Los Angeles Times

Dodgers go on a romp in the Park

They rough up Sale, hit four home runs at Fenway to end skid at four games.

- DODGERS 11 BOSTON 2 By Jorge Castillo

BOSTON — The best left-handed pitcher east of the Mississipp­i since the start of the decade walked off the mound Saturday with his head down. Boos from the home crowd initially rained before a merciful chorus of applause and cheers drowned them out. There were two out in the fifth inning at Fenway Park and the Boston Red Sox ace’s outing was over.

The Dodgers’ recent offensive slump, which propelled their four-game losing streak, had been pronounced against left-handed pitching. Snapping out of it so emphatical­ly against Chris Sale (3-9), even as he wades through a relatively disappoint­ing season, seemed improbable. But the Dodgers knocked Sale around in a 11-2 win to halt their skid.

“It’s a matter of time,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “We’re too good.”

Fair or not, this weekend’s series — along with every other one against premier American League competitio­n this season, including next month’s encounter with the New York Yankees — was slated for use as fodder to measure the Dodgers’ standing among the elite.

Yes, they have been, by far, the best team in the National League and fourgame, midseason blips are not sufficient sample sizes. But consensus is the AL features more top-tier clubs. Boston’s convincing fivegame triumph over the Dodgers in the World Series in October only stoked the widespread opinion.

“I think it’s fun to debate and to see a team that you don’t see very often,” Roberts said before the game. “And, obviously, that’s a team that we lost to in the World Series. But we know the talent that we have and if there is an opportunit­y to go through Boston or New York down the road, I don’t think that we’re too concerned about that right now.”

The Dodgers, Roberts added, just needed to win against anybody from any league. They hadn’t won one since the Fourth of July. They began their march to a victory Saturday immediatel­y with Ross Stripling on the mound.

The right-hander recorded his best outing since returning to the starting rotation last month, giving up one run, punching out seven, and walking none over five innings against an offense averaging eight runs per game over the last two weeks. The only costly mistake he made was the fastball Xander Bogaerts drove over the Green Monster in the fourth inning.

“I felt like I threw the ball well the last few starts and just didn’t have much to show for it,” Stripling said. “I definitely had kind of everything firing today and felt like, with the mix, I was able to keep them off balance a bit.”

Joe Kelly relieved Stripling (4-3) in the sixth inning to make his first appearance against his former club since signing with the Dodgers. He ignited a familiar blaze — this one was sparked by two hits, a walk, an error, a 99mph wild pitch, and a couple of broken bats — but extinguish­ed it with a strikeout of Christian Vazquez on a 3and-2 fastball to strand two runners and limit the Red Sox to one run. Julio Urias recorded two perfect innings before JT Chargois secured the final outs to give Los Angeles its first win at this New England relic since June 2004, ending a seven-game losing streak.

Justin Turner, Cody Bellinger, A.J. Pollock and Max Muncy each supplied solo home runs. Turner slugged his homer off Sale in the third inning. Bellinger and Pollock went back to back against Steven Wright in the Dodgers’ four-run seventh.

Bellinger, celebratin­g his 24th birthday, hit a 433-foot blast for his 31st this season. Pollock, playing in his second game since coming off the injured list, hit his just over the Green Monster, his first homer since April 17. Muncy’s missile to straightaw­ay center field capped off the scoring in the ninth inning as the Dodgers tallied their first double-digit scoring output outside of Denver’s thin air since May 26.

 ?? Rich Gagnon Getty Images ?? CHRIS TAYLOR scores in the first inning as the ball gets away from Boston catcher Sandy Leon.
Rich Gagnon Getty Images CHRIS TAYLOR scores in the first inning as the ball gets away from Boston catcher Sandy Leon.

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