Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Offense really does leave it on the field

- DYLAN HERNÁNDEZ

ATLANTA — Chris Taylor sat on the infield dirt, removing his helmet in disgust.

His mistake on the bases had cost the Dodgers a potential run. The lapse in judgment was about to cost them the game.

The Dodgers collected 10 hits on Saturday night at Truist Park, the last of them a sharp single to right field by Cody Bellinger in the top of the ninth inning.

All of that offense, however, translated into only two runs, none after the fourth inning.

The wasted chances opened the door for the Atlanta Braves to steal Game 1 of the National League Championsh­ip Series, which they did when Austin Riley’s single drove in Ozzie Albies for a walk-off 3-2 victory.

The Big Peach turned into LOB City for the Dodgers, who were one for eight with runners in scoring position. The Braves had two runners in scoring position the entire night; both of them scored.

The Braves didn’t win this game. The Dodgers lost it.

“We threw out some hits,” manager Dave Roberts said. “We just couldn’t get the hit when we needed.”

And in one of the rare instances in which they did, when Bellinger singled in the ninth, Taylor made a baserunnin­g gaffe for the ages.

Bellinger’s single cleared the outstretch­ed glove of leaping Braves second baseman Albies and sailed into right field.

Taylor, who reached base by drawing a two-out walk from Braves closer Will Smith, initially thought he could advance to third base on the play.

“Just a bad read on my part,” Taylor said.

But as he rounded second base, he peaked over his right shoulder and saw that right fielder Joc Pederson was winding up to throw.

“I should have kept going,” Taylor said.

Instead, he stopped.

“We got him,” Albies recalled thinking.

Pederson threw the ball behind Taylor to shortstop Dansby Swanson, who was covering second base. Taylor was caught in a rundown.

“That’s a huge, huge out in the game,” Braves manager Brian Snitker said.

In retrospect, Taylor said he should have stopped at second base. Doing so would have brought up Mookie Betts with two outs and men on first and second.

“It happens,” Roberts said. “It’s baseball.”

The chances started early and came often, even with No. 1 starter Max Fried

pitching for the Braves.

Corey Seager doubled with two outs in the first inning, only for Justin Turner to follow with a strikeout.

The Dodgers’ only hit with a runner in scoring position came in the second inning when AJ Pollock doubled and was driven in on a single by Taylor, leveling the game at 1-1.

The Dodgers went in front, 2-1, on a solo home run by Will Smith in the fourth inning. The Braves countered in the bottom half of the inning with a solo home run by Riley. The Dodgers didn’t score again.

Trea Turner stroked a two-out single to center field in the fifth inning and stole

second base, only for Seager to strike out looking.

Justin Turner singled to center field in the sixth and reached second base on a wild pitch by Fried to Albert Pujols. Justin Turner moved to third on a groundout by Pujols, but Pollock lined out to Albies for the third out.

Fried was removed after that inning.

“Tonight, considerin­g the stuff Fried had, to get him out after six, I thought we took good at-bats,” Roberts said. “We just couldn’t push enough runs across.”

The troubles continued after Fried departed.

Taylor led off the seventh inning with a double against

left-hander Tyler Matzek. Pinch hitter Austin Barnes put down a perfectly placed sacrifice bunt to move Taylor to third base.

With Taylor on third with one out and Betts at the plate, the go-ahead run felt like an inevitabil­ity.

Betts couldn’t deliver, popping up to first baseman Freddie Freeman in foul territory. The task of driving Taylor fell to NL batting champion Trea Turner.

He swung and missed at the first pitch, a 98-mph fastball below the strike zone. He fouled off a 99-mph pitch that was outside.

Three pitches later, he swung and missed on a slider that was low and

inside.

“I think I might have been a little too aggressive, but I’m OK with that because that’s what I told myself I wanted to do,” Trea Turner said. “He made some good pitches, I swung at some balls. Obviously, I’d like to have that at-bat back.”

In the regular season, the Dodgers could console themselves after a game like this by reminding themselves the numbers would eventually even out, that timely hits were bound to come.

Now, they are confronted with the harsh truth of the postseason: Drive in runs or go home.

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? THE BRAVES’ Ozzie Albies, right, signals himself safe after stealing second base in the ninth. Albies singled and stole the base to set up Austin Riley’s RBI single in an example of clutch hitting that the Dodgers lacked in going one for eight with runners in scoring position.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times THE BRAVES’ Ozzie Albies, right, signals himself safe after stealing second base in the ninth. Albies singled and stole the base to set up Austin Riley’s RBI single in an example of clutch hitting that the Dodgers lacked in going one for eight with runners in scoring position.
 ?? ??

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