
Clayton Kershaw ‘sad’ after close teammate cut for Dodgers’ top prospect Dalton Rushing
NY Post
Clayton Kershaw pitched to Austin Barnes 86 times in the regular season dating back to 2015, developing a bond with the catcher/utility player.
Pitchers and catchers spend so much time with one another over the course of a grueling 162-game season that it’s natural for the parties to grow close.
That rapport is why it’s tough for pitchers to see their battery partners jettisoned, with Kershaw expressing his disappointment Thursday after the team designated Barnes for assignment to clear a path for top catching prospect Dalton Rushing.
“I think everybody was surprised,” Kershaw said before a 19-2 win over the A’s, according to the Los Angeles Times. “Yeah, it’s sad. Barnesy’s one of my best friends on or off the field. You won’t find a guy that competes better than Austin Barnes. He wants to win more than anybody, and he always found a way, and he came up with some big moments for us throughout the years. I think a lot of people forget he was starting a lot of playoff games and winning a lot of games for us, getting big knocks.
“It’s sad to see someone like that go who’s been here that long, and I think we all kind of feel it. It’s no disrespect to Dalton. I know he deserves it, and he’s going to be a great player. It’s just, for me personally, I think a lot of guys on the team, it was disappointing to see him go.”
Barnes won two titles with the Dodgers during his 11 seasons, serving as both the backup and starter. He had been Will Smith’s No. 2 before the team moved on.

He had just delivered what was — may still be — the forever money performance in the Nets’ NBA history. Jason Kidd had played 51 minutes, 38 seconds of a 120-109 double overtime win against the Pacers, do-or-die Game 5, 2002 first round at the Meadowlands. Reggie Miller had made another of his gut-punch shots to extend the game, a 35-footer that made Tyrese Haliburton’s Game 1 prayer against the Knicks seem like a routine layup.