Lodi News-Sentinel

Hernandez’s 3 HRs carries Dodgers to World Series

- By Jay Cohen

CHICAGO — Enrique Hernandez put a Hollywood ending on an LA story three decades in the making.

Fueled by a home run trilogy from their emotional utilityman, Clayton Kershaw and the Los Angeles Dodgers are finally going to the World Series.

Hernandez homered three times and drove in a record seven runs, Kershaw breezed through six crisp innings and Los Angeles ended the Chicago Cubs’ title defense with an 11-1 rout in Game 5 of the NL Championsh­ip Series on Thursday night.

“It feels good to hear World Series,” Kershaw said. “It’s been a long time coming for this team.”

After years of playoff heartache, there was just no stopping these Dodgers. With Kershaw firing away at the top of a deep pitching staff and co-NLCS MVPs Justin Turner and Chris Taylor leading a tough lineup, one of baseball’s most storied franchises captured its first pennant since Hall of Famer Tommy Lasorda managed Kirk Gibson, Orel Hershiser and Co. to Los Angeles’ last championsh­ip in 1988.

The Dodgers will host the New York Yankees or Houston Astros in Game 1 of the World Series on Tuesday night. The Yankees have a 3-2 lead in the ALCS heading into Game 6 at Houston on Friday night, so one more New York win would set up another chapter in an old October rivalry between the Yankees and Dodgers.

Los Angeles made the playoffs eight times in the previous 13 seasons and came up short each time, often with Kershaw shoulderin­g much of the blame. The three-time NL Cy Young Award winner took the loss

when his team was eliminated by the Cubs in Game 6 of last year’s NLCS at Wrigley Field.

The ace left-hander was just OK during his first two starts in this year’s postseason, but Los Angeles’ offense picked him up each time. Backed by Hernandez’s powerful show in Chicago, Kershaw turned in an efficient three-hit performanc­e with five strikeouts and improved

to 6-7 in the playoffs — matching Burt Hooton’s club record for postseason wins.

When Kenley Jansen retired Willson Contreras on a liner to shortstop for the final out, the party was on. The Dodgers poured out of the dugout and mobbed their dominant closer near the mound, and a small but vocal group of Los Angeles fans gathered behind the visitors’ dugout and chanted “Let’s go Dodgers! Let’s go Dodgers!”

Hernandez connected on the first two pitches he saw, belting a solo drive in the

second for his first career playoff homer and then a grand slam in the third against Hector Rondon. He added a tworun shot in the ninth against Mike Montgomery.

The 26-year-old Hernandez became the fourth player with a three-homer game in a league championsh­ip series, joining Bob Robertson (1971 NLCS), George Brett (1978 ALCS) and Adam Kennedy (2002 ALCS). Hernandez’s seven RBIs set an LCS record and tied the postseason record shared by four other players who all did it in a Division Series.

 ?? WALLY SKALIJ/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? The Dodgers celebrate a series-clinching 5-1 win against the Cubs in Game 5 of the NLCS in Chicago on Thursday.
WALLY SKALIJ/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE The Dodgers celebrate a series-clinching 5-1 win against the Cubs in Game 5 of the NLCS in Chicago on Thursday.

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