Dodgers vs Phillies Match Player Stats: The Full Story of the 2025 NLDS
Quick Series Facts
| Detail | Information |
| Series | 2025 MLB NLDS — Best of Five |
| Teams | Los Angeles Dodgers vs Philadelphia Phillies |
| Series Result | Dodgers won 3-1 |
| Game 1 | Dodgers 5, Phillies 3 — Oct 4 (Philadelphia) |
| Game 2 | Dodgers 4, Phillies 3 — Oct 6 (Philadelphia) |
| Game 3 | Phillies 8, Dodgers 2 — Oct 8 (Los Angeles) |
| Game 4 | Dodgers 2, Phillies 1 (11 innings) — Oct 9 (Los Angeles) |
| Series Clincher | Walk-off error — Orion Kerkering wild throw in 11th |
| Dodgers Game 1 Starter | Shohei Ohtani |
| Phillies Game 1 Starter | Cristopher Sánchez |
| Ohtani Pitching (G1) | 6 IP3 ER, 9 K — Win |
| Ohtani Hitting | .222 avg, 2 HR, 5 RBI across series |
| Kyle Schwarber HRs | 2 (Game 3) — including a 455-foot, 117.2 mph blast |
| Teoscar Hernández HRs | 1 (Game 1) — 3 RBI |
| Glasnow (Game 4) | 6 IP, 0 ER, 6 K |
| Roki Sasaki (Game 4) | 3 perfect innings |
| Phillies Ace Status | Zack Wheeler ruled out in August (blood clot) |
| Postseason history | First meeting since 2009 — 6th overall postseason matchup |
| Unique Record | Dodgers became only 2nd team in MLB history to clinch a series on walk-off error |
Two Heavyweights, One October Stage
There are some October matchups in baseball that make your spine tingle before a single pitch is thrown.
Dodgers versus Phillies in the 2025 NLDS was one of those.
Los Angeles had just swept the Cincinnati Reds in the Wild Card round. They were the defending World Series champions. They had Shohei Ohtani — the greatest two-way player the sport has ever seen — and Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman in the same lineup.
Philadelphia came in as one of the hardest-hitting teams in the entire National League. Kyle Schwarber had crushed 56 home runs that regular season. Trea Turner was electric. Bryce Harper was dangerous. The Phillies had averaged more runs per game than almost anyone.
These two franchises had not met in the postseason since 2009. Sixteen years of waiting for this moment.
And when it finally arrived, it delivered everything and more.
Game 1 — October 4, Philadelphia: Ohtani Makes History
The first game of this series produced one of the most unusual statistical lines in postseason history.
Shohei Ohtani walked to the mound at Citizens Bank Park to start Game 1. Then, as the designated hitter, he repeatedly walked to the plate. That alone makes baseball unlike any other sport.
As a pitcher, Ohtani was brilliant. He went six full innings. He struck out nine Phillies batters. He allowed three runs but kept his team in the game long enough for the offence to take over. His final line earned him the win.
As a hitter, he was terrible. Ohtani struck out all four times he came to the plate.
He became the first player in postseason history to strike out four times as a batter and strike out nine batters as a pitcher in the same game. That is both ridiculous and completely on brand for a player whose career never seems to stop creating new pages in the record books.
The run that actually won the game came from Teoscar Hernández. He hit a home run that gave Los Angeles breathing room — three RBI in a single swing. His brother Kiké Hernández also chipped in with two runs batted in.
Sánchez pitched well for Philadelphia. He was handling the weight of being the Phillies’ ace with their real ace, Zack Wheeler, sitting in the dugout in full uniform after being ruled out for the season in August with complications from a blood clot. Wheeler received a standing ovation during pregame introductions. His teammates knew they were playing this series for him too.
Cristopher Sánchez gave them everything he had. But the Dodgers took Game 1, five to three.

Game 2 — October 6, Philadelphia: Ohtani Delivers When It Counts
If Game 1 was about Ohtani the pitcher, Game 2 showed what Ohtani the clutch hitter looks like.
The Dodgers sent Blake Snell — a two-time Cy Young Award winner — to the mound for Game 2. Philadelphia countered with Jesús Luzardo, who had gone 15-7 with 216 strikeouts during his first season with the Phillies.
The game was tight from the start. Philadelphia applied pressure throughout. Citizens Bank Park was rocking.
