Los Angeles Times

Smith blasts walk-off homer

His pinch-hit, three-run shot in ninth inning caps Dodgers’ comeback.

- By Steve Henson

In a game of firsts, what happened last will linger.

The Dodgers overcame a five-run deficit to beat the San Francisco Giants 8-6 on a walk-off, pinch-hit threerun home run by Will Smith on Tuesday night at Dodger Stadium.

The rally was triggered by the control problems of Giants submarine reliever Tyler Rogers, who opened the ninth by walking Chris Taylor and Matt Beaty. Both scored on Smith’s blast into the left-field seats.

The turnabout absolved two young Dodgers pitchers. Making his first major league start was left-hander Darien Nuñez, followed by top prospect Josiah Gray, making his first major league appearance.

Taylor homered twice and doubled in the first six innings to keep the Dodgers in the game while batting leadoff because a sore hip sidelined Mookie Betts for a third game in a row.

The win pulled the Dodgers within one game of the first-place Giants in the National League West and evened the four-games series at a win apiece.

The Dodgers struck first, with Max Muncy continuing to torment the Giants — he’s batting .375 against them with 10 RBIs this season — with a run-scoring single in the first inning.

But then the second rolled around and the Giants abruptly changed the narrative, blasting one home run off Nuñez and three off Gray to take a fiverun lead.

The left-handed-hitting Alex Dickerson launched an 81-mph changeup by Nuñez into the right-field seats for a two-run home run in the second. And an inning later, the first position player Gray faced, the left-handed-hitting LaMonte Wade Jr., turned on a 96-mph fourseam fastball and deposited

it deep in the Giants’ bullpen.

Like good teams often do, the Giants then benefited from a reserve, shortstop Thairo Estrada, in the lineup only because All-Star Brandon Crawford is injured. Estrada, whose two-run double sealed the Giants’ 7-2 win over the Dodgers on Monday, homered to center on Gray’s get-it-over first-pitch fastball to lead off the fifth. Four batters later, the left-handed-hitting Mike Yastrzemsk­i blasted a two-run homer.

The thought behind starting Nuñez was to keep the Giants from stacking their lineup with left-handed hitters, of which they have an abundance, to face the right-handed Gray. But Giants manager Gabe Kapler didn’t budge and his left-handed hitters did most of the damage.

Gray’s final line: He struck out seven in four innings, but the three home runs turned the game.

Taylor did his best to lift the Dodgers, scoring in the first after leading off with a double, then blasting a solo homer in the fifth off starter Alex Wood and a two-run shot in the sixth off John Brebbia to pull the Dodgers within 6-5. Smith did the rest, with the assistance of Rogers.

Other observatio­ns about the rival teams:

Mirror, mirror

Andrew Friedman mentored Kapler. He also mentored Farhan Zaidi.

Proud as the Dodgers’ president of baseball operations might be of his proteges, the specter of Kapler and Zaidi essentiall­y beating the Dodgers at their own game must grate.

Kapler is the Giants’ manager by way of the Philadelph­ia Phillies because in an upset he didn’t land the position he was groomed by Friedman to take — the Dodgers job Dave Roberts has cemented with six winning seasons in a row and a 2020 World Series title.

Zaidi is the Giants’ general manager by way of Chavez Ravine, serving as Friedman’s top lieutenant from 2014 to 2018. And Zaidi from the office suite and Kapler from the dugout have assembled and guided a team that has the best record in baseball, staying ahead of the Dodgers in the standings since April.

The Giants’ formula? A deep lineup of patient hitters that leads the league in homers, takes walks and delivers late in games. Oh, and a reliable starting rotation.

Sound familiar? Perhaps most galling to the Dodgers is Giants closer Jake McGee, who has 19 saves after spending 2020 with the Dodgers as an underused situationa­l lefthander.

Gut punch for Belly

If Cody Bellinger’s slump gets any deeper, he might need a rescue crew and a long rope to extricate himself.

Bellinger is four for 55 with 17 strikeouts since July 1, utterly lost at the plate. For the season, he’s batting .161 with four home runs and 43 strikeouts in 159 plate appearance­s.

Understand­ably, the slump appears to be messing with his mind. On Monday, Bellinger drove a ball to right field, seemingly getting a lot of it, yet it died on the warning track. And in the sixth inning Tuesday, he took a full-count pitch from Wood with his bat resting on his shoulder, taking all the way. It was ball four and the last pitch Wood threw.

Ouch!

Justin Turner was hit in the knee by an 84-mph slider from Wood in the third inning and although he was clearly in pain, he ran the bases. Turner stayed in the game through the fifth before departing because the knee tightened. The next batter was Muncy, and he too was hit by a pitch and departed in the seventh with a right shoulder contusion.

 ?? MARK J. TERRILL Associated Press ?? THE DODGERS’ Josiah Gray throws his first major league pitch during the third inning against the Giants. Gray pitched four innings and gave up four runs. He surrendere­d three home runs.
MARK J. TERRILL Associated Press THE DODGERS’ Josiah Gray throws his first major league pitch during the third inning against the Giants. Gray pitched four innings and gave up four runs. He surrendere­d three home runs.

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