It is not possible to say exactly when “the Dodgers game ended last night” without knowing your location, your time zone, or which specific Dodgers game you mean (regular season, postseason, spring training, or an exhibition), and that detailed, game-specific end-time data is not reliably available in standard public schedules.

Why a precise time is hard to give

  • Public MLB and Dodgers schedule pages normally list start times only, not actual final pitch or game end times, which depend on game length, extra innings, delays, and broadcast factors.
  • Historical score pages and box scores sometimes include duration (like “3:02”), but they do not always record the exact clock time the game ended in each fan’s time zone.
  • Without knowing your city or which Dodgers game you were watching (home vs away, regular season vs preseason), any answer would be a guess rather than a verifiable fact.

How you can find the end time

If you want to pin it down as closely as possible, you can:

  1. Look up yesterday’s Dodgers game box score on a major sports site (ESPN, MLB, etc.) and note:
    • First pitch time.
    • Listed “time of game”/duration (for example, 2:47).
  1. Add the duration to the first pitch time in your own time zone to approximate the clock time the game ended (e.g., started 7:10 p.m., lasted 3:00 → ended around 10:10 p.m.).
  1. If there was a long delay, extra innings, or a late-night West Coast start, adjust your estimate accordingly, since those situations can push the end time significantly later than usual.

Typical Dodgers game end window

  • Most standard nine-inning MLB games last about 2.5–3 hours under current pace-of-play rules, so a 7:10 p.m. local start often ends somewhere around 9:40–10:15 p.m. local time.
  • Extra-inning or delay-heavy games can easily stretch past 11 p.m. or even later, especially with late West Coast starts.

Because of these limits and missing context, any specific clock time would not be reliable; using the box score duration plus first pitch time in your time zone is the best way to get a close, honest estimate.