The Mercury News

Kershaw dominates, Dodgers a win away from World Series

Pitcher strikes out 9, has Dodgers one win from Series

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LOS ANGELES >> Clayton Kershaw put his previous flop behind him and pushed the Los Angeles Dodgers forward — one victory from a return trip to the World Series.

With so much at stake, the three-time Cy Young Award winner bounced back from one of his worst postseason starts with one of his best, pitching the Dodgers past the Milwaukee Brewers 5-2 Wednesday for a 3-2 lead in the NL Championsh­ip Series.

“I don’t really think about the one before. And after this one I’m not going to think about this one, either,” Kershaw said.

Max Muncy hit a goahead single in the sixth inning for the defending NL champs. Kershaw held the lead, scoring an insurance run in the seventh and then exiting.

Roughed up in the NLCS opener, Kershaw mixed his fastball and slider on a hot day to shut down the Brewers. The Dodgers ace didn’t allow a baserunner past the third inning.

“He just has a knack,” Brewers star Christian Yelich said. “He has the ability to punch guys out.”

Game 6 is Friday night in Milwaukee. The Brewers will start left-hander Wade Miley, who walked Cody Bellinger to open Game 5 before getting pulled in an interestin­g piece of strategy by Manager Craig Counsell. Hyun-Jin Ryu will go for the Dodgers.

“To go back to Milwaukee up 3-2 as opposed to being down 3-2 is huge for us,” Kershaw said. “It’s been a battle every single game we’ve played them so far

and we don’t expect anything different when we go back.”

The Brewers do. “We’re in a good spot, man,” Counsell said. “We’re going back home, to me, in a position of strength.”

The Dodgers haven’t been in back-to-back World Series since losing to the Yankees in 1977 and ’78. They were beaten by Houston in Game 7 last year.

“You’ve seen it this entire postseason, even when we’re behind, we’re battling back, putting ourselves in a position to possibly tie games or take the lead late,” Dodgers third baseman Justin Turner said. “That’s where our experience comes in. We never count ourselves out.”

If the Brewers rally to win the series and this ends up

being Kershaw’s last start for the Dodgers, he left behind a gem. The left-hander can opt out of the last two years and $70 million remaining on his contract after the World Series and become a free agent. He said Tuesday he hasn’t made a decision about his future.

The teams reconvened less than 15 hours after the Dodgers eked out a 2-1 victory Tuesday night on Cody Bellinger’s RBI single with two outs in a 13-inning game that lasted over five hours.

Pitching in 82-degree sunshine, Kershaw was well-rested and masterful in allowing one run and three hits over seven. He struck out nine, all on breaking pitches, and walked two.

“I don’t know if it was that much, just a little bit

better execution maybe,” Kershaw said of his repertoire compared with Game 1. “Maybe I threw some more curveballs today than I did in Game 1.”

Kershaw pitched in and out of trouble in the third, when the Brewers loaded the bases and scored their lone run. Kershaw struck out Jesus Aguilar to end the third, the first of 13 consec- utive batters that the lefthander retired.

“Any time you can work yourself out of situations like that that’s going to make or break the game,” Kershaw said.

Yelich, who nearly won the NL Triple Crown this season, was hitless in four at-bats. He is 3 for 20 without an RBI in the NLCS.

“Just not capitalizi­ng,” he said. “It’s frustratin­g.”

 ?? JAE HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Los Angeles Dodgers’ Yasiel Puig raises his arms Wednesday after hitting an RBI single during the sixth inning of Game 5 of the NLCS against the Milwaukee Brewers.
JAE HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Los Angeles Dodgers’ Yasiel Puig raises his arms Wednesday after hitting an RBI single during the sixth inning of Game 5 of the NLCS against the Milwaukee Brewers.

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