Los Angeles Times

L.A. in command

Dodgers head back to Wrigley Field up 2-0.

- By Andy McCullough

Justin Turner sank into his chair inside the Dodgers clubhouse and picked up his iPhone. Mere minutes after his game-winning, ballpark-rattling, three-run homer cleared the center-field fence, the aisles at Dodger Stadium still were packed, his auburn mane still was sticky from a postgame Gatorade shower, and his body still coursed with the adrenaline unleashed in the final moment of Sunday’s 4-1 victory over the Chicago Cubs in Game 2 of the National League Championsh­ip Series.

Turner could not sit still. There were 65 unread messages on his phone, and he expected more to flood it. He rose to greet a staffer who showed him a picture of the homer. He hugged Cole Roberts, the teenage son of the Dodgers’ manager. The younger Roberts declared it “the sickest thing ever.” Turner did not disagree.

“That,” Turner said, “was the coolest thing I’ve ever done in my baseball career.”

It was something this ballpark and this city had not seen in 29 years. On Oct. 15, 1988, Kirk Gibson pulled himself off the training table for a legacy-defining homer off of Oakland closer Dennis Eckersley. Sitting on a living room floor about 25 miles south of the ballpark, inside his grandmothe­r’s house in Lakewood, a 3-year-old boy screamed as the baseball cleared the fence.

The boy grew up to be a baseball player, then a big leaguer, then a Dodger, then the second Dodger to hit a walk-off postseason homer. On the 29th anniversar­y of Gibson’s home run, Turner recognized the symmetry as he rounded second base. He decided against mimicking Gibson’s famed fist pump. Instead he hollered at his teammates assembled at the plate, tossed his helmet into the grass and disappeare­d inside delirium of two dozen other Dodgers, a group two wins away from the World Series. “I felt like I was floating,” Turner said. The noise inside the stadium felt volcanic. The ballpark shook beneath the weight of 54,479 fans stamping

on the bleachers and shouting toward the sky. Dave Roberts emerged from the scrum and urged the crowd to raise the decibel level. Yasiel Puig did the same. The crowd obliged — because this ballpark may not host another game for more than a week.

Owners of a 2-0 lead in this series, the Dodgers will f ly to Chicago on Monday with an opportunit­y to close out the defending champions at Wrigley Field. Through 18 innings, the Dodgers have feasted on the bullpen of the Cubs, a glaring weakness for an otherwise formidable opponent. On Sunday, the Cubs held firm until the bottom of the ninth, when veteran John Lackey fed Turner a 92-mph fastball at the belt, and Turner etched his name into franchise lore.

The moment underscore­d the strategic advantage Roberts holds over Cubs manager Joe Maddon, who chose Lackey over closer Wade Davis, who Maddon said was only available in a save situation. The situation never arose. Turner guaranteed that. “He’s probably the most clutch player I’ve ever played with,” outfielder Chris Taylor said.

Roberts relished the production from Turner, who helped the team forget about the absence of injured shortstop Corey Seager. As Turner starred, the Dodgers kept quiet the twin titans of the Cubs lineup, first baseman Anthony Rizzo and third baseman Kris Bryant. The duo is one for 14 through two games, and the Dodgers relievers have retired 24 of the 25 batters they’ve faced.

“What’s different about this team?” closer Kenley Jansen repeated. “The thing is, we all care about each other. It’s not about that one guy or this.”

The Dodgers relievers have played a role in that. On Sunday, a day after pulling ace Clayton Kershaw after just five innings, Roberts opened his bullpen again with glee. He removed Rich Hill after five innings, despite Hill allowing only three hits with eight strikeouts. Maddon turned to his relievers far earlier than he had hoped.

The Dodgers forced Cubs ace Jon Lester to depart after 42⁄3 innings, the shortest of his 21 postseason starts. Even so, Hill bent first.

In the fifth, Chicago shortstop Addison Russell swung late at a pair of fastballs, lifting them foul along the first-base side. He found his timing on a 1-2 fastball that bisected the plate. Russell hooked a drive beyond the left-field fence for a solo home run. “That was the frustratio­n,” Hill said.

Hill stewed next to pitching coach Rick Honeycutt as the Dodgers tied the score. The rally started with Charlie Culberson’s leadoff double. Three batters later, Turner threaded a two-out single to score Culberson.

The bullpens decided the game. The two relief corps traded zeros into the ninth. Maddon sent lefthander Brian Duensing for a second inning of work, and Puig took a four-pitch walk before Culberson bunted him to second base. Maddon decided Lackey, a 38-year-old sage with a 4.59 earned-run average in 2017, could put out the blaze.

Lackey walked Taylor. Turner swept the dirt out of the batter’s box as he stepped in. Lackey fired a cutter in the dirt. Turner poised himself as a 1-0 fastball hummed over the plate. Turner unloaded on the pitch and waited to see where it would fall.

The ball landed in the glove of a fan on the farthest edge of the leftfield pavilion. Turner spread his arms wide. The ballpark started to reel. His teammates crowded the plate. The party was on.

“I can’t even put it into words right now,” Turner said. “It’s incredible.”

As he finished up his postgame news conference, Turner returned to the field for a TV interview. He answered questions as a few stray fans called his name from the concourse. They spoke the words that resonated on a night 29 years in the making. “Clutch, baby!” “Clutch!” “World Series! World Series!”

 ?? Photograph­s by Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? JUSTIN TURNER conjures memories of Kirk Gibson with his three-run, walk-off home run against John Lackey (41) of the Cubs in the ninth inning of Game 2.
Photograph­s by Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times JUSTIN TURNER conjures memories of Kirk Gibson with his three-run, walk-off home run against John Lackey (41) of the Cubs in the ninth inning of Game 2.
 ??  ?? PENNANT FEVER like this town hasn’t seen in 29 years surged through Dodger Stadium as the Dodgers moved within two wins of a World Series return.
PENNANT FEVER like this town hasn’t seen in 29 years surged through Dodger Stadium as the Dodgers moved within two wins of a World Series return.
 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? YASIEL PUIG, right, avoids a collision with center fielder Chris Taylor and catches Kris Bryant’s first-inning fly ball in the late afternoon sun at Dodger Stadium.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times YASIEL PUIG, right, avoids a collision with center fielder Chris Taylor and catches Kris Bryant’s first-inning fly ball in the late afternoon sun at Dodger Stadium.

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