Los Angeles Times

Neuse outburst, but then silence

He follows his first major league homer with basesloade­d line drive that ends Dodgers’ threat in loss.

- SAN DIEGO 3, DODGERS 2 By Jorge Castillo

The latest installmen­t in the rivalry between the Dodgers and San Diego Padres, an intense feud that has routinely provided captivatin­g thrills over the last week, came down to a roller-coaster eighth inning in the Dodgers’ 3-2 loss Thursday night at Dodger Stadium.

It began with the Padres mustering a run against reliever Blake Treinen on a double play to break a tie in the top of the inning.

Justin Turner then led off the bottom half for the Dodgers with a single off right-hander Nabil Crismatt. Will Smith followed with a flyball that landed down the leftfield line, just beyond a diving Jurickson Profar’s reach. The ball was initially called foul, but the Dodgers challenged the play.

The video showed the ball bouncing off the chalk, leaving a brown spot behind, and into the seats. Smith was given a groundrule double. The crowd roared as Turner and Smith jogged to their stations with no outs. It was the break the struggling Dodgers offense needed.

The Padres replaced Crismatt with left-hander Tim Hill to face the left-handed-hitting Max Muncy. He got Muncy to hit a groundball to second baseman Jake Cronenwort­h, who was drawn in, and Turner didn’t try scoring.

AJ Pollock then worked a 2-0 count before he was intentiona­lly walked to load the bases and set up the double play. The strategy worked by a few inches.

Sheldon Neuse followed by smashing a 105-mph groundball to Cronenwort­h, who sprawled to somehow stop the ball on one hop. He recovered to underhand it to second base. Fernando Tatis Jr. corralled it, just kept his foot on the bag and whipped the ball to first base, where Eric Hosmer stretched just far enough to snatch it before Neuse’s foot hit the base.

Dodger Stadium went from rocking to silence. The Dodgers (14-5) went from threatenin­g for a big inning to nothing. They then went down in order in the ninth inning as the Padres (11-10) took the opener of the four-game series between the clubs to end a threegame losing streak.

“They had to make a great play, a big double, to hold us off,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “We had a chance to win tonight and just got beat.”

Strip away all the layers, all the hype and animosity and star power, and Thursday’s game was a meeting between two sputtering offenses.

The Dodgers had scored four runs over their last 24 innings and tallied eight runs on 13 hits over their last four games. The Padres netted three runs in three losses to the Milwaukee Brewers over the previous three days. They matched that total Thursday while the Dodgers have generated just 10 runs over their last five games without Cody Bellinger (fibula) and Gavin Lux (wrist).

“We have a lot of good offensive players who have track records to back it up, but again, I think we’ll be fine,” Roberts said. “There’s always parts of a season where there’s a lull offensivel­y, that happens. Those pitchers are pretty good too, but yeah, I’m OK with our offense.”

The anticipati­on for the marquee matchup, the fourth of 19 meetings this season, was palpable as the 15,167 people in attendance took their seats just four days after the teams delivered a wild threegame show two hours south last weekend.

Fans booed Tatis during pregame introducti­ons and reached another decibel level when Manny Machado’s name was announced. Chants of “Manny sucks!” pelted Machado, a Dodger for three months in 2018, when he stepped into the batter’s box the first time.

The jeers didn’t relent for his second plate appearance in the fourth inning. Tatis was at second base after a leadoff single for the Padres’ first hit of the night off Walker Buehler after three perfect innings and stealing second base. Machado coolly cracked a single to left field to score Tatis for the game’s first run.

The Padres doubled the margin in the sixth when Trent Grisham turned on a 96-mph fastball high and tight and launched it 419 feet away deep into the right-field pavilion.

Grisham’s blast came on a similar pitch — a four-seam fastball up and in — Buehler used to strike him out in the first inning. The strikeout was one of eight Buehler finished off with his four-seam fastball, a pitch that showed marked improvemen­t Thursday.

Buehler entered Thursday with 12 strikeouts in 18 innings over his first three starts. He had a seasonhigh five strikeouts through five innings and finished with nine. Of his season-high 101 pitches, 50 were four-seam fastballs. The pitch, which reached 97 mph several times, generated 14 of his 15 swingand-misses.

Buehler held the Padres to two runs on four hits across seven innings, but he nearly left with a deficit because the Dodgers couldn’t solve starter Ryan Weathers.

The left-hander, starting opposite Buehler for the second time in less than a week, held the Dodgers scoreless for 52⁄3 innings. He surrendere­d just one hit — a single by Buehler — and a walk.

The Dodgers didn’t put a runner on second base until Austin Adams replaced Weathers with the bases empty and two outs in the sixth inning. The erratic righthande­r promptly walked Turner and hit Smith with a pitch. He escaped the jam by striking out Muncy.

Emilio Pagán couldn’t keep the Dodgers off the board in the seventh inning. Pollock and Neuse greeted him with back-to-back homers for the Dodgers’ first runs in 12 innings. The home run was the first of Neuse’s major-league career and his first hit as a Dodger.

He nearly had his second hit in his next at-bat. He couldn’t have squared the ball any better. But Cronenwort­h got a glove on it and the rest fell in place for San Diego.

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? AJ POLLOCK, left, makes a leaping catch at the warning track in the series opener. Pollock homered in the seventh inning and was intentiona­lly walked to load the bases in the eighth.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times AJ POLLOCK, left, makes a leaping catch at the warning track in the series opener. Pollock homered in the seventh inning and was intentiona­lly walked to load the bases in the eighth.

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