Dodgers Obliterate A’s with 19-2 Rout Behind Ohtani’s Power Surge

In spite of getting shelled Sacramento A’s position player Jhonny Pereda (64) is all smiles after striking out Los Angeles Dodgers two way star Shohei Ohtani in the bottom of the eighth inning who had two home runs earlier in the night at Dodgers Stadium in Los Angeles on Fri May 15, 2025 (AP News photo)

Dodgers Obliterate A’s with 19-2 Rout Behind Ohtani’s Power Surge

By Mauricio Segura

On a night when the Sacramento Athletics were hoping to build on recent momentum, Shohei Ohtani and the Los Angeles Dodgers delivered a thunderous reality check at Chavez Ravine. The green and gold were overwhelmed in every phase of the game, falling 19-2 in a blowout that saw the Dodgers pile on 11 extra-base hits and three home runs, two off the bat of Ohtani alone.

The A’s struck first, scratching out a run in the top of the first thanks to a Shea Langeliers RBI double. But the early lead lasted only moments. In the bottom half of the inning, Freddie Freeman tied it with a single before Max Muncy launched a two-run homer, putting the Dodgers up 3-1 before the seats were even warm.

That was just the beginning of the storm.

A’s starter Osvaldo Bido, who had previously held the Dodgers in check across two career starts, couldn’t escape the third inning in this one. By the time he was lifted, he had allowed six runs and was tagged with the loss. The bullpen offered little relief. Jason Alexander, Mitch Spence, and Jhonny Pereda all took turns trying to plug the leaks, but the Dodgers simply couldn’t be slowed.

Ohtani, who had been 0-for-4 in his career against Bido, erupted for five RBIs on the night. His first home run came in the third, a three-run Space-X type Launch to left center. He followed it up two innings later with another, bringing his season total to 15. Not to be outdone, Andy Pages added his eighth homer, another three-run shot in the third that pushed the lead to 13-2.

By the time the dust settled, the Dodgers had scored in every inning but the fifth and seventh. Every starter reached base. Hyeseong Kim had four hits, including a ground-rule double. Mookie Betts swiped his fourth bag of the year and crossed the plate three times.

For the Athletics, there were few bright spots beyond Langeliers, who went 2-for-4 to extend his hit streak. Max Schuemann added his first home run of the season in the second inning, a solo shot that briefly narrowed the deficit to one.

The loss drops the A’s to 22-22 on the season, right back to .500. They’ve now surrendered 39 runs over their last five games, continuing a troubling trend for a pitching staff that owns the sixth-highest ERA in the majors. On the flip side, their 14-9 road record still ranks among the best, but that stat took a serious dent Thursday night.

Next up for the green and gold is a weekend “I-80 Series” against the San Francisco Giants. JP Sears will take the mound Friday against Logan Webb, hoping to stabilize a rotation that has struggled to get through six innings consistently.

But for now, it’s hard to ignore the wreckage left behind in Tinseltown, a night where Ohtani shined, the bats erupted, and the Athletics had no answer.

Costa Rican-born Mauricio Segura has been covering sports in the Bay Area since 2001 for a variety of magazines and newspapers, as well as his own publication, Golden Bay Times.

Leave a comment