China Daily

Dodgers rise on feat of Clay LA ace Kershaw fans 11 Astros en route to winning Series opener

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LOS ANGELES — No sweat, Clay Kershaw.

Changing jerseys to beat the 103-degree heat, the Dodgers ace with a checkered playoff history delivered a signature performanc­e, pitching Los Angeles past the Houston Astros 3-1 in Tuesday’s opening game of the World Series.

Boosted by Justin Turner’s tiebreakin­g, two-run homer in the sixth inning off Dallas Keuchel, Kershaw was in complete control against the highest scoring team in the majors this season.

“Definitely feels good to say it was the World Series, and it feels good to say we’re 1-0,” Kershaw said.

The left-hander had waited his whole career for this moment. And once he took the mound in his Series debut, he lived up to the legacy of Sandy Koufax, Orel Hershiser and the greatest of Dodgers hurlers.

The three-time Cy Young Award winner struck out 11, gave up just three hits with no walks over seven innings, featuring a sharp breaking ball that often left Houston batters taking awkward swings.

Kershaw’s lone blemish was a home run by Alex Bregman in the fourth.

No matter. With Hall of Famer Koufax looking on, Kershaw did his pal proud.

“He was as good as Keuchel said.

A sweltering, advertised,” pulsating crowd at Dodger Stadium dotted with Hollywood A-listers was filled with Kershaw jerseys, and he drew loud cheers all evening.

Kershaw got one more ovation when he walked through a corridor to a postgame interview.

“I felt good. It’s a tough lineup over there,” Kershaw said. “The way Keuchel was throwing it was up and down a lot, which was good. It got us into a rhythm a little bit. I think for me personally, it helped out a lot.”

Brandon Morrow worked a perfect eighth and Kenley Jansen breezed through the Astros in the ninth for a save in a combined three-hitter.

The Dodgers’ dominant relievers have tossed 25 straight scoreless innings this postseason.

With both aces throwing well, the opener zipped by in 2 hours, 28 minutes — fastest in the World Series since Game 4 between Toronto and Atlanta in 1992.

It certainly was unusual for this postseason, when games had been averaging 3 hours, 32 minutes — up 18 minutes from two years ago.

Chris Taylor gave the Dodgers an immediate jolt in their first Series game since 1988 when he hit a no-doubt home run on Keuchel’s very first pitch.

Taylor was co-MVP of the NL Championsh­ip Series with Turner, and they both kept swinging away against the Astros.

“Just getting that momentum early is huge,” Kershaw said. “And let the crowd kind of feed off that. It was definitely as good a start as we could have hoped for.”

The loss left the Astros still without a single World Series win in their 56-season history. In their only other Series appearance, they were swept by the White Sox in 2005.

Game 2 is on Wednesday evening, with AL Championsh­ip Series MVP Justin Verlander starting against Dodgers lefty Rich Hill.

Kershaw has almost every imaginable individual accolade on his resume — five ERA titles, an MVP trophy, a no-hitter and seven All-Star selections — but also was dogged by a shaky October past.

He began this outing in the twilight with a 6-7 career playoff record and an unsightly 4.40 ERA. He improved to 3-0 in four starts this postseason.

“I don’t know if you can decipher between a postseason start and a World Series start. The adrenaline, I feel like every game is so much more magnified,” Kershaw said.

A Series opener that served as a showcase for several of the game’s best young hitters — Jose Altuve, Carlos Correa, Cody Bellinger and more — instead was dominated by Kershaw.

“Couldn’t be happier him,” Turner said.

Facing a team that had the for fewest strikeouts in the majors this year, Kershaw fanned more Houston hitters than any starter this season. And he helped the Dodgers, who led the majors with 104 wins and a $240 million payroll, improve to 8-1 this postseason.

“Tonight is about Kershaw,” Astros manager AJ Hinch said. “Keuchel was really good tonight too ... just a pitch or two less than Kershaw.”

 ?? HARRY HOW / GETTY IMAGES / AFP ?? Clay Kershaw of the Los Angeles Dodgers pitches during the seventh inning against the Houston Astros in Tuesday’s Game 1 of the World Series at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles.
HARRY HOW / GETTY IMAGES / AFP Clay Kershaw of the Los Angeles Dodgers pitches during the seventh inning against the Houston Astros in Tuesday’s Game 1 of the World Series at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles.

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