Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Dodgers fall to Padres in 10th

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And more “Beat L.A.! Beat L.A.!” chants carried on into a San Diego night.

Though the Dodgers (10-4) pushed the game into extras, Saturday was all about missed chances.

Early on, Padres starter Yu Darvish appeared to be on the ropes, facing a basesloade­d situation in the second inning with his pitch count already approachin­g 50.

But with two outs, Darvish got Mookie Betts to swing through a cutter to retire the side. After that, the right-hander retired 12 in a row to complete a scoreless six-inning outing.

“We stressed him the first two innings,” manager Dave Roberts said. “Just couldn’t get that big hit.”

Tyler Anderson, meanwhile, pitched decently for the Dodgers in his first start of the year, taking the place of injured Andrew Heaney in the team’s rotation.

In 42⁄3 innings, the lefthander gave up two runs, four hits and three walks with four strikeouts. His only blemishes: a sacrifice fly from Wil Myers in the second and a solo home run from Jake Cronenwort­h in the third.

After Anderson exited, a parade of relievers blanked the Padres (10-6) to keep the game close, setting up Turner’s double in the eighth off Padres closer Taylor Rogers.

After that, however, the Dodgers squandered more opportunit­ies to take the lead. With two aboard in the top of the ninth, Chris Taylor rolled into an inning-ending double play.

Then in the top of the 10th, Taylor ran into an out on the bases, getting tagged at third after trying to tag up from second — where he began the inning as the automatic runner — on a fly ball hit to Jurickson Profar in left.

“It was a good baseball play,” Roberts said, approving of Taylor’s decision. “You got to give Profar credit, he made a perfect throw.”

There were other empty performanc­es up and down the lineup. A night after hitting two home runs to snap an early season skid, Betts went 0 for 5 with four strikeouts for only the third time in his career.

“Seemed like every situation, I was up and I failed,” Betts said. “I let us down. But gotta be ready for tomorrow.” Max Muncy and Justin Turner also each went 0 for 4, continuing their own struggles. As a team, the Dodgers were just one for seven with runners in scoring position.

“One part of the equation is give yourself opportunit­ies, create traffic, and we do a pretty good job of that,” Roberts said. “But the other part is finishing an inning, and I just think that this entire year we haven’t done as good of a job as we’re capable of.”

Indeed, it all set the stage for Nola’s winning sacrifice fly in the bottom of the 10th, which snapped the Padres’ 10-game losing streak to the Dodgers stretching to last season, and gave their fans one more chance to chant on their way out of the stadium.

“Beat L.A.! Beat L.A.!”

 ?? Derrick Tuskan Associated Press ?? C.J. ABRAMS slides home with the winning run behind Dodgers catcher Will Smith to give the Padres a 3-2, 10-inning win at Petco Park. San Diego snapped a 10-game losing streak to L.A., dating to last season.
Derrick Tuskan Associated Press C.J. ABRAMS slides home with the winning run behind Dodgers catcher Will Smith to give the Padres a 3-2, 10-inning win at Petco Park. San Diego snapped a 10-game losing streak to L.A., dating to last season.

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