Mookie Betts is ready to throw out all the wins his Dodgers and the rival Giants piled up on the way to a frenetic regular-season finish.
San Francisco edged the defending World Series champions by a single game for first place in the NL West, 107 victories to 106 — a total of 213 wins between them.
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It’s a new playoff stage now with baseball's two hottest teams in a best-of-five NL Division Series. Game 1 is Friday night in the Bay Area.
"I think all the 106 games are out the window now. It didn’t help us win the division, so it’s really irrelevant," Betts said after the Dodgers earned a 3-1 wild card win over the Cardinals to set up this instant NLDS classic. "We’re in the spot we are now. We’ve got to play the hand we’re dealt. ... Obviously, use what you learned in 106 wins. You just try and apply it to now. Other than that, those 106 are irrelevant."
And no doubt you can take this rivalry up a notch or two before the first pitch is even thrown, because the Dodgers and Giants are meeting on the big October stage for the first time.
"This series is going to be a mad house at both places," Giants third baseman Evan Longoria said Thursday.
The storied franchises go way, way back to their memorable New York days.
In 1951 and ’62 the clubs faced off in a best-of-three NL tiebreaker, with the Giants winning both times.
They were about as even as you can get meeting head-to-head this year: the Giants won the season series 10-9, while the Dodgers outscored San Francisco 80-78.
Los Angeles had won the previous eight division titles.
"For me it kind of felt like this was how it was going to end up anyway," Giants outfielder Mike Yastrzemski said. "I felt like I didn't even have to watch the game to figure out who we were going to play."
Dodgers manager Dave Roberts realizes this is the matchup of playoff matchups everybody longed to see after all these teams did to get here.
"There’s a lot of familiarity, which makes it fun, even more challenging," Roberts said. "It’s going to be a fantastic series."
PONDERING THE FORMAT
Longoria wishes these teams could play a bit deeper in October and not face an early exit.
"I feel like this may also be a series or a moment where baseball may have to think about restructuring the way that the playoffs happen — 106 and 107 wins doesn't feel like a DS matchup," Longoria said. "Especially 'cause the season is so long, for two teams to win that many games and then one of them to have to go home this early."
Told of his player's take, manager Gabe Kapler stayed straight.
"We want to be good with whatever the rules are," Kapler said.
WEBB'S PREP
Right-hander Logan Webb takes the ball in Game 1 for the Giants in his postseason debut, though Kapler considered his gem during Sunday’s division-clinching 11-4 victory against the Padres the equivalent of a playoff game and atmosphere.
Webb went 10-0 since a May 5 loss at Colorado.
"Honestly, it’s crazy to me that this is the first time that we’ve played each other in the playoffs," he said. "So to be a part, even a part of that is pretty cool for me."
Los Angeles will counter in Game 1 with right-hander Walker Buehler, a 16-game winner over 33 starts.
Buehler went 3-1 against San Francisco this year but lost Sept. 5 in the season series finale after he had gone 7-0 with a 1.83 ERA over his initial 12 outings and 10 starts against the Giants.
PUJOLS’ CHANCE
Dodgers slugger Albert Pujols gets his chance on the postseason stage once more at age 41.
This will be the slugger's first playoffs since the 2014 ALDS with the Angels, who designated him for assignment in May before he landed with the other Los Angeles team later that month.
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CONNECTIONS GALORE
Roberts played his final two major league seasons for the Giants from 2007-08. He and Kapler were teammates at Double-A Jacksonville in 1998 and again on the 2004 Red Sox.
"Saw him steal one of the biggest bases in the history of baseball to some degree, but definitely in the history of the Red Sox," Kapler said.
Farhan Zaidi, Giants president of baseball operations, was hired away from the Dodgers after the 2018 season, then he brought in ex-Dodgers farm director Kapler as manager in November 2019 following his firing by the Phillies after two losing seasons.