Mason Miller’s career-first mistake changed the NL West race instantly
Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images San Diego did not lose this game because the Dodgers overwhelmed them late. They lost because the Padres were handed the out they needed, and Mason Miller failed to take it. That is what will make this defeat sting.
Miller’s first career error came at the exact moment San Diego needed its most reliable late inning arm to slow the game down. The Padres had moved top of the NL West one day earlier, but the Dodgers won 5-4 at Petco Park after Alex Call advanced from first to third on Miller’s wide pickoff throw and scored on Andy Pages’ sacrifice fly. San Diego were handed the out they needed Photo by Sean M.
Haffey/Getty Images The most painful part for the Padres is how available the play was. Call was caught leaning. Miller stepped off.
The inning should have shifted back toward San Diego. Instead, his throw to Ty France sailed wide, turning a Dodgers mistake into the decisive base. That is not a complicated failure.
It is exactly why it mattered so much. Elite closers are not judged only by stuff. They are judged by the routine moments around the stuff.