The Los Angeles Dodgers and San Francisco Giants are locked in a heated rivalry series at Oracle Park, but the story of this particular matchup is all about pitching. Despite the Dodgers entering as one of baseball’s best teams at 16-8, San Francisco has taken the first two games of this series — beating Los Angeles 3-1 in Game 1 and 3-0 in Game 2. Thursday’s finale at Oracle Park at 3:45 p.m. ET features a pitching matchup that swings the equation dramatically back in the Dodgers’ favor. When Shohei Ohtani takes the mound, the conversation changes completely.
The oddsmakers at major sportsbooks have installed the Dodgers as -154 moneyline favorites despite being the visiting team at Oracle Park. San Francisco is listed at +135. The spread has Los Angeles at -1.5 at +120 on the runline. The over/under sits at 7.0, reflecting the pitcher-friendly environment at Oracle Park and the potential for Ohtani to suppress scoring. The run line at +120 for a team favored on the moneyline by more than a run is somewhat unusual, but it tells you how much the books respect Oracle Park’s run-suppressing factor (0.92 park factor, below average for offense) even with a dominant pitcher on the mound.
Shohei Ohtani has been historically dominant as a pitcher in 2026. Through four starts, he carries a 2-0 record with a 0.50 ERA and 0.75 WHIP — numbers that would look absurd even in a video game. His fastball sits at 95.3 mph and generates a 0.360 expected weighted on-base average against. But the real weapon is his knuckle curve at 80.6 mph, which produces a 50.0 percent whiff rate — elite even by Ohtani’s own exceptional standards. His slider complements those two pitches with a 42.2 percent whiff rate, and even his curveball generates a 58.3 percent whiff rate. When three of your four pitches each produce whiff rates above 40 percent, you’re operating in a different realm entirely. The xwOBA against Ohtani on his primary pitches (.203 on the knuckle curve, .198 on the slider) confirms that these are not just lucky results — the metrics support sustained dominance.
Against Ohtani, the Giants are sending Tyler Mahle to the mound, and the contrast is stark. Mahle is 0-3 with a 7.23 ERA through his first five starts, allowing six home runs in 18.2 innings. His WHIP of 1.93 and 12 walks issued reflect command problems that opposing lineups have learned to exploit. His primary pitch — a sinker at 92.1 mph — generates just a 10.8 percent whiff rate and allows a 0.372 xwOBA, meaning hitters are making quality contact consistently. The Dodgers’ lineup, which averages 5.58 runs per game this season with a .480 slugging percentage and an .836 OPS — far above San Francisco’s .655 OPS — is built exactly to punish the kind of strikeable-but-hittable stuff Mahle throws.
The Dodgers’ offense is loaded with dangerous options. Freddie Freeman’s contact quality (0.488 xwOBA, .503 historically vs. right-handers) makes him a particularly dangerous matchup against Mahle’s sinker-heavy arsenal. Max Muncy’s 0.553 xwOBA puts him as arguably the single biggest threat in the order to drive a big inning. Luis Arraez brings consistency at .302. Kyle Tucker adds power and plate discipline throughout the lineup. Los Angeles has a +52 run differential on the season; San Francisco is -16. That 68-run swing reflects the talent gap between these teams on a game-by-game basis.
The Giants have won the last two games — both against Landen Roupp and different circumstances — but facing Ohtani is categorically different. San Francisco’s best hitters include Luis Arraez (.302 average, but a contact-focused approach that lacks impact power at .287 xwOBA) and Willy Adames (.403 xwOBA), but both carry strikeout vulnerability that Ohtani’s arsenal can exploit. The Giants’ offense has scored just three runs in each of their wins, which tells you they’re grinding out low-scoring victories — a recipe that disappears when the opposing starter is Ohtani.
The pitching mismatch in this game is as wide as you’ll find on any given day in baseball in 2026. Ohtani’s ERA of 0.50 against Mahle’s 7.23 represents a gap that even Oracle Park’s pitcher-friendly environment cannot bridge. The Dodgers lost the first two games against a different starter with a different profile; facing Ohtani changes everything. Los Angeles should bounce back in this series finale with a convincing victory.
Paying -154 for a team that has Shohei Ohtani on the mound in his current form against a starter with a 7.23 ERA is not steep — it’s the appropriate price for the talent disparity on display. The Dodgers’ offensive depth (.856 OPS) against Mahle’s command issues makes Los Angeles the clear play in the series finale at Oracle Park. Take the Dodgers to win outright and restore order in this rivalry matchup.
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