LOS ANGELES — Clayton Kershaw became the 20th pitcher with 3,000 strikeouts when Vinny Capra of the Chicago White Sox took a slider for a called third strike from the Los Angeles Dodgers star for the final out of the sixth inning on Wednesday night.
''It's the last box for Clayton to check in his tremendous career,'' Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said before the game. ''He's never been a person to look for kind of acknowledgment or attention, but he's earned that whether he likes it or not.''
The sellout crowd of 53,536 was on its feet roaring as the 37-year-old left-hander walked off the mound to end the inning. He paused and doffed his cap, with teammates briefly holding off hugging him to allow him to soak in the cheers.
Kershaw waved to his wife and four children in the stands and then patted his chest and mouthed, ''Thank you.''
The game was delayed for nearly 6 minutes between pitches, a gap that included a tribute video. Kershaw has spent his entire 18-year career in Los Angeles.
Kershaw joined Justin Verlander of San Francisco (3,468) and Max Scherzer of Toronto (3,412) as the only active pitchers with that many. Kershaw is just the fourth left-hander in the club.
Capra, hitting ninth, was retired on four pitches, with plate umpire Jim Wolf calling the third strike on a slider, Kershaw's season-high 100th pitch of the night. Wolf is the brother of retired pitcher Randy Wolf, once a teammate of Kershaw's.
It was the 251st strikeout of Kershaw's caught by Will Smith.