Clayton Kershaw didn’t reach his magic number, but he sure had the Rockies’ number.

The veteran left-hander perplexed the Rockies for six innings, leading the Dodgers to a 3-1 victory and tidy finish to their three-game sweep at Coors Field. Los Angeles beat Colorado for the 10th straight time.

Colorado, which managed just five baserunners (two hits, three walks) in the game, has been swept 12 times this season.

Kershaw (4-0, 3.03 ERA) allowed one run on two hits, walked one, and struck out five. The five Ks left him just three shy of 3,000 strikeouts for his career. When the 37-year-old Dodgers icon does get his 3,000th K, he’ll become just the 20th major league pitcher to reach that lofty plateau.

“Kershaw was really good,” Rockies manager Warren Schaeffer said after Kershaw made the 14th quality start of his career at Coors Field, his first since June 27, 2023. “He was throwing in, early in the game, tying up our right-handers with some cut. We chased down (against) him, and then later on, his slider came into play and he kept us on the ground. He did a nice job against us. We didn’t have an answer.”

Kershaw induced Colorado into nine outs via groundballs.

The Rockies slid to 8-32 at home and 18-63 at the midway point of the season. At this pace, they’ll finish 36-126, establishing a dubious record for the most losses in a season during the modern era. The Chicago White Sox lost a record 121 games last season.

“I feel like progress is being made on a consistent basis,” said Schaeffer, who is 11-30 since taking over for Bud Black. “We just got done playing the world champs and we gave them a fight. We didn’t get any wins out of it, no doubt, but we are playing better baseball. I think everybody in that (clubhouse) knows it and feels it. It’s just a matter of keep pushing forward.”

Colorado’s lone run came on Brenton Doyle’s two-out, solo homer off Kershaw in the second. It was Doyle’s sixth home run but his first since May 27. Doyle was out of the lineup Wednesday as he worked on his swing in the batting cage. He made some minor adjustments, but believes that lately, he’s been hitting the ball hard only to have it hit right at defenders.

“You always want the back of your baseball card to look pretty, and hard-hit baseballs don’t show on the card,” said Doyle, who’s batting .195. “But at the end of the day, I have to be happy with hard-hit balls. It’s a very hard game. If I can stay consistently hitting balls 100 mph, I’m pretty confident they will start falling more and more for me.”

Much to the delight of the Dodgers fans, who once again turned Coors into Dodger Stadium East, Shohei Ohtani’s two-out solo home run off Tyler Kinley in the seventh sealed the deal. It was Ohtani’s 28th homer, the most in the National League.

Ohtani is slashing .391/.451/.781 with six home runs, five doubles, one triple and 17 RBIs over 17 career games at Coors.

Rockies left-hander Austin Gomber, making his third start since coming off the injured list with a sore shoulder, pitched five excellent innings. He allowed one run on four hits, walked one, and struck out one. He was lifted after just 77 pitches, but said he was OK with Schaeffer’s decision to pull him.

“I feel like I’m getting stronger every day, but that’s a tough lineup, they grind you down,” Gomber said. “I thought I emptied the tank, right there, in the fifth. It was a little bit hotter day. It was pedal to the metal all day against them — from pitch one. And getting Ohtani there in the fifth (for the final out), I kind of emptied the tank. So I thought that was probably the right move, especially with the middle of their order coming up for the third time.”