Toronto Star

Rest for the weary and wired relievers

Intensity of every at-bat and increased workloads grind on Astros’ and Dodgers’ bullpens

- STEPHEN HAWKINS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

HOUSTON— Nobody needs a day off in this World Series more than those rundown relievers.

Brandon Morrow has pitched in all five games for the Los Angeles Dodgers. He had never pitched three straight days before talking himself into a wild Game 5, then allowed a tying home run on his first pitch. He left without getting an out and the Houston Astros suddenly ahead by three runs.

Morrow has given up three home runs in the post-season after not allowing any in the regular season.

“It’s not just the amount of games you play, but emotional investment and the incredible focus that everybody has,” the former Toronto Blue Jays pitcher said. “It wears on you mentally, and that kind of mental focus kind of wears on you physically. So yeah, it’s a grind. Guys are fatigued, but not tired, if that makes sense.”

After a 162-game regular season plus another month of high-pressure games in the playoffs, they’re not done yet.

Game 6 is Tuesday night in Los Angeles.

Houston never even used struggling closer Ken Giles in its 13-12 win in Game 5, which ended early Monday morning after each team employed seven pitchers in 10 innings over nearly 51⁄ hours. The loser was

2 Kenley Jansen, the Dodgers’ all-star closer who had already blown a save in Game 2 — matching his total during the entire year to date.

Taxing bullpens and top relievers in the post-season in certainly not a new phenomenon.

Look no further than last year’s World Series. For the first time ever in 2016, not a single starter recorded an out after the sixth inning of any game — and that Series went the full seven games.

The Astros took a 3-2 series lead back to Los Angeles, where they won the second game in 11 innings.

Astros manager A.J. Hinch has said Giles will get the ball again in this Series but hasn’t specified in what role after the righty with 100 m.p.h. heat was tagged for five runs over12⁄

3 innings in his two World Series appearance­s. Giles lost Game 4 after taking over in the ninth in a1-1tie that turned into a 6-2 Dodgers win.

By this point in the season, it doesn’t really matter how many pitching changes are needed.

“We’ve got to get 27 outs one way or another,” Hinch said. “I don’t care who gets them. Our guys don’t care who gets them.

“I think the comfortabl­e roles and knowing who you’re going to face and what the game situation is going to be in, it’s just so unpredicta­ble in this sport. Especially at this stage of the year.”

Houston relievers have combined for a 5.94 ERA in the post-season.

Morrow has pitched in all but one of the Dodgers’ 13 post-season games, but Los Angeles had not planned to use him Sunday.

“He called down and said that he felt good,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “So in the seventh inning, you can’t turn him down.”

On the mound for the fifth time in six days, Morrow struggled.

“There wasn’t quite as much life as I’ve had on the ball,” he said. “Velocity is one thing, it was a tick down, but if you have life on it, then you can still get away with some pitches.”

The right-hander got away with nothing against the top of the Astros lineup. All four batters he faced reached, including home runs by George Springer and Carlos Correa as Houston took an 11-8 lead.

Jansen entered in the bottom of the ninth, after the Dodgers scored three times in the top of the inning to tie the game12-12. He hit Brian McCann with a two-out pitch in the 10th, then walked Springer before Alex Bregman’s game-ending single.

 ??  ?? Dodgers reliever Brandon Morrow couldn’t get an out in Game 5 while working for the third day in a row.
Dodgers reliever Brandon Morrow couldn’t get an out in Game 5 while working for the third day in a row.

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