The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Dodgers beat Giants in first '22 meeting

- By Bill Plunkett bplunkett@scng.com @billplunke­ttocr on Twitter

LOS ANGELES » Buckle up. The ride is starting again.

Ancient hostilitie­s, heightened by last summer’s highspeed division chase and last fall’s playoff skirmish, resumed Tuesday night at Dodger Stadium as the Dodgers and the reigning NL West division champion San Francisco Giants met for the first time in 2022.

The two teams entered this week’s mini-clash (two games) separated by just a half-game in the standings — shades of the ‘Anythingyo­u-can-do-we-can-do-too’ lockstep of last August and September. They also entered as the two highestsco­ring teams in baseball (by runs per game).

There was little evidence of that Tuesday.

Dodgers starter Julio Urias held the Giants scoreless for six innings while Giants starter Carlos Rodon allowed just three hits over his six. One of those hits, though, was a two-out, two-run single by Chris Taylor in the second inning and the Dodgers held on for a 3-1 victory.

Urias was unruffled by a Giants lineup depleted by assorted injuries (and COVID). He breezed through his six scoreless innings on just 65 pitches, allowing four hits and striking out four. Only 13 of Urias’ 65 pitches were called balls and the Giants had just one at-bat with a runner in scoring position against him.

Rodon was complicit in the Dodgers’ first scoring rally. Max Muncy worked him for a walk with one out in the second. After Justin Turner struck out (part of an 0-for-14 slide the veteran is mired in), Rodon also walked Cody Bellinger. A wild pitch moved the runners into scoring position and Taylor drove them both in when he shot a 1-and-2 fastball into right-center field for a line-drive single.

At least three Dodger fly balls each left the bat at 95 mph or higher only to die on the warning track in the middle innings (one each by Bellinger, Muncy and Will Smith) — they must have been using the balls from the back of the humidor.

One-out doubles by Taylor (in the fifth) and Trea Turner (in the sixth) were the Dodgers’ only other hits off Rodon after Taylor’s two-run single. Both were stranded, leaving the two-run lead when Dodgers manager Dave Roberts elected to pull Urias despite his low pitch count rather than allow him to go through the Giants’ lineup a third time.

Brusdar Graterol replaced Urias and the Giants promptly cut the lead in half.

Graterol broke Wilmer Flores’ bat with a pitch but the ground ball that resulted dribbled slow enough to Justin Turner at third base that Flores was able to beat it out for a single and then go to second when Turner’s throw up the line wasn’t handled by Freddie Freeman. Flores moved to third on a ground out then scored on a sacrifice fly.

 ?? DAVID CRANE – STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Chris Taylor of the Dodgers breaks a scoreless tie with a tworun single in the second inning Tuesday against the Giants.
DAVID CRANE – STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Chris Taylor of the Dodgers breaks a scoreless tie with a tworun single in the second inning Tuesday against the Giants.

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