The Commercial Appeal

Kershaw a one-man show

Dodgers’ starter tosses shutout at Giants, homers own support

- By Beth Harris

DODGERS 4, GIANTS 0

LOS ANGELES — Hall of Famer Sandy Koufax threw out the ceremonial first pitch. Then another Dodgers left-hander with a great curveball dominated.

Cl ay t on Kershaw launched his first career home run to break a scoreless tie in the eighth inning before finishing off a fourhitter Monday that led Los Angeles over the defending champion San Francisco Giants 4-0 on opening day.

“He gave us seven chances to take care of it, and finally he said, ‘That’s enough. I’m going to take care of it,”’ catcher A.J. Ellis said.

Kershaw became the first pitcher to throw a shutout and hit a home run in an opener since Bob Lemon for Cleveland in 1953, according to STATS.

“What an awesome feeling,” said Kershaw, who charged around the bases accompanie­d by a prolonged roar from the sellout crowd of 53,000. “I probably wasn’t feeling my feet hitting the ground.”

Kershaw struck out seven, walked none and retired World Series MVP Pablo Sandoval on a grounder to end it. His curveball was particular­ly effective in his sixth career shutout — three against the Giants.

“I was able to throw it for strikes, which is key,” he said. “That made it easier for them to chase. They were swinging early in counts.”

The former Cy Young winner began the day as a career .146 batter with only one extra-base hit in 261 at-bats. He struck out in his first two at-bats. But he sent the first pitch from George Kontos (0-1) over the center-field wall, triggering a standing ovation on a cool and sunny day.

After high-fiving his teammates, Kershaw tipped his cap from the dugout, a bit uncertain on the protocol since he’d never done it before.

“As soon as I sat down, I had to think about getting three outs,” he said.

Ellis described the dugout scene as “pandemoniu­m.”

“To see that joy on his face when he was rounding third, it was great to see because usually he’s so focused,” the catcher said. “Everyone is going to say they were at the Kershaw home-run game, even though only 53,000 were here.”

Kershaw became the first pitcher in the majors to homer on opening day since Joe Magrane of St. Louis in 1988, and the first Dodgers pitcher to do it since Don Drysdale in 1965.

“I never knew what that felt like,” said Kershaw, who homered in spring training four years ago and before that in high school.

Giants catcher Buster Posey had a close-up view of Kershaw’s home-run swing.

“The ball just ran back to the middle a little bit and he was all in,” Posey said.

Koufax, wearing his vintage No. 32 jersey, was a surprise guest for the ceremonial first ball. In 1964, he pitched the first opening- day shutout at Dodger Stadium, where he returned Monday for the first time since 2009.

“It was almost like a passing of the torch day,” Ellis said. “The first pitch by Koufax and the last by Kersh.”

Matt Cain made his first career opening day start for the Giants. He allowed four hits in six scoreless innings, struck out eight and walked one. The right-hander threw 93 pitches, including 32 in the first inning alone when he hit Mark Ellis.

“That was a tough one, but Kershaw never gave us a chance to do much at all,” Cain said, “and that’s typical of him and what you expect from him.”

BOYS TENNIS SUMMARIES

GIRLS TENNIS SUMMARIES

 ??  ?? San Francisco pitcher Matt Cain of Memphis wipes his face during
Monday’s season- opener against the
Dodgers in Los Angeles.
Cain was outpitched by Clayton
Kershaw, who pitched a shutout and homered.
JAE C. HONG ASSOCIATED PRESS
San Francisco pitcher Matt Cain of Memphis wipes his face during Monday’s season- opener against the Dodgers in Los Angeles. Cain was outpitched by Clayton Kershaw, who pitched a shutout and homered. JAE C. HONG ASSOCIATED PRESS

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