The Day

Dodgers roll past Mets

- By STEVE DILBECK

Los Angeles — Another day, another power outburst by the Los Angeles Dodgers. And the struggling New York Mets were in no mood for Yasiel Puig's antics. Puig riled the frustrated Mets with a long look at his three-run homer, Yasmani Grandal added two solo shots and the streaking Dodgers took over first place in the NL West by battering New York pitching again for an 8-2 victory Wednesday night.

Rich Hill turned in his best five innings of the season for the Dodgers, who have won six straight and 12 of 13. They jumped a half-game ahead of Colorado, which had its six-game winning streak snapped with a 16-5 loss to Arizona.

Puig posed at home plate and admired his fourth-inning drive off rookie Tyler Pill, irritating Mets first baseman Wilmer Flores, who said something to Puig as the Cuban slugger rounded the bag.

Puig looked back at Flores as he was trotting toward second and cursed at him, Flores said.

"I just told him to run the bases, that was it," Flores said. "I don't think he knows what having respect for the game is. We're playing horrible right now, we don't need his (behavior)."

Puig claimed he did not remember the exchange.

"He disrespect­ed us," Flores said. "I think there's a way to enjoy a home run. That was too much."

Between innings, Mets veteran Jose Reyes and outfielder Yoenis Cespedes, also from Cuba, spoke with Puig on the field.

"After I talked to Cespedes, he told me, 'Try to run a little bit faster,' and tried to give me some advice," Puig said through a translator. "I don't look at it that way, but it is what it is."

It's far from the first time Puig has annoyed an opponent, but there was no obvious attempt at retaliatio­n from the Mets.

"We've got bigger problems than somebody's home run trot right now," manager Terry Collins said.

Outscored 30-8 in the first three games of this four-game series, the banged-up Mets (31-40) have dropped six of seven overall and are nine games under .500 for the first time since Sept. 2, 2014.

They've given up 12 homers in the series, and the Dodgers have gone deep in 13 consecutiv­e games.

"Historical­ly, it's a moment in time you have to appreciate," Hill said.

Hill (4-3) gave up a leadoff home run to Curtis Granderson, then held the Mets scoreless for the rest of his five innings. He struck out a season-high eight and allowed four hits, but became the first pitcher in major league history to last five or fewer innings in each of his first nine starts in a season.

Trainer's room

Mets: RHP Zack Wheeler was placed on the 10-day disabled list with biceps tendinitis. The Mets are hoping Wheeler (3-5, 5.29 ERA) will only miss one start. Collins said it was undetermin­ed who would take Wheeler's next turn.

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