Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Cubs power past Dodgers in NLCS Game 1

Grand slam in eighth carries Chicago over Dodgers in Game 1 thriller

- By JAY COHEN

CHICAGO — Miguel Montero delivered one memorable swing, Javier Baez stole home with a daring dash down the line and Jon Lester turned in another steady performanc­e.

Business as usual this year for the Chicago Cubs, who are off and running in the National League Championsh­ip Series.

Montero snapped an eighth-inning tie with the third pinch-hit grand slam in postseason history, and Chicago beat the Los Angeles Dodgers 8-4 in Game 1 on Saturday night, moving the Cubs a step closer to their first pennant in 71 years.

Game 2 is Sunday night, with the Dodgers once again in need of a clutch performanc­e by ace Clayton Kershaw. Major league ERA leader Kyle Hendricks pitches for the Cubs, chasing their first World Series title since 1908.

Lester pitched six effective innings, and Dexter Fowler homered after making two diving catches in center field — breaking his belt on the second grab. Left fielder Ben Zobrist threw out Adrian Gonzalez at the plate, helping Chica-

go to its first NLCS win in 13 years.

The Cubs were swept in four games by the New York Mets in last year’s NLCS. Lester & Co. are back again and already in better shape following a crazy eighth inning.

In the top half, Gonzalez tied it 3-all with a two-out, two-run single off Aroldis Chapman.

Zobrist hit a leadoff double in the bottom of the eighth before pinch hitter Chris Coghlan was intentiona­lly walked with runners at first and second and two outs, bringing up Chapman’s spot in the batting order.

“That was the right thing to do,” Cubs manager Joe Maddon said. “I probably would have done the same thing.”

Maddon sent up Montero, who drove an 0-2 slider from loser Joe Blanton halfway up the right-field bleachers for his first hit of the playoffs.

“I trust Joe. I’ve trusted him all year long, he’s been great for us,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “Left a pitch up. … It just didn’t work out.”

The crowd of 42,376 at Wrigley Field roared as Montero rounded the bases and kept cheering until the veteran catcher popped out of the dugout for a curtain call.

“I never even thought I was going to hit at that point,” Montero said. “To be honest, I thought Maddon put me out there just to bring the lefty and get (Willson) Contreras to pinchhit for me, and they didn’t bring the lefty for Contreras.”

Fowler homered on the next pitch as the Cubs rebounded quickly from a shaky bullpen performanc­e. Hector Rondon allowed Andrew Toles’ RBI double in the ninth before Chase Utley lined into a game-ending double play.

Chapman retired Yasmani Grandal on an inning-ending groundout and was credited with the win.

Lester and Baez helped Chicago to a 3-1 lead after seven. But the Dodgers rallied the eighth, when Maddon brought in Chapman with the bases loaded and no outs.

The lefty struck out Corey Seager and Yasiel Puig before Gonzalez lined a 102 mph fastball back up the middle. A pumped-up Gonzalez celebrated at first base after delivering Los Angeles’ first hit in 12 at-bats with the bases loaded in the playoffs.

“Because it didn’t work out doesn’t mean it was wrong,” Maddon said.

But everything changed in the bottom half, leaving both managers to answer for several difficult decisions. Lester was replaced by a pinch hitter after just 77 pitches, and the intentiona­l walk to Coghlan put the go-ahead run at third.

“A lot of that stuff was preplanned,” Maddon said. “You look for situations. You’re looking for the right matchups. But you don’t know what he’s going to do. … You have to be able to react.”

Andre Ethier had a pinch-hit homer for Los Angeles, helped by a strong wind going out to left and left-center on a warm night at Wrigley Field.

Kenta Maeda lasted just four innings in his fourth straight shaky outing dating to the regular season.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States