Santa Fe New Mexican

Dodgers feeling the blues in tough stretch

Owners of best record in baseball have seen massive division lead cut in half by Arizona

- By Beth Harris

LOS ANGELES — A few weeks ago, everybody was wondering if the Dodgers could break the major league record of 116 wins in a season.

Now they’re looking vulnerable with the playoffs approachin­g.

Los Angeles had lost six in a row and 11 of 12 — its worst skid of the season — before Thursday night’s game against Colorado. Once again, the Dodgers turned to ace Clayton Kershaw to stem the tide. He ended their five-game skid last week at San Diego in his first start off the disabled list.

The Dodgers remained baseball’s best team at 92-47 as of Thursday afternoon and led the NL West by 10½ games over the streaking Arizona Diamondbac­ks, a seemingly comfortabl­e margin with three weeks left in the regular season. But their lead was 21 games on Aug. 25, and as the Dodgers have stumbled, the D-backs have surged.

Arizona left Dodger Stadium on Wednesday night having won its franchise-record 13th in a row, sweeping Los Angeles in two three-game series over the last week.

“You get hit in the mouth, you got to fight back,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “There’s a lot of fight left in our guys.”

There just hasn’t been much offense and the bullpen has been hit hard.

The Dodgers were outscored 19-2 and had 30 strikeouts this week against the D-backs, who could potentiall­y give them fits if they meet again in the playoffs.

“If we get them, we know we’re the better team,” catcher Yasmani Grandal said. “There’s no doubt they play hard, but so do we. I’m glad someone is trying to challenge us, especially in our own division.”

After a poor 1½-month stretch to start the second half, Arizona hasn’t lost since Aug. 24. The Diamondbac­ks earned their fourth straight series sweep and have won seven in a row on the road, both franchise firsts. Until the Dodgers took a 1-0 lead Wednesday, Arizona had gone 97 consecutiv­e innings without trailing, the second-longest streak in major league history.

Manager Torey Lovullo knows the D-backs’ recent success against the Dodgers isn’t a guarantee in October.

“That’s a long way from right now,” he said. “The rosters are going to look totally different, things are going to look

playoffs and that’s all I’m focused on.”

Led by the low-key Roberts, the Dodgers are sticking to their script: stay the course, prepare and play the same way, and the wins will come again.

“For me to get upset at a result makes no sense,” Roberts said. “Adversity, if you learn from things, then it can be a good thing if you don’t let it dominate your thoughts or get you down too much.”

The mounting frustratio­n got to third baseman Justin Turner, who was ejected from the dugout for arguing balls and strikes on Wednesday.

Still, there are plenty of questions swirling around the Dodgers as they pursue their first World Series appearance since 1988.

Adrian Gonzalez is still bothered by a herniated disk in his lower back that might keep him off the playoff roster. The veteran first baseman has hit .184 since returning from the DL on Aug. 18.

New acquisitio­ns Yu Darvish and Curtis Granderson are struggling.

NL Rookie of the Year candidate Cody Bellinger is batting .172 since coming off the DL after a sprained ankle.

On the plus side, All-Star shortstop Corey Seager is expected back in the lineup Friday after pinch-hitting the last couple weeks because of a sore right elbow. He’s hitting .310, utility man Chris Taylor is batting .302 and Turner leads the team with a .327 average.

“We’re in a hole and we have to figure out a way to dig ourselves out,” Taylor said. “The last thing we want to do is feel sorry for ourselves.”

“We’re in a hole and we have to figure out a way to dig ourselves out. The last thing we want to do is feel sorry for ourselves.” Chris Taylor, Dodgers left fielder

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