Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Dodgers extend their hot streak to eight

Rain delay can’t stop them as L.A.’s bullpen delivers after Kershaw gives up a key homer.

- By Jorge Castillo

WASHINGTON — Clayton Kershaw glanced up when Yan Gomes swatted the pitch Saturday night at Nationals Park, yelled in frustratio­n once he realized where the ball was going and looked away.

It landed over the leftfield wall with two outs in the fourth inning for a tying, three-run home run. On most nights, Kershaw would’ve rebounded, finished strong and kept the Dodgers in the game. Mother Nature had other plans.

Within minutes, with one out in the top of the fifth inning, the skies opened, and the game was stopped. It resumed after a rain delay of 1 hour and 44 minutes without Kershaw or Washington Nationals starter Paulo Espino. With a bullpen game looming Sunday and questions in their rotation, it was an untimely sequence for the Dodgers.

But they went on to win 5-3 to extend their winning streak to eight games and stay a half-game behind the first-place San Francisco Giants in the NL West.

“It certainly wasn't ideal,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “I know Clayton wanted to keep going, which is a credit to him. No surprise. But we managed it and we'll get through tomorrow.”

The Dodgers (52-31) scored three runs in the fourth inning on two sacrifice flies and an RBI double from Gavin Lux. Then they took the lead without hitting a ball out of the infield in the top of the sixth on a hit by

pitch, a fielder’s choice, an error, and AJ Pollock’s RBI infield single to the third baseman. The dribbler had an exit velocity of 65.1 mph.

Lux worked a walk to lead off the ninth inning, stole second base and scored on Chris Taylor’s single to give the Dodgers a two-run cushion. The Dodgers manufactur­ed enough offense despite just five hits and no home runs. They are riding high. But Sunday, after a turnaround of fewer than 11 hours, will present a challenge.

Kershaw’s rain-shortened outing means the Dodgers will effectivel­y be forced into bullpen games on backto-back days. Trevor Bauer was scheduled to start Sunday’s matinee against the Nationals (40-41) — the series finale is scheduled for 11 a.m. local time — until he was placed on paid administra­tive leave Friday after a woman accused him of sexual assault and obtained a temporary restrainin­g order against him Tuesday.

The Dodgers, without an obvious viable choice to immediatel­y log a convention­al starter’s workload, will go with a bullpen game. They’ll be in a bind after using five relievers to cover the final five innings Saturday.

After the win, Roberts said the team still hadn’t decided on an opener for Sunday morning. He said the club will recall right-hander Edwin Uceta from triple-A Oklahoma City to shoulder some of the workload. Uceta is a starter by trade, but he hasn’t logged more than four innings in any of his 12 outings between triple-A and the majors. Roberts said he can throw 75 to 80 pitches Sunday.

As for after Sunday, the league can keep Bauer on leave for seven days, but it would need approval from the players’ union to extend the duration. If the approval isn’t granted, Bauer would return to the roster Friday when the Dodgers host the Arizona Diamondbac­ks at

Dodger Stadium unless the team decides to act on its own. That appears unlikely.

If Bauer does miss more than seven days, the Dodgers would prefer to avoid navigating the schedule with a four-man rotation for an extended period. They have two internal options for the role: veteran David Price and minor leaguer Josiah Gray.

Price is a former Cy Young Award winner who the Dodgers placed in the bullpen after he opted out of the 2020 season citing health concerns during the COVID-19 pandemic. He has started two games as an opener this season during the Dodgers’ five weeks with four starters following Dustin May’s season-ending elbow injury. He’s given up 12 runs — 11 earned.

On Saturday, Roberts said Price wouldn’t be available for more than 40 pitches Sunday. The left-hander would need multiple starts, perhaps up to a month, to build up the stamina for a convention­al starter’s workload. “The buildup is something else that is not ideal and practical,” Roberts said.

Price said there’s a plan in place, but he declined to disclose details.

“I’ll start if they want me to start,” Price said. “That’s fine with me.”

While the 35-year-old Price has 11 full major-league seasons of experience as a starter, Gray has yet to make his big-league debut. The 23year-old right-hander began the season as the organizati­on’s top-ranked prospect, but he has pitched in just one game this season. He was shut down with a shoulder impingemen­t after starting opening day for Oklahoma City.

Gray resumed throwing recently and Roberts said he expects he’ll appear in games soon. But he’ll also need time to build up. Acquiring a starter prior to the July 31 deadline, already a possibilit­y before the allegation­s against Bauer surfaced, is an alternativ­e.

 ?? Nick Wass Associated Press ?? JUSTIN TURNER slides home to score during the fourth inning of the Dodgers’ 5-3 victory over the Nationals on Saturday in Washington. It was the Dodgers’ eighth straight victory that came after a long rain delay.
Nick Wass Associated Press JUSTIN TURNER slides home to score during the fourth inning of the Dodgers’ 5-3 victory over the Nationals on Saturday in Washington. It was the Dodgers’ eighth straight victory that came after a long rain delay.

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