The key moment came during a rally in the sixth inning. The Dodgers had runners on base and needed someone to deliver.
Ohtani ripped a run-scoring single to help Los Angeles take a 3-0 lead. Will Smith added a two-run single shortly after. The Dodgers were ahead by three in an instant.
But the game was not finished. The Phillies came back. They got within one. The tension at Citizens Bank Park was immense.
In the ninth, a moment that nobody in the stadium saw coming. A slow roller was hit to shortstop by Kiké Hernández. Trea Turner threw the ball quickly, but it went wide. Teoscar Hernández scored on a beautiful, daring slide.
Freddie Freeman made a crucial defensive play at first base to save the game on the other side. The Dodgers held on, four to three.
Two-nothing in the series. The Dodgers were one win from the NLCS without even going back to Los Angeles.
The Phillies flew across the country knowing their season was genuinely on the line.
Game 3 — October 8, Los Angeles: Schwarber Wakes Up the Phillies
Kyle Schwarber had been completely silent through the first two games. Hitless in the series. Looking like a man whose bat had gone on holiday.
Then came the fourth inning of Game 3 at Dodger Stadium.
With the Phillies hitless on the night and facing elimination, Schwarber came to the plate against Yoshinobu Yamamoto. Yamamoto had been one of the best pitchers in the postseason. He was sharp and precise and unhittable to most batters.
Schwarber hit a 455-foot home run.
The ball left his bat at 117.2 miles per hour. It cleared the right-field seats entirely. It did not just go out — it sailed over an entire section of the ballpark and landed somewhere beyond view.
“It’s ridiculous how far that ball went,” said Trea Turner afterwards.
That single swing changed everything. The Phillies poured through the door Schwarber had kicked open.
J.T. Realmuto added a home run. Schwarber came back and hit his second homer of the night. The runs kept coming. Philadelphia scored eight in total. The final scoreline — eight to two — looked like a mismatch, but it told the exact truth about how completely the Phillies had dominated.
Yamamoto was chased from the mound in the fifth inning. It was only the second time all postseason that the Dodgers had been thoroughly beaten. Ohtani and Freeman went a combined zero for eight.
The series was alive again. Phillies three, Dodgers two in games. One win for either team meant the season lived or died in the next game.

Game 4 — October 9, Los Angeles: One of the Greatest Games of the Year
Game 4 of the 2025 NLDS was a heavyweight bout for eleven innings.
Tyler Glasnow started for Los Angeles. Cristopher Sánchez started for Philadelphia — again. Both pitchers were exceptional.
Through five innings, zero runs. Both starters matched each other pitch for pitch, groundout for groundout, strikeout for strikeout. Glasnow had six strikeouts through five innings with just one hit allowed. Sánchez was equally locked in with four strikeouts and two hits.
Then the seventh inning changed shape.
A chain of events involving an Emmet Sheehan error allowed J.T. Realmuto to get on base. Max Kepler reached on a fielder’s choice. Then Nick Castellanos drove a grounder into the outfield, scoring Kepler. Phillies ahead, one to nothing.
The crowd inside Dodger Stadium went quiet. Philadelphia had one of the best bullpens in the league. Their closer Jhoan Duran, throwing 101 miles per hour, was coming in with an eight-out lead to protect.
But Mookie Betts had other ideas.
With the bases loaded and the count at three and two, Duran threw a 101 mph fastball just outside the strike zone. Betts laid off. Ball four. Bases-loaded walk. The run scored. One to one.
Dodger Stadium erupted.
The game went to extra innings tied at one.
The 11th Inning — A Moment Nobody Will Forget
Roki Sasaki had thrown three perfect innings of relief before the 11th. He was electric. Three perfect frames. Nobody from Philadelphia got on base while he was pitching.
Alex Vesia handled the 11th inning for Los Angeles, throwing a scoreless frame to keep the game alive.
Then came the bottom of the eleventh. Bases loaded. Two outs. Andy Pages — a young outfielder — hit a slow swinging bunt toward the mound.
Phillies reliever Orion Kerkering fielded the ball. He turned. He threw home.
The ball sailed wide. It hit the backstop. Ha-Seong Kim, the Dodgers runner, scored.
Game over. Series over.
