Antelope Valley Press

Quintana pitches strong vs. Dodgers

- By JAY COHEN

CHICAGO — José Quintana was the star of the show. Even better than Javier Báez’s dance around David Freese.

Quintana pitched seven crisp innings in his third straight win, and the Chicago Cubs used a fast start to beat the Los Angeles Dodgers 7-2 on Tuesday night.

“He was once again on top of his game,” manager Joe Maddon said. “Great focus, kept coming back with good pitches.”

Willson Contreras hit a three-run double in Chicago’s four-run first, and Anthony Rizzo added a two-run drive in the second. Báez reached three times, including a memorable infield single in the second and a solo shot in the seventh.

It was more than enough support for Quintana (3-1), who turned in another gem in the Cubs’ sixth win in seven games. The veteran left-hander allowed two runs and four hits while improving to 3-0 with a sparkling 0.86 ERA since he was hit hard in a loss at Milwaukee on April 5.

“I know I’ve been throwing the ball really well the last (three) starts,” Quintana said. “Threw really good, all my stuff working really good.”

NL West-leading Los Angeles had won seven of eight. But the Dodgers were unable to recover after Kenta Maeda (3-2) struggled early on.

With one out and runners on second and third in the first, Báez walked on a close full-count pitch that Maeda

wanted badly. After Kyle Schwarber struck out swinging, Contreras doubled down the third-base line and Daniel Descalso tacked on an RBI double for a 4-0 lead.

“The Báez walk, that was something I did not like at all,” Maeda said through a translator. “It ended up making the damage a little bigger.”

Rizzo went deep with one out in the second, sending an opposite-field drive into the bleachers in left. Báez then hit a bouncer up the line and juked inside to avoid Freese’s tag , delighting the crowd of 35,536 on a cool night at Wrigley Field.

“Never had this play before,” Báez said. “It’s just things that come to me, reaction, I don’t know.”

Los Angeles manager Dave Roberts argued the call first with first base umpire Chad Whitson and then with home plate umpire Ted Barrett, but Báez stayed on first.

The Dodgers wasted a couple of late chances to get back in the game. Pinch-hitter Max Muncy struck out looking on Quintana’s 114th pitch, stranding two runners in the seventh. A.J. Pollock struck out and Cody Bellinger grounded out with the bases loaded in the eighth.

“We had chance to scratch our way back into the game, but we didn’t get that big hit,” Roberts said. TOUGH DAY

Maeda allowed seven hits, struck out five and walked three in four innings. The six runs were the most allowed by the right-hander since he was charged with a career-high seven in an 8-1 loss at Arizona on Aug. 31, 2017.

“He just didn’t have his fastball command,” Roberts said.

IOWA-BOUND

Cubs shortstop Addison Russell is joining Triple-A Iowa to prepare for his return from a 40-game suspension for violating Major League Baseball’s domestic violence policy. Russell is expected to play when Iowa begins a nine-game homestand Wednesday night against Nashville. TRAINER’S ROOM Dodgers: LHP Rich Hill (strained left knee) pitched six innings during an extended spring training game in Arizona on Monday. He is expected to make his season debut Sunday against Pittsburgh . ... C Russell Martin (back) could return this weekend. “We’re going to do a simulated situation on Friday,” Roberts said. “Depending on how that goes, a weekend activation seems likely.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? BAD DAY — The Dodgers’ Kenta Maeda reacts after giving up a single to Chicago Cubs’ Ben Zobrist during the first inning of a baseball game on Tuesday in Chicago.
Associated Press BAD DAY — The Dodgers’ Kenta Maeda reacts after giving up a single to Chicago Cubs’ Ben Zobrist during the first inning of a baseball game on Tuesday in Chicago.

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