Los Angeles Times

Shaky Jansen falters in the ninth, Dodgers lose to A’s in 10 innings.

Dodgers’ shaky closer gives up the tying run before Oakland tallies against Nelson in 10th.

- By Jorge Castillo

OAKLAND — The Dodgers’ soft underbelly, the one glaring question mark for the consensus World Series favorites, was exposed on a chilly Wednesday afternoon inside an outdated concrete mass against the only team left in the majors searching for a win in 2021.

Kenley Jansen was tasked to protect a one-run lead in the ninth inning and complete the Dodgers’ seven-game, season-opening trip. A save would’ve extended L.A.’s win streak to six games, but he failed to do his job in the Dodgers’ 4-3 loss to the Oakland Athletics in 10 innings at RingCentra­l Coliseum.

Jansen looked uncomforta­ble pitching on consecutiv­e days for the first time this season. His velocity was down.

His command was erratic as he threw 13 of his 22 pitches for balls. Matt Chapman welcomed him with a leadoff single and scored the tying run on Elvis Andrus’ sacrifice fly.

Jansen survived the inning, but the Athletics, who were outscored 50-13 before Wednesday, won the game in the 10th on Mitch Moreland’s walk-off single against Jimmy Nelson.

The bullpen’s letdown — combined with the offense going two for 21 with runners in scoring position — wasted Trevor Bauer’s strong performanc­e in his second start as a Dodger and dropped the club to 5-2 heading into their home opener Friday against the Washington Nationals.

“That’s just uncharacte­ristic for him to not have the command like that,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said of Jansen. “There were some misfires in there, some spiked fastballs that typically doesn’t happen with him. We’ll dig into it.”

The Dodgers weren’t at full strength again, this time missing former MVPs Cody Bellinger and Mookie Betts. Bellinger’s absence from the lineup was expected after getting spiked on his calf Monday. Betts’ exclusion was not.

For a couple of hours, the reason for the $365-million star right fielder’s omission was unknown. Roberts didn’t address reporters before the game and the club didn’t disclose any informatio­n. At 12:02 p.m., 35 minutes before first pitch, the Dodgers announced the problem: a stiff lower back.

After the game, Roberts said he expected Betts to play Friday. Bellinger, however, isn’t expected to play and a stint on the injured list remains a possibilit­y.

“We’ll make a decision Friday,” Roberts said.

Bauer held the Athletics (1-6) to two runs and three hits in 62⁄3 innings.

Oakland tallied its first run when Ramón Laureano was hit by a pitch to lead off the fourth inning, stole second base, stole third and scored on a wild pitch.

Otherwise, Bauer gave up one hit in six innings — after six no-hit innings in his debut — before yielding a home run in the seventh. Through two starts, hitters are one for 38 against Bauer in the first six innings and five for nine in the seventh.

“Mixed bag,” Bauer said. “I thought my stuff was really good. I made some betweeninn­ing adjustment­s but was behind on a lot of counts 1-0, 2-0. So, I have to clean that up.”

Not all injury developmen­ts were negative for the Dodgers. Chris Taylor returned to the lineup after getting hit by a pitch on the left elbow Monday. He played center field in Bellinger’s place and led off in Betts’ place.

At the plate, he helped put Athletics left-hander Jesús Luzardo on the ropes in the first inning with a walk. He scored on AJ Pollock’s twoout single. Luzardo walked Max Muncy for his third walk of the inning to load the bases as former Dodger Adam Kolarek began warming up.

But Austin Barnes, the Dodgers’ designated hitter, flied out to end the inning and the Dodgers squandered the opportunit­y to bury Luzardo, who threw 35 pitches but surrendere­d just one run.

Luzardo kept the Dodgers off the board from there until the sixth inning. Muncy worked a one-out walk and Barnes singled to chase

Luzardo. Kolarek was summoned to face Gavin Lux, who advanced the runners with a groundout to first base.

That brought up Zach McKinstry, the No. 9 hitter and Betts’ replacemen­t in right field, with two outs and the score tied. The rookie utilityman noticed the infield was shifted and dropped a bunt down the third-base line to create some chaos.

Athletics third baseman Chapman fielded the ball on the run as Barnes sprinted to third base behind him and Muncy raced home. Barnes overslid the bag and was tagged out to end the inning, but Muncy crossed home plate first, giving the Dodgers the lead.

“That was on his own,” Roberts said. “Very heads-up play.”

Justin Turner’s RBI double off Sergio Romo in the seventh inning gave the Dodgers a two-run lead until Matt Chapman led off the bottom of the inning with a solo home run against Bauer.

The one-run edge lasted until Jansen took the mound in the ninth and the Dodgers’ one major potential flaw became evident.

 ?? Jeff Chiu Associated Press ?? THE ATHLETICS’ Matt Chapman slides home to score past Dodgers catcher Will Smith in the ninth.
Jeff Chiu Associated Press THE ATHLETICS’ Matt Chapman slides home to score past Dodgers catcher Will Smith in the ninth.

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