Los Angeles Times

Tatis hits two home runs off Kershaw to lead Padres over Dodgers.

On 22nd anniversar­y of his dad’s two grand slams, Fernando Jr. hits two home runs.

- By Bill Shaikin

Fernando Tatis was a pretty good ballplayer. He bounced among five major league teams. He never made an All-Star team. He was traded for the likes of Todd Stottlemyr­e and Dustin Hermanson.

But he earned the distinctio­n of a career in one night, in a game not fondly remembered by Dodgers fans. On April 23, 1999, Tatis hit two grand slams in one inning at Dodger Stadium, both off Chan Ho Park.

Three months earlier, Tatis had welcomed a son into the family. The son was named Fernando Jr. He grew up to be a spectacula­rly good ballplayer, so good his signature is the one on the longest contract in baseball history.

And, 22 years to the day that the father stamped a signature moment upon Dodger Stadium, the son left his own mark here as well. Tatis Jr. did not hit two grand slams in one inning, but he did hit two home runs off Clayton Kershaw.

Never before in major league history had a father and son hit multiple home runs in the same ballpark on the same calendar date, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

“I definitely knew this was the day,” Tatis said. “I told myself, just hit two home runs today. That would be so crazy.

“The baseball gods were in my favor.”

That was all the support Yu Darvish needed, as the San Diego Padres won the fifth of what Dodgers third baseman Justin Turner had called “19 World Series games” between the two National League heavyweigh­ts. With a 6-1 victory on Friday, the Padres lead the season series between the teams 3-2.

“It’s the biggest rivalry in baseball,” Tatis said. “Everybody can feel it. Everybody can see it.”

A Dodgers team hyped in this newspaper as “the best team in baseball history” started the season with 13 victories in 15 games. Since then, the Dodgers have lost four of five games.

They have gone an entire week without scoring more than three runs in a game. They have 23 hits in their last six games — according to ESPN, their lowest total in a six-game span since 1909, when the team was called the Brooklyn Superbas and finished 551⁄2 games out of first.

“No, I don’t think we’re pressing,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “I don’t think we’re there yet. I just think we’ve got to find a way to create baserunner­s and keep putting ourselves in position to drive runs in. If we do that, we’ll start scoring more.”

On Saturday, the Dodgers could fall into a first-place tie in the NL West. The San Francisco Giants are one game behind the Dodgers; the Padres trail the Dodgers by three.

The evening belonged to the villains. Tatis is one, and he was booed at a moderate level. Darvish, booed at a mild level, held the Dodgers to one run and four hits over seven innings, striking out nine. Mookie Betts doubled to lead off the first inning, and Darvish did not give up an extra-base hit the rest of the way. In each of his last three starts — two against the Dodgers — Darvish has pitched seven innings and given up one run. His earned-run average this season is 2.27.

And, just when even the Padres thought the Dodgers had Darvish on the ropes, the biggest villain of all saved him.

Manny Machado got the loudest and most sustained boos, and chants not intended to boost his self-esteem. He got the ball out of the infield once in four at-bats, a single that flared into left field. He fouled out, struck out and grounded into a double play.

No matter. In the seventh inning, the Dodgers put the tying runs on base, with two out and Betts coming up. Padres manager Jayce Tingler appeared to be headed toward the mound.

Victor Caratini, Darvish’s personal catcher, waved to Tingler to stay put. Betts lined a screaming rocket that appeared bound for left field, but Machado leaped high to his left and intercepte­d it. Darvish reacted with glee, Betts with frustratio­n.

The evening was over for Darvish and, soon enough, for the Dodgers. Yet the evening did not end before further trouble found the Dodgers: reliever Corey Knebel left the game because of injury after pitching to one batter in the ninth inning. The Padres added three runs in the inning off Dennis Santana.

Knebel, acquired from the Milwaukee Brewers last winter, sat out the 2019 season after Tommy John surgery and has pitched only 191⁄3 innings since then. Roberts said Knebel had experience­d discomfort in his upper triceps and would undergo tests Saturday.

Kershaw gave up three runs over seven innings — good, but not good enough on this night.

In his first four starts this season, he had not given up a home run. On this night, he gave up three. “Made some mistakes and they went over the fence,” Kershaw said. “That was kind of the difference in the game.”

McKinstry to DL

The Dodgers put utilityman-turned-breakout-star Zach McKinstry on the injured list with what they called a right oblique strain. Such strains often take weeks to heal.

McKinstry is batting .296 with three home runs in 17 games. He ranks second on the team with 14 runs batted in. To replace McKinstry on the roster, the Dodgers called up outfielder DJ Peters.

Peters, 25, the Dodgers’ fourth-round draft pick in 2016, played at Glendora High.

 ?? THE PADRES’ Michael Owens Getty Images ?? Fernando Tatis Jr. celebrates after his solo home run in the third inning against the Dodgers. Tatis added another home run in the fifth inning.
THE PADRES’ Michael Owens Getty Images Fernando Tatis Jr. celebrates after his solo home run in the third inning against the Dodgers. Tatis added another home run in the fifth inning.
 ?? Mark J. Terrill Associated Press ?? THE DODGERS’ Mookie Betts, left, winces after being hit by a pitch in the third inning on Friday.
Mark J. Terrill Associated Press THE DODGERS’ Mookie Betts, left, winces after being hit by a pitch in the third inning on Friday.

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