Los Angeles Times

COMEBACK SKIDS

Dodgers can’t get out of Kershaw’s three-run hole and Nationals get even

- By Jorge Castillo

The door cracked open for the Dodgers in the seventh inning Friday when Sean Doolittle, not Stephen Strasburg, appeared on the mound at Dodger Stadium. The Dodgers, gasping for six innings opposite Strasburg, had reached their destinatio­n. They had nine outs to prey on the Washington Nationals’ dreadful bullpen and steal Game 2 of the National League Division Series.

It was wide open when Corey Seager stepped into the batter’s box with the bases loaded and two outs in the ninth inning. The rejuvenate­d Daniel Hudson, a Dodger last season, was on the mound. A clash ensued.

After taking a called strike, Seager fouled off the next three pitches. He took the next two for balls and fouled off the seventh pitch. All seven pitches were fastballs. The seventh was a slider that darted in on Seager’s hands. Seager swung through it for strike three to conclude the Dodgers’ failed comeback attempt in a 4-2 loss that evened the series.

The Dodgers’ offensive game plan was elementary in theory: Force Strasburg to throw excess pitches and test his limits. The best way to beat the Nationals, as they accomplish­ed in Game 1, is to expose the team’s glaring weakness: the middle relief.

The Nationals, clawing to avoid facing eliminatio­n, exhausted their best options in un

precedente­d fashion to sidestep their biggest problem. Doolittle, the closer to begin the season, was summoned two innings early. Max Scherzer, a three-time Cy Young Award winner, was deployed for the eighth inning. The ninth went to Hudson.

Doolittle, a left-hander, was summoned with left-handed hitters Cody Bellinger and Max Muncy due up. Doolittle outlasted Bellinger, striking him out on eight pitches. His ninth pitch was a 95mph fastball down the middle that Muncy demolished. The ball traveled 413 feet into the right-field pavilion. Muncy flipped his bat to the infield grass a few feet in front of him. The Dodgers had eight outs to produce one more run. Doolittle concluded the eighth inning without stumbling again to dwindle the expiration number to six.

The next three outs came in succession in a cameo appearance by Scherzer. The right-hander, who went five innings in Tuesday’s wild-card game, was given the eighth inning. He struck out the three batters he encountere­d on 14 pitches.

Justin Turner welcomed Hudson in the ninth with a ground-rule double. He retired the next two hitters before issuing an intentiona­l walk to Muncy and Will Smith drew a walk to load the bases with two outs for Seager.

A comeback was necessary after Strasburg outpitched Clayton Kershaw.

Kershaw’s early-game struggles from the regular season — he compiled a 5.79 ERA in the first game — seeped into Friday. The Nationals ambushed him for a run in the first inning and two more in the second. He plunked two of the first eight batters he faced after hitting two of 706 batters during the regular season. He needed 44 pitches to secure six outs.

And as he did in most of his regular-season starts, Kershaw discovered a groove after the turbulence. The left-hander retired 13 of the final 15 batters he faced after Anthony Rendon’s two-out double in the second inning. He managed to complete six innings on 99 pitches. He struck out four and walked one.

One of the few questions remaining over the final month of the Dodgers’ regular season was how they would line up their starting pitchers for the National League Division Series. Kershaw, Walker Buehler and Hyun-Jin Ryu were largely interchang­eable. The decision was relayed to the players at the beginning the week. Buehler was given Game 1. Kershaw was assigned Game 2. Game 3 fell to Ryu.

It was the second straight October Kershaw was tasked Game 2. Last season, it was a stunning decision. Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said it was easier to sell Kershaw, whose playoff history doesn’t inspire confidence, on the idea this year.

“It’s hard to get his respect and so you get good respect by, not necessaril­y longevity, but by performanc­e,” Roberts said. “And so I think that with Walker’s track record, albeit short, what he’s done over this sample, has shown Clayton that it’s justified.”

Buehler further proved his standing as the club’s big-game pitcher with six scoreless innings Thursday. Kershaw held the Nationals scoreless for five batters Friday.

Trea Turner smacked the game’s first pitch, a 91-mph fastball in off the plate, past a diving Justin Turner down the left-field line for a double. The Dodgers caught a break when Adam Eaton popped up a sacrifice bunt. It was the only out Kershaw would secure before loading the bases with a walk and hit by pitch for Howie Kendrick. The former Dodger laced a one-out single through the hole on the left side for the game’s first run.

The Nationals added two more runs in the second frame. Kershaw ignited the trouble by hitting Victor Robles to lead off the inning. Eaton knocked Robles home with a two-out single, and Rendon cracked the next pitch for an RBI double to give Washington a 3-0 lead.

Strasburg’s most prominent postseason experience remains the postseason he didn’t experience in 2012. The Nationals decided to shut down Strasburg, then in his first full season after undergoing Tommy John surgery the previous year, a month before the playoffs started. They were atop the NL East. They wound up losing in the NLDS in five games.

On Friday, on two days’ rest, he flummoxed the Dodgers, who emptied the chamber with five lefthanded batters, not including Kershaw, to maximize their chances.

Strasburg rendered that strategy difficult. The right-hander smoothly blended his four-pitch arsenal and goaded the Dodgers into hacking at pitches out of the strike zone. It was a ruthlessly efficient display that kept Strasburg perfect into the fifth inning.

Smith spoiled the effort with a two-out single to left-center. He was stranded, but the progress preceded a breakthrou­gh in the sixth inning.

Matt Beaty, hitting for Kershaw, hit a one-out single. Joc Pederson doubled to center, giving the Dodgers their first runners in scoring position. Justin Turner lofted Strasburg’s next pitch to right field for a sacrifice fly and the Dodgers’ first run. Strasburg snatched A.J. Pollock’s line drive to end the inning and his night.

His departure marked an opportunit­y the Dodgers had salivated about but could not capitalize on.

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? CLAYTON KERSHAW MAKES the play to get Washington’s Victor Robles in the fourth inning (with Will Smith behind him), but the Nationals had already done their damage against the left-hander, scoring one run in the first inning and two in the second.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times CLAYTON KERSHAW MAKES the play to get Washington’s Victor Robles in the fourth inning (with Will Smith behind him), but the Nationals had already done their damage against the left-hander, scoring one run in the first inning and two in the second.
 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? CODY BELLINGER HITS the wall as he tries to catch a run-scoring double by Washington’s Anthony Rendon in the second inning.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times CODY BELLINGER HITS the wall as he tries to catch a run-scoring double by Washington’s Anthony Rendon in the second inning.
 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? MAX MUNCY WATCHES his seventh-inning home run off Washington’s Sean Doolittle that cut the Nationals’ lead to 3-2.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times MAX MUNCY WATCHES his seventh-inning home run off Washington’s Sean Doolittle that cut the Nationals’ lead to 3-2.

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