Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Strasburg, Scherzer lift Nats over Dodgers to even NLDS

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NATIONALS 4, DODGERS 2

LOS ANGELES — Stephen Strasburg turned in another dominant playoff outing, Max Scherzer overpowere­d Los Angeles for an inning out of the bullpen and the Washington Nationals held off the Dodgers 4-2 Friday night to even their NL Division Series at a game apiece.

Scherzer struck out the side in the eighth, but Washington’s shaky bullpen still ran into trouble. Daniel Hudson labored through the ninth, loading the bases with two outs before striking out Corey Seager for the save. The tense final inning also included a twisting, falling grab by third baseman Anthony Rendon on Cody Bellinger’s pop fly in shallow left field, as well as a gutsy intentiona­l walk by Manager Dave Martinez that brought the winning run to bat.

Game 3 is back in Washington tonight, where Scherzer is expected to face major league ERA leader Hyun-Jin Ryu.

“I’m going to see how he feels [Saturday],” said Martinez, adding Anibal Sanchez would start today if Scherzer doesn’t.

Pitching on the shortest rest of his career, Strasburg took a perfect game into the fifth inning while outdueling Clayton Kershaw. Strasburg pitched one-run ball for six innings and struck out 10, lowering his career postseason ERA to 0.64 — the best in history for players with at least four starts. He edged out Dodgers great Sandy Koufax (0.95 ERA), who watched from the front row.

Rookie Will Smith broke up Strasburg’s perfect bid with a two-out single. The three-time All-Star allowed his first earned run in 23 consecutiv­e postseason innings dating to the 2014 NLDS against San Francisco and limited Los Angeles to three hits and no walks.

Scherzer came on for the eighth and punched out Gavin Lux, Chris Taylor and Joc Pederson on 14 pitches. The 35-year-old right-hander threw 77 pitches in the NL wild-card game Tuesday, yet he topped out at 99 mph in his fourth career playoff relief appearance.

“We weren’t expecting that,” Dodgers Manager Dave Roberts said.

Justin Turner led off the ninth with a ground-rule double off Hudson, spurring hope from a chanting, clapping sellout crowd of 53,086. A.J. Pollock struck out, and then Bellinger popped up to shallow left. Rendon misjudged the ball but recovered and made the catch while he tumbled over. The goateed All-Star smiled wide as he stood.

“The ball kept going and I kept thinking, ‘Where the hell is our left fielder at?’ ” Rendon said. “He didn’t call it so I knew I had to catch it.”

Martinez intentiona­lly walked Max Muncy, who hit a solo shot off Sean Doolittle in the seventh, before Hudson walked Will Smith to load the bases. Seager fouled off four fastballs before Hudson got him to swing over a slider.

The Nationals took a 4-2 lead in the top of the eighth on Asdrubal Cabrera’s pinchhit RBI single.

Los Angeles finally scored in the sixth on Turner’s sacrifice fly after Matt Beaty’s pinch-hit single and Pederson’s double. With the tying run at the plate, Pollock lined out to Strasburg to end the inning.

Until Smith broke through, the Dodgers’ closest attempt at a hit came in the third when Kershaw’s sinking line drive was grabbed by diving left fielder Juan Soto.

 ?? AP/MACIO JOSE SANCHEZ ?? Washington Nationals starting pitcher Stephen Strasburg allowed 1 run on 3 hits in 6 innings and struck out 10 as the Nationals defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers 4-2 in Friday night’s National League division series game.
AP/MACIO JOSE SANCHEZ Washington Nationals starting pitcher Stephen Strasburg allowed 1 run on 3 hits in 6 innings and struck out 10 as the Nationals defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers 4-2 in Friday night’s National League division series game.

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