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Dodgers' growing offensive struggles have a familiar feel in loss to Cubs

Los Angeles Dodgers' Shohei Ohtani, puts his hands up as Chicago Cubs shortstop.
Shohei Ohtani puts his hands up in front of Chicago Cubs shortstop Dansby Swanson after reaching second base on a fielding error during the Dodgers' 10-4 loss to the Chicago Cubs on Monday night at Dodger Stadium. (Mark J. Terrill / Associated Press)

It was around this time last year that the Dodgers’ offense started cooling off. After a sluggish performance at the plate this week, they can only hope it isn’t happening again.

Before the Dodgers crashed out of the playoffs in a National League Division Series sweep against the Arizona Diamondbacks last fall, their bats began to go quiet in September, when declining production from big stars and role players alike foreshadowed the offensive no-show that doomed them in October.

Lately the Dodgers have experienced something similar, following up a rollicking offensive showcase in Arizona with one muted effort after the next in the week since. The latest example came in a 10-4 loss to the Chicago Cubs on Monday night at Dodger Stadium, in which ex-Dodgers Cody Bellinger and Michael Busch almost single-handedly outscored their former team.

In the first four innings alone, Bellinger and Busch had three hits, a home run apiece and four RBIs off Walker Buehler. The Dodgers, meanwhile, didn’t score their first run until the fifth and squandered multiple opportunities to get back in the game — despite facing Cubs starter Kyle Hendricks and his 6.60 earned-run average, which was worst among major league starters with 100 innings.

“We had the opportunities,” first baseman Freddie Freeman said. “I think we could go through the course of the year and, unfortunately, this is what happens in baseball when you play 162 games. You can have the opportunities, you just don’t get the hits.”

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Since tallying 32 runs and 52 hits in a victorious four-game series against the Diamondbacks to start the month, the Dodgers had managed just 23 runs and 45 hits in six games entering Tuesday. During that stretch, they struck out 56 times. They scored five or more runs just twice. And, after appearing to turn a corner at the plate with a healthy lineup for the first time in months, signs of their midsummer malaise have returned.

“Offensively certainly the first few innings were forgettable,” manager Dave Roberts said. “I thought [after] calibrating … we took better at-bats and we took the walks when we needed, got [Hendricks] out of the game, stressed their 'pen. We just couldn’t get that hit to really put up multiple crooked numbers.”

Alarm bells aren’t ringing yet. But reasons for concern are starting to sprout.

The Dodgers’ biggest problems Monday resided at the bottom of the batting order. While Shohei Ohtani, Mookie Betts and Freeman combined for five hits and five walks — Ohtani also stole his 47th base in his continued pursuit of baseball’s first 50-homer, 50-steal season — the rest of the lineup offered little support.

Max Muncy went hitless and managed only a fifth-inning sacrifice fly from two bases-loaded at-bats, leaving him two for his first 18 to start September.

Will Smith failed to build off a three-hit performance Sunday, continuing his second-half slide with an 0-for-5 line that included a strikeout with two runners aboard in the fifth.

Tommy Edman had two hits, while Gavin Lux, Chris Taylor and Miguel Rojas each singled. But the Dodgers were just two for seven with runners in scoring position — not nearly enough on a night they trailed 3-0 after the first inning and 7-2 after six.

“The production from the bottom half, I certainly know it’s not as dire as it was early in the season,” Roberts said, maintaining confidence in an offense that still ranked third in the majors in scoring entering Tuesday. “I still think we’re in a good spot.”

Bellinger, the Dodgers’ former rookie of the year and most valuable player, opened the scoring with a first-pitch, two-run homer in the first, launching his second at Chavez Ravine as a visiting player deep into the right-field pavilion.

Cody Bellinger runs.
Cody Bellinger rounds third after hitting a two-run home run for the Chicago Cubs during the first inning Monday. (Mark J. Terrill / Associated Press)

Busch, the former Dodgers prospect who was traded to Chicago last offseason, tallied the next two runs for the Cubs. He lined an RBI single in the first, then cleared the short wall in left on an opposite-field solo homer in the fourth.

It all amounted to a step back for Buehler, who was coming off encouraging outings in his previous two starts. He finished the night with five earned runs in five-plus innings, striking out just four while yielding nine hits.

“I [set us back] from the jump,” said Buehler, who now has a 5.95 ERA, including a 9.69 ERA in first innings. “Obviously three runs in the first kind of sucked the energy out of the building … That’s a lot to ask of the rest of our guys to dig me out of a hole every game.”

Despite that, the Dodgers (had chances to rally.

They loaded the bases in the third inning but came away with nothing. They scored twice in the fifth and seventh innings — Betts homered in the latter, his seventh since returning from a broken hand — but missed chances to chip away further.

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The good news for the Dodgers: Their biggest stars still are hitting.

In addition to his seven homers, Betts also had a .316 batting average and 26 RBIs since coming off the injured list entering Tuesday. Freeman, playing through a fractured right middle finger, was 11 for 33 with seven walks since getting a three-game break in late August. And Ohtani also was continuing to mash, entering Tuesday batting .300 since Aug. 21 in search of his third MVP award.

But if the Dodgers thought their top-heavy lineup problems were a thing of the past, Monday’s loss — in which they were without Teoscar Hernández for a third straight game because of his foot contusion — offered a familiar reminder of how quickly things can turn.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.