Dodgers two, Phillies one, in eleven innings. Los Angeles wins the series three games to one. NLCS bound for the second straight year.
Kerkering put his hands on his knees. He hung his head. He could not look up.
“He just got caught up in the moment a little bit,” said Phillies manager Rob Thomson. “I feel for him.”
The Dodgers became only the second team in Major League Baseball postseason history to clinch a series on a walk-off error.
Dave Roberts called it an instant classic. He was right.
The Key Player Stats Across the Full Series
Shohei Ohtani (Dodgers) Game 1: 6 IP, 3 ER, 9 K (Win). Batting: 0-for-4, 4 strikeouts. Series hitting: .222 average, 2 home runs, 5 RBI, 1 RBI single (Game 2). Historic first: 4 K as batter + 9 K as pitcher in the same postseason game.
Teoscar Hernández (Dodgers) Game 1 home run: 3 RBI — the decisive swing of the opener. Scored the walk-off run in Game 2 on Turner’s throwing error.
Kyle Schwarber (Phillies) Game 3: 2 home runs, 3 RBI. First homer — 455 feet, 117.2 mph exit velocity. Series total: 2 HR, 3 RBI. Hitless Games 1-2, then exploded when his team needed him most.
Tyler Glasnow (Dodgers) Game 4: 6 innings, 0 runs, 1 hit allowed, 6 strikeouts. First postseason start as a Dodger — a masterpiece.
Roki Sasaki (Dodgers) Game 2: Saved the lead in the ninth. Game 4: 3 perfect innings — the bridge that held the game at one to one.
Cristopher Sánchez (Phillies) stepped in as the team’s ace after Zack Wheeler’s injury. Game 1: 24 batters faced, gave up 5 runs. Game 4: 6.1 innings, 1 run allowed, 5 strikeouts — arguably the best game of his postseason.
Mookie Betts (Dodgers) Game 3: Tripled and singled in 4 at-bats — the only Dodger to consistently threaten. Game 4: Took the pivotal 3-2 walk off Duran with the bases loaded to tie the game.
Trea Turner (Phillies) Scored the first run in Game 2 — but also threw wildly home allowing the Dodgers to walk off in the same game. Series total: 2 SB, 3 RBI.
J.T. Realmuto (Phillies) Game 1: 2 RBI. Game 3: Home run as part of the eight-run blowout. Game 4: Hit that started the seventh-inning sequence leading to the Phillies’ lone run.
The Zack Wheeler Factor
You cannot tell this series’ story without mentioning the name Zack Wheeler.
Wheeler had been one of the best pitchers in the National League through the first four months of the 2025 season. He was a serious candidate for Cy Young. He was Philadelphia’s true ace — the man opponents feared when they looked at the schedule.
In August, complications from a blood clot ended his season completely.
The Phillies had to rebuild their rotation on the fly. Cristopher Sánchez stepped up bravely. The bullpen worked overtime. The team showed remarkable character getting to the postseason and then winning three games against the Dodgers before their season ended.
Wheeler stood in the dugout at Citizens Bank Park in his full uniform before Game 1. The crowd roared. His teammates played with his memory hanging over every at-bat.
It was one of the most emotional storylines of October baseball.
What the 2025 NLDS Meant Historically
This was the first time these two franchises had met in the postseason since 2009. That is sixteen years.
Overall, it was their sixth postseason meeting. The historical record between them going into 2025 showed Dodgers winning two of the first five series, Phillies winning three. The 2025 result evened things up slightly in the modern era.
The Dodgers became just the second team in Major League Baseball’s entire postseason history to clinch a playoff series on a walk-off error. That moment — Kerkering’s throw sailing into the backstop — will live in the memories of everyone inside Dodger Stadium that Thursday evening.
For the Phillies, it was a heartbreaking finish to a season where they fought without their best pitcher, went toe-to-toe with the defending champions, and ultimately fell in an eleven-inning game on one wild throw.
Final Words
Four games. Four completely different storylines. Four chances to see what October baseball does to even the best teams in the world.
Shohei Ohtani struck out four times in Game 1 and still won the game as a pitcher. Teoscar Hernández hit a home run and then scored the walk-off run without putting the ball in play. Kyle Schwarber went from invisible to unstoppable in the space of one swing. Tyler Glasnow threw six perfect innings in his first postseason start as a Dodger. Roki Sasaki threw three perfect innings when the whole season was trembling. And Orion Kerkering threw a ball into the backstop and ended Philadelphia’s year.
