Imperial Valley Press

Ryu has 3 of Dodgers’ 16 hits in 14-0 rout of Padres

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LOS ANGELES (AP) Matt Kemp is used to being an everyday player. With so much talent on the Dodgers, though, he’s had to adjust to not seeing his name in the lineup as often.

“Does he like it?” manager Dave Roberts said. “Probably not, but he understand­s.”

Kemp is just happy to be playing baseball that matters in September, after being on teams in San Diego and Atlanta that missed the playoffs in recent years.

“This doesn’t get old,” he said after NL West-leading Los Angeles pounded out 16 hits in a 14-0 rout of the San Diego Padres on Sunday. “I’m excited about what’s to come.”

The Dodgers’ division lead remained at 1½ games over Colorado, which won 2-0 at Arizona.

The Dodgers finished their home slate at 44-37. They are 87-69 overall with six games remaining and would need to surpass the NL East champion Atlanta Braves (88-68) to earn home-field advantage in the NL Division Series.

“We do some scoreboard watching,” Kemp said.

Kemp went 3-for-4 — falling a triple shy of the cycle — drove in three runs and scored two on his 34th birthday. Fans in right field serenaded him by singing “Happy Birthday.”

“I haven’t had a triple all year,” he said. “That would have been cool.”

Hyun-Jin Ryu (6-3) pitched six scoreless innings and tied a career high with three hits. The South Korean lefthander allowed four hits, struck out eight and walked none to help the Dodgers take two out of three from the last-place Padres.

“Because the hitters gave me a lead, it was very comfortabl­e pitching,” Ryu said through a translator.

Brian Dozier was the only Dodgers starter without at least one hit. Max Muncy entered as a pinch-hitter and drove in a team-high four runs.

Los Angeles had three homers to extend its NL-leading and club-record total to 225.

Manny Machado and Kemp slugged solo shots in the first, giving Ryu a 2-0 lead.

Kemp’s homer was his 1,000th career RBI, making him the 11th active player to reach that mark.

“It’s tough for all of us,” Kemp said, referring to those who don’t play every day, “but we all got one common goal. Sacrifices have to be made at this moment. The main thing is to get back to the playoffs and back to the World Series.”

Machado’s homer was his 37th this season, matching a career high, and his 13th since the Dodgers acquired him from Baltimore.

Austin Barnes’ tworun homer highlighte­d a six-run fourth when the Dodgers batted around. David Freese’s two-out RBI single chased Joey Lucchesi (8-9).

 ??  ?? Los Angeles Dodgers’ Manny Machado drives in a run with a single against the San Diego Padres during the fourth inning of a baseball game on Sunday in Los Angeles. AP Photo/MArcIo JoSe SAnchez
Los Angeles Dodgers’ Manny Machado drives in a run with a single against the San Diego Padres during the fourth inning of a baseball game on Sunday in Los Angeles. AP Photo/MArcIo JoSe SAnchez

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