Los Angeles Times

Buehler takes charge in win

He strikes out 11 in six innings in his best outing of the season. Dodgers make it nine out of 10 wins.

- By Jack Harris

Starting pitcher Walker Buehler strikes out 11 in six innings as the Dodgers roll.

Getting a rare day off, Mookie Betts joined the Dodgers’ TV broadcast in the second inning Friday night for an interview, fielding questions about his “spa day,” as manager Dave Roberts called it, and his strong start to the season.

Then the topic turned to Walker Buehler. Betts’ mind immediatel­y f lashed back to two Octobers prior.

Still a member of the Boston Red Sox then, Betts was on the receiving end of one of Buehler’s signature career moments. In Game 3 of the 2018 World Series, the pitcher silenced the Red Sox’s lineup in a scoreless seven-inning, sevenstrik­eout Fall Classic spectacle, a night that showcased just how special — how sensationa­l — the righthande­r can be.

“His stuff is electric,” Betts said. “To this day, it was probably the best pitching game I’ve ever been a part of.”

For much of Friday, Buehler showed similarly dominant form, putting an end to his early-season struggles with an emphatic six-inning, one-run, 11-strikeout display in the Dodgers’ 5-1 win over the Colorado Rockies at Dodger Stadium, the first-place Dodgers’ ninth win in 10 games.

It was peak Buehler for long stretches.

An upper-90s fastball lasered to all corners of the zone. A kneebuckli­ng curveball that disappeare­d as it reached the plate. A cutter and two-seamer that ran away from bats and kept Rockies hitters off-balance. An unshakable calm and unmistakab­le confidence accompanyi­ng every pitch.

The 26-year-old hardly even needed his slider. The rest of his arsenal was that good, allowing him to get ahead in counts (67 of his 92 pitches were strikes) and put away his opponents with familiar ease (he recorded double-digit strikeouts for the eighth time in his career).

“I was just kind of tired of being [lousy] to be honest,” Buehler said. “I don’t really know how else to say it. Sorry for the language. I was just kind of tired of it.”

Indeed, Buehler’s first four starts this year were a battle. His command was off. His breaking balls weren’t generating many whiffs. And his numbers were out of whack, marked by an ERA that was greater than five as well as walk and home run rates that had more than doubled from last year.

But all along, Roberts maintained Buehler just needed more time. Over summer quarantine, the pitcher hadn’t thrown as much as some of the team’s other starters. During last month’s training camp, his main focus was simply on building up his stamina.

“With Walker, we knew it was a slow ramp up,” Roberts said. “We knew it was going to take time.”

Buehler finally seemed to be at full force Friday, getting more than enough offensive support to earn his first win of the campaign. The Dodgers (20-8) took the lead in the first on a Cody Bellinger RBI double, added three more in the fourth on a Matt Beaty RBI single and Corey Seager two-run double, and ended the night with eight players in the hit column.

The Rockies (13-13), meanwhile, failed to reach base their first time through the order, opening the game with 11 consecutiv­e outs before Charlie Blackmon’s fourth-inning single. By then, Buehler was well into a groove. At one point, he struck out nine of 12 batters. Over the first five innings, only three balls left the infield.

“I haven’t had that choosewhat-I-want-to-do-with-it kind of feeling. I had that more tonight,” Buehler said. “For me, that’s a huge thing, being able to change speeds since most of the stuff I throw is around the same velo.”

Buelher finally ran into trouble in the sixth, conceding three consecutiv­e one-out singles to allow his first run. But then, even after Trevor Story stole second to put two runners in scoring position with only one out, Buehler fanned Blackmon with a curveball in the dirt and induced an inning-ending fly out from Nolan Arenado deep down the line in right.

Buehler bit down on his Dodger blue glove as he walked back to the dugout afterward, leaving the game for good in his longest start this season. He knew Arenado had come only a few feet short of tying the score.

Even on a night with few other complaints, he was still craving a little more perfection.

“He’s such a finely tuned machine that, to get to that optimum performanc­e level, there are certain things that he’s got to get to,”

Roberts said. “I felt that each outing, it was getting better. This one just seemed like he was primed.”

Short hops

Catcher Will Smith took four atbats in a simulated game Friday and is planned to be activated from the injured list Sunday. … Roberts believed the groin injury that landed reliever Pedro Báez on the injured list Thursday is a new problem, but acknowledg­ed the righthande­r hasn’t “been 100% physically right” all season.

 ?? Alex Gallardo Associated Press ?? WITH THE SHIFT ON, Rockies third baseman Nolan Arenado takes the throw at second base to force Cody Bellinger and goes to first to complete a double play on Max Muncy.
Alex Gallardo Associated Press WITH THE SHIFT ON, Rockies third baseman Nolan Arenado takes the throw at second base to force Cody Bellinger and goes to first to complete a double play on Max Muncy.

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