Every game in this series could have ended differently. Every game had at least one moment where the whole thing balanced on a knife’s edge.
The Dodgers won. They were the better team across four games, but they were nearly pushed to a fifth. Philadelphia gave everything they had without their best pitcher and came within one clean throw of forcing a deciding game.
That is what the Dodgers versus Phillies 2025 NLDS was. Not just a series. An experience.
FAQs
1. What was the final result of the 2025 Dodgers-Phillies NLDS series?
The Los Angeles Dodgers won the series three games to one, advancing to the NLCS. Game results: Game 1 — Dodgers 5, Phillies 3; Game 2 — Dodgers 4, Phillies 3; Game 3 — Phillies 8, Dodgers 2; Game 4 — Dodgers 2, Phillies 1 in 11 innings.
2. How did the Dodgers win Game 4 of the NLDS?
In the bottom of the 11th inning with the bases loaded and two outs, Andy Pages hit a swinging bunt to the mound. Phillies reliever Orion Kerkering threw wildly to the plate. Ha-Seong Kim scored from third. The Dodgers won 2-1 on the walk-off error.
3. What were Shohei Ohtani’s stats in Game 1?
As a pitcher, Ohtani went six innings, allowed three runs, and struck out nine Phillies batters — earning the win. As a batter, he struck out all four times he came to the plate. He became the first player ever to strike out four times as a batter and nine times as a pitcher in the same postseason game.
4. What was Kyle Schwarber’s biggest moment in the series?
At Dodger Stadium in Game 3, Schwarber hit a 455-foot home run off Yoshinobu Yamamoto at a speed of 117.2 mph. He went on to add a second home run the same night as the Phillies won 8-2 to keep their season alive.
5. Why was Zack Wheeler not pitching for the Phillies?
Wheeler was ruled out for the season in August due to complications from a blood clot. He had been one of the best pitchers in the NL before the injury and a legitimate Cy Young contender.
6. What were Tyler Glasnow’s stats in Game 4?
Glasnow threw six innings, allowed just one hit, gave up zero runs, and struck out six batters. It was his first postseason start as a Dodger — and one of the finest pitching performances of the entire October calendar.
7. How did Mookie Betts tie Game 4 in the seventh inning?
With the bases loaded and a three-and-two count, closer Jhoan Duran threw a 101 mph fastball just outside the strike zone. Betts took the pitch for ball four. The bases-loaded walk scored the tying run from third. One to one.
8. Who was the standout reliever for the Dodgers in Game 4?
Roki Sasaki threw three perfect innings of relief — nobody reached base — and kept the game tied heading into extra innings. His performance was crucial in a game decided in the 11th.
9. What is the all-time postseason record between Dodgers and Phillies?
Through 2025, the teams had met in six postseason series. The Dodgers won the first two meetings, the Phillies won the next three, and the Dodgers took the 2025 NLDS — their most recent matchup. This was their first postseason meeting since 2009.
10. What happened to Teoscar Hernández in Game 1?
He hit a home run that drove in three runs — the decisive hit that gave Los Angeles enough cushion to win. He was the biggest offensive performer of the opener.
11. What was Cristopher Sánchez’s role for the Phillies?
Sánchez started twice in the series — Games 1 and 4. With Wheeler out for the season, Sánchez stepped into the ace role. In Game 4, he was exceptional — 6.1 innings, just one run, five strikeouts. Even in defeat, his performance was admired.
12. How did the Dodgers become MLB postseason history-makers in Game 4?
By winning on Kerkering’s wild throw, Los Angeles became only the second team in MLB postseason history to clinch a playoff series on a walk-off error, according to OptaSTATS.
13. What was the combined home run total for the series?
Schwarber hit two in Game 3. Realmuto had one in Game 3. In Game 3, Tommy Edman scored for the Dodgers. In the first game, Teoscar Hernández scored. The series was dominated more by pitching than power — except for the Phillies’ Game 3 explosion.
14. What happened to Kyle Schwarber after the 2025 season?
After hitting 56 regular-season home runs and 132 RBI — numbers that made him a serious NL MVP contender — Schwarber became a free agent following the series. The Phillies faced a significant offseason decision about whether to bring him back.
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