The Dodgers were dealt just their second loss on the road this season as they fell to the Colorado Rockies 4-3 on Saturday, snapping a four-game winning streak dating back to Monday. Among the highlights of Saturday’s loss included Shohei Ohtani extending his league-leading on-base streak to 50 games, as he reached base on a […]

DENVER, CO - APRIL 18: Shohei Ohtani #17 of the Los Angeles Dodgers hits a single in the ninth inning against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field on April 18, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Justin Edmonds/Getty Images) | Getty Images The Dodgers were dealt just their second loss on the road this season as they fell to the Colorado Rockies 4-3 on Saturday, snapping a four-game winning streak dating back to Monday. Among the highlights of Saturday’s loss included Shohei Ohtani extending his league-leading on-base streak to 50 games, as he reached base on a two-out single to right field with the streak in jeopardy.

Manny Randhawa of MLB.com wrote about Dave Roberts’ reaction to Ohtani eclipsing 50 consecutive games reaching base, becoming only the fourth Dodger to do so in team history. “I was hoping he’d get that last at-bat and give him an opportunity to change the game,” manager Dave Roberts said. “And he found a way to get on base.

It was good to see it, and that’s quite the streak. And you’ve got to be pretty dang good to do something like that. He’s in a class by himself.” Randhawa also shares the story of both Ohtani and Roberts meeting Momoyo Nakomoto— a 100-year-old Japanese woman who survived the 1945 Nagasaki bombing— before Saturday’s game.

“It was really a pleasure meeting her,” Roberts said. “She was 19 when the a-bomb dropped in Nagasaki. And it’s by a miracle that she lived to tell her story.

Just seeing her is a piece of history.” Links Kyle Tucker had his best game as a Dodger in Saturday’s loss, finishing 3-5 with a home run and two singles and marking his first multi-hit game since April 4 against the Washington Nationals. Tucker discussed trying to have successful at-bats carry over into the next ones, something that he has struggled to do so far as a Dodger, per Bill Plunkett of the Orange County Register. “I have had good swings.

I just need to carry over to the next at-bat, next at-bat, the next at-bat and the next game rather than just kind of sporadically throughout. So I just had a few good at-bats and good swings. I just need to do a better job at carrying it over to the next one.” Dodgers starting pitchers had gone four straight games with a quality start, but Emmet Sheehan was unable to keep the trend going as he lasted just five innings and earned a no-decision in Saturday’s contest. Sheehan spoke with Kirsten Watson of SportsNet LA postgame about his struggles early in the game and how he was able to settle in as his outing progressed.