
by Megan Garcia
The Dodgers are back in October baseball. This is their 13th consecutive trip to the postseason, tied for the second-best streak baseball has ever seen.
The 1995–2007 Yankees also made it 13 straight times. The 1991–2005 Atlanta Braves hold the record at 14.
As the Dodgers get set to face the Reds in the Wild Card Series at Dodger Stadium on Tuesday, it’ll start a milestone watch for some individuals.
These are the various lists that Dodger players could find their names climbing in the postseason ranks:

All-Time Home Runs (Dodger history): Muncy — 1st (Tied)
Max Muncy will become the Dodgers’ franchise leader with his next postseason home run. Muncy has hit 13 home runs for the Dodgers throughout October, tied with Justin Turner and Corey Seager for most in Dodger history.
Kiké Hernández’s 10 home runs have him tied for fifth on the Dodger postseason home run list with Steve Garvey.
Hall of Famer Duke Snider ranks fourth with 11.
All-Time Games Played (Dodger history): Hernández — 3rd
Hernández’s 75 games are behind Justin Turner (86) and Chris Taylor (80). A long Dodger postseason run could make him the all-time leader.

All-Time Career Doubles (MLB): Betts — 4th (Tied)
Through eight postseason trips, five being with the Dodgers, Mookie Betts is tied with former Red Sox slugger David Ortiz with 22 career postseason doubles.
With his next postseason double, Betts will move up to third all-time with 23 career doubles. He’ll be tied with former Yankees catcher Jorge Posada.
Yankee Derek Jeter is the all-time leader with 32.
Betts ranks second in Dodger postseason history with 15 doubles. Turner ranks first with 19.
All-Time Career Walks (MLB): Muncy — 8th
The slugger has been issued 54 walks through six trips to the postseason. It ranks as the eighth-most all-time in baseball. David Ortiz ranks above Muncy at seventh with 59 career postseason walks.
Manny Ramirez is the all-time leader with 72.
All-Time Career Stolen Bases (MLB): Betts — 7th
Betts has swiped 16 bases throughout his postseason. It puts him two behind Jeter, whose 18 career stolen bases rank sixth overall in postseason history. Kenny Lofton is the all-time leader with 34.
Betts’ 14 stolen bases as a Dodger have him tied for second with Cody Bellinger. Davey Lopes is the Dodger leader with 19.
All-Time Managerial Wins (MLB): Roberts — 6th
Dave Roberts enters this postseason with 56 victories, one behind Dusty Baker and Bruce Bochy who are tied for fourth place. The Dodgers will need 13 victories to win the 2025 World Series. That would put Roberts at 69 wins, which would rank third all time. Joe Torre (84) and Tony La Russa (71) have the top two spots.
All-Time Career Strikeouts: Kershaw (MLB) — 2nd
The legendary left-hander is not on the Wild Card Series roster, but could be a factor down the road if the Dodgers keep winning. The newest member of the 3,000 Strikeout Club has 213 strikeouts in the postseason. Only Giants pitcher Justin Verlander has more with 244.
All-Time Career Innings Pitched (MLB): Kershaw — 7th
Kershaw has logged 194 1/3 innings in 39 postseason appearances, the seventh-most in baseball history. It puts him 3 2/3 innings away from tying Hall of Famer Greg Maddux for sixth on the all-time list.
Roger Clemens is fifth with 199 innings.

2025 Postseason: The Dodgers who are chasing postseason career records was originally published in Dodger Insider on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
