Dodgers’ hot offense in June making up for pitching injury woes

Photo: Stacie Wheeler

The Dodgers’ offense has been on fire in June. In fact, it has been the best in Major League Baseball in a number of categories, which is a big departure from the first two months of the season.

Stat April/May MLB Rank June MLB Rank Season Rank
BA .236 24 .286 2 17
OBP .315 20 .367 1 9
SLG .393 24 .599 1 7
wOBA .307 25 .404 1 9
ISO .156 18 .313 1 4
wRC+ 95 17 161 1 6
HR 56 t-22 30 1 5

Once again, batting average shows why it’s a nearly useless stat.

Thanks to the hot (literally) June, the Dodgers boast a Top 10 offense in baseball. And that’s with a guy like Yasmani Grandal, who carried the team the first month or so weeks of the season, slumping a bit since May and June (.189/.285/.387, 87 wRC+).

The Dodgers have gotten contributions from the players who, last year, performed. Guys like Cody Bellinger (232 wRC+), Joc Pederson (373 wRC+), Yasiel Puig (229 wRC+) and Chris Taylor (153 wRC+) have remembered how to hit. But the biggest surprises not only this month but all season have been Matt Kemp and Max Muncy.

I wrote about Muncy yesterday, but Kemp’s consistency has been much needed in a lineup that was lacking it much early on. Here are his month-by-month wRC+ numbers:

Month wRC+
March/April 147
May 156
June 148

That’s the consistency of an All-Star.

It’s difficult to think where the Dodgers would be without Kemp and Muncy spearheading the offense.

This offensive explosion has also helped mitigate the comical number of injuries on the pitching side — specifically in the rotation. Without the elite-level offense (that isn’t sustainable, by the way), the Dodgers’ middle-of-the-pack pitching this month would look a lot worse.

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This model of baseball isn’t sustainable for the rest of the season, unless Muncy is truly the second coming of Babe Ruth. But it’s nice to see a majority of the hitters snap out of a 2-month funk.

Going forward, there will be regression. But hopefully that’s when the pitching will get healthy enough and that there will be additions to said pitching staff before the end of next month.

For now, let’s just enjoy the dongs.

Dammit.

About Dustin Nosler

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Dustin Nosler began writing about the Dodgers in July 2009 on his blog, Feelin' Kinda Blue, and co-hosted a weekly podcast with Jared Massey called Dugout Blues. He was a contributor/editor at The Hardball Times and True Blue LA. He graduated from California State University, Sacramento with a bachelor’s degree in journalism and a minor in digital media. While at CSUS, he worked for the student-run newspaper The State Hornet for three years, culminating with a one-year term as editor-in-chief. He resides in Stockton, California.