Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Another tough night

- By Mike DiGiovanna

Dodgers are one pitch from victory, then Brewers rally.

Dustin May turned his back toward home plate and winced in pain after his 27th pitch of the game Saturday night, a 94-mph fastball that the Dodgers can only hope isn’t the 23-year-old flame thrower’s final pitch of the season.

May immediatel­y summoned manager Dave Roberts and athletic trainer Yosuke Nakajima to the mound in the second inning of a crushing 6-5, 11-inning loss to the Milwaukee Brewers, who erased a two-run deficit with three 11th-inning runs for the walk-off win in American Family Field.

After a brief discussion, May headed for the clubhouse, his injury adding to the sting of a grueling loss in a 4-hour, 48-minute game in which the Dodgers emptied both their bullpen and bench.

“He said he felt a shooting sensation through his arm on one of those curves he threw in the [Billy] McKinney at-bat,” Roberts said. “We’re gonna get an MRI when we get to Chicago [on Monday]. We remain hopeful, but we won’t know until we get the MRI.”

May has not had a serious arm injury in his six-year profession­al career.

Asked whether he feared this could be serious, Roberts said, “Yeah, I think so. Any time a pitcher comes out of a game and starts talking about the elbow, you’re concerned.”

The Dodgers weathered May’s injury and took a 5-3 lead in the top of the 11th when Will Smith capped an eight-pitch at-bat with his first career triple, a shot into the right-field corner to score two runs.

Mookie Betts was walked intentiona­lly and thrown out attempting to steal, Roberts confirming Betts was “running on his own,” and Corey Seager struck out, the Dodgers’ inability to tack on costing them.

Dodgers left-hander Alex Vesia walked Luke Maile and Mario Feliciano to load the bases in the bottom of the 11th. Mitch White, the 10th Dodgers pitcher of game, got Kolten Wong to hit a sacrifice fly, trimming the deficit to 5-4, and struck out Keston Hiura.

But Avisail Garcia grounded an RBI single to left for a 5-5 tie, and Travis Shaw, who hit a 443-foot solo homer in the third, lined an RBI single to right, sending the Dodgers to their 10th loss in 13 games. They are 16-12 after a 13-2 start.

“Yeah, obviously a little frustratio­n,” Betts said. “We understand it’s a long season. We can get it back rolling, but we can’t keep wasting time. You gotta be there for each and every game, and we haven’t been lately.”

The Dodgers went three for 14 with runners in scoring position and are hitting .202 (22 for 109) in those situations in the last 14 games. They had runners on first and third with one out in the fifth Saturday and didn’t score.

“We’ve got to do better with some situationa­l hitting,” said Betts, who crushed Brandon Woodruff ’s first pitch of the game for a homer. “Building innings, stringing hits together. A couple of times tonight, we could have broken it open, but we didn’t.”

May looked unhittable early, striking out three of his first five batters before Luis Urias lined a 97-mph fastball over the wall in left field for a solo homer in the second, pulling the Brewers even 1-1.

But on his seventh pitch in the ensuing at-bat by McKinney, a 2-and-2 four-seam fastball that was well below his 98.4-mph average, May added to the growing list of injured Dodgers and unexpected­ly forced the team into its second bullpen game in two days.

Jimmy Nelson, Scott Alexander, Dennis Santana, Victor Gonzalez, Kenley Jansen and Blake Treinen each threw scoreless innings to keep the Dodgers even through nine innings, and Justin Turner’s run-scoring single in the top of the 10th off Drew Rasmussen gave the Dodgers a 3-2 lead.

Max Muncy was walked intentiona­lly to load the bases, and with the Dodgers out of position players, pitcher Clayton Kershaw was sent up to pinch-hit in extra innings for the second time this week. Kershaw struck out and AJ Pollock grounded out to end the inning.

Vesia, making his Dodgers debut after being recalled Saturday, gave up Urias’ bases-loaded sacrifice fly in the bottom of the 10th but struck out McKinney to escape further damage.

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 ?? Morry Gash Associated Press ?? DODGERS STARTER Dustin May leaves the game after being injured during the second inning in Milwaukee. The Dodgers lost for the 10th time in 13 games.
Morry Gash Associated Press DODGERS STARTER Dustin May leaves the game after being injured during the second inning in Milwaukee. The Dodgers lost for the 10th time in 13 games.

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