar and Sinclair TV stations will not run 'Jimmy Kimmel Live!' after return to ABC
Los Angeles Times

Nexstar and Sinclair TV stations will not run 'Jimmy Kimmel Live!' after return to ABC

News
SEC unveils league matchups for the next four seasons and keeps most rivalries intact
AP News

SEC unveils league matchups for the next four seasons and keeps most rivalries intact

News
Gucci unveils Demna's premiere looks in Spike Jonze-Halina Reijn film starring Demi Moore
AP News

Gucci unveils Demna's premiere looks in Spike Jonze-Halina Reijn film starring Demi Moore

News
Diesel ditches the runway to present latest collection on models inside transparent Easter eggs
AP News

Diesel ditches the runway to present latest collection on models inside transparent Easter eggs

News
What to know about the man found guilty of trying to assassinate Trump at a Florida golf course
AP News

What to know about the man found guilty of trying to assassinate Trump at a Florida golf course

News
Cubs 3B Shaw says he's 'not concerned at all' about backlash for attending Charlie Kirk memorial
AP News

Cubs 3B Shaw says he's 'not concerned at all' about backlash for attending Charlie Kirk memorial

News
FBI Boston warns of rise in 'cruel' courier cash scams in New England
UPI

FBI Boston warns of rise in 'cruel' courier cash scams in New England

News
Israeli man avoids jail time for swinging pipe at pro-Palestinian UCLA protesters
Los Angeles Times

Israeli man avoids jail time for swinging pipe at pro-Palestinian UCLA protesters

News
Heathrow flight delays stretch into second day amid cyber attack
UPI

Heathrow flight delays stretch into second day amid cyber attack

News
After ICE raids surged this summer, calls to LAPD plummeted
Los Angeles Times

After ICE raids surged this summer, calls to LAPD plummeted

News
Dodgers defeat Giants, but Will Smith’s playoff availability remains a concern
Los Angeles Times

Dodgers defeat Giants, but Will Smith’s playoff availability remains a concern

News
The Ryder Cup is off to an emotional start for Team USA
AP News

The Ryder Cup is off to an emotional start for Team USA

News