Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Dodgers win despite a shaky Kershaw

-

DODGERS 9, DIAMONDBAC­KS 5

LOS ANGELES — Clayton Kershaw still hasn’t figured out how to dominate in October. This time, he couldn’t even keep the ball in the yard.

Justin Turner and the Los Angeles Dodgers made sure it hardly mattered in a strong postseason opener.

Turner hit a home run and drove in five runs, Kershaw won despite giving up four home runs and the Dodgers roared to a 9-5 victory over the Arizona Diamondbac­ks on Friday night in Game 1 of their National League division series.

Turner hit a three-run home run and Yasiel Puig added an RBI double before Los Angeles made its first out against starter Taijuan Walker, who lasted just one inning in his playoff debut. Turner, the red-bearded slugger with postseason poise, added an RBI single in the fourth and another in the eighth to tie the Dodgers record for most RBI in a postseason game.

With his teammates providing such a generous cushion, Kershaw could afford to allow some home runs in the first victory of his checkered postseason career at Dodger Stadium. He improved to 5-7 in the playoffs.

“Yeah, he gave up four solo homers, but who cares?” asked Turner, batting .397 with 17 RBI in his last 17 postseason games. “When you have a lead like that, it’s about attacking guys, not giving up free bases and pounding the zone. So I thought he was spectacula­r for us tonight.”

Kershaw yielded backto-back home runs into the short left-field porch by light-hitting Ketel Marte and Jeff Mathis on his final two pitches in the seventh, making him the first pitcher in team history and the eighth in baseball history to give up four home runs in a postseason game.

LA’s big lead was down to 7-4 when the three-time Cy Young Award winner left, but the suspense didn’t last: Turner and the 104-victory Dodgers added two more runs in the eighth, capping a 12-hit performanc­e.

“It just wasn’t coming out as good as I would have liked it to that last inning,” said Kershaw, who allowed five hits in 61/3 innings. “So they hit some good pitches. Not really. I just didn’t have much left. I don’t know. Hopefully, when you give up hits, maybe one or two would stay in the ballpark, but tonight it didn’t seem like that was going to happen. Obviously a frustratin­g way to end it, but thankfully we had a big lead.”

Puig and Corey Seager both tripled and drove in two runs for the Dodgers, who finished 11 games ahead of Arizona to earn their fifth consecutiv­e NL West crown.

A.J. Pollock and J.D. Martinez also homered off Kershaw, but Arizona’s euphoria from its wild-card victory over Colorado was erased during a rough first inning. Los Angeles’ first five batters reached base, punctuated by Turner’s shot and Puig’s line-drive double that scored rookie Cody Bellinger.

Arizona ended a five-year playoff absence Wednesday with a rollicking 11-8 victory over the Rockies that was described by Manager Torey Lovullo as “one of the most emotional days I’ve had in my career.”

But that tough game bit the Diamondbac­ks in Los Angeles when Walker needed 48 pitches to get out of the first inning. Playing from behind all night, Arizona couldn’t catch up.

“Well, we have been very resilient,” Lovullo said. “We’ve had some tough losses, and this is playoff baseball. We know that we’re built for moments like this. We’ve been battle-tested all year long. It’s one game. It was a tough day for us.”

Ray was supposed to start this series opener, but was pressed into relief against the Rockies when ace Zack Greinke faltered — and Walker couldn’t come through in his place.

“I just felt like they had a really good game plan against me,” Walker said. “They were sitting on the fastball most of the time.”

Zack Godley pitched five innings of relief, but Turner, Puig and Seager added RBI in the fourth for a 7-1 lead.

Kershaw struck out seven, but the ace left-hander’s frequent inability to match his regular-season brilliance in October remains a constant presence. He struggled with the long ball again after serving up a career-high 23 homers during the regular season, but still earned his fifth career postseason victory — one shy of the franchise record — in 15 starts.

Pollock made his postseason debut with two extra-base hits in the wild-card game, and he added a home run in the third inning for Arizona’s first hit off Kershaw.

But Seager hit an RBI triple in the eighth, and Turner drove him home.

“We gave them a run for their money there towards the middle, end of the game,” Martinez said. “They had to execute, and they had to put up a couple more runs. So you tip your hat to them, [but]’) I feel a lot more confident the way we battled back in that game.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States