The Day

Greinke leaves Dodgers as wife awaits birth of first child

- By RALPH D. RUSSO AP Sports Writer

New York— Zack Greinke’s shutout streak is on hold while the Los Angeles Dodgers ace and his wife await the birth of their first child.

Greinke has pitched 43.2 scoreless innings, and was set to start tonight against the New York Mets at Citi Field.

He is approachin­g the big league record of 59 straight scoreless innings by Orel Hershiser in 1988 for the Dodgers.

Dodgers manager Don Mattingly said before Thursday night’s game against the Mets that Greinke had returned to Los Angeles early in the morning to join wife Emily.

Mattingly received a call in his hotel room at 5 a.m. from Greinke, who caught a flight a couple of hours later.

“To get back to pitch tomorrow would be, I’d say unrealisti­c, but we do feel like there’s a good chance he’d pitch this weekend,” Mattingly said.

Mattingly said it was unclear who would take Greinke’s start tonight, but he did rule out the possibilit­y of using Brett Anderson.

The left-hander is dealing with a sore left Achilles’ tendon. Mattingly said Anderson is on track to pitch Sunday, but would not want to push him up.

The Mets look like a good matchup for a pitcher chasing a scoreless innings streak record. New York had scored the second- fewest runs in baseball and had the lowest team batting average entering Thursday night’s game against Clayton Kershaw.

The Dodgers can fill Greinke’s roster spot Friday if necessary and put him on three days’ paternity leave.

The team is off Monday and returns to Los Angeles for a series against Oakland that starts Tuesday.

Greinke leads the majors with a 1.30 ERA. He is 9-2 in 19 starts for the NLWest leaders. The

Mattingly said he has not noticed a drastic difference in how Greinke has pitched this season compared to the right-hander’s last two with the Dodgers.

“Since we’ve had him, he’s been really, really good,” Mattingly said. “This year’s just been a little more exceptiona­l than the years before. The only true difference in mind is that he started right out of spring training,” Mattingly said.

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