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Late home runs, stranding walks doom Dodgers in loss to Blue Jays

Late home runs, stranding walks doom Dodgers in loss to Blue Jays

Yahooa day ago
LOS ANGELES — The Blue Jays homered to take leads off Dodgers relievers Blake Treinen and Alex Vesia in the eighth and ninth innings, giving Toronto a 5-4 win in a back-and-forth affair in which the Dodgers couldn't fully capitalize on numerous chances.
Staked to a lead to open the eighth inning, Treinen was brought in to face the heart of Toronto's order. After striking out Bo Bichette, Treinen allowed a home run to center field to Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and two pitches later Addison Barger slammed a solo shot into the right field pavilion.
These were the first two home runs allowed by Treinen in five games since returning from the injured list, but he wasn't sharp in those earlier outings. In all, 12 of 23 batters faced by Treinen have reached base, with eight hits and four walks in his last 3⅔ innings.
The Dodgers tied things in the bottom of the eighth, but Ernie Clement greeted Vesia in the ninth with a home run to left. Vesia has tied for most appearances on the Dodgers and has been the team's best reliever with his 2.61 ERA and 34.9-percent strikeout rate, but his eight home runs allowed represent a new career high, one more than he gave up in each of his previous two years.
The outcome spoiled a strong start by Tyler Glasnow, who survived early trouble. He allowed a walk and RBI double by Vladimir Guerrero in the first inning, and was in hot water again in the second inning, loading the bases with one out. He escaped that jam with a double play and retired 10 of 11 batters to get through the fifth.
Two singles with a productive out in between produced Toronto's second run, but Glasnow walked off the mound with a lead and eight strikeouts to his ledger, working around his four walks. Since returning from the injured list, Glasnow has a 2.27 ERA in six starts, with a 29.9-percent strikeout rate in his 35⅔ innings.
Shohei Ohtani and Freddie Freeman each homered in the first inning off longtime Dodgers nemesis Eric Lauer.
With a runner in scoring position in the second inning and first base open, the Blue Jays intentionally walked Ohtani this time around. Mookie Betts singled to load the bases and Freeman walked as well to bring home another run against Toronto left-hander Eric Lauer.
Those three runs were all Lauer allowed, but at 71 pitches and 10 baserunners allowed, the left-hander's day was done after just three innings. That's the shortest outing by Lauer in 13 career starts against the Dodgers, against whom he has a 2.90 ERA.
Still, the Dodgers might have left some runs on the table. Betts was caught stealing directly before Freeman's home run in the first inning, and Ohtani was thrown out trying to steal third base to end the sixth while Freeman was at the plate.
Presented with another runner in scoring position and first base open in the eighth inning, Toronto intentionally walked Ohtani again. This time Betts struck out against Yariel Rodríguez for the second out of the frame.
Jeff Hoffman entered and walked both Will Smith and Freeman to force home the tying run. Pinch-hitter Michael Conforto worked a 3-0 count but popped out in foul territory to the catcher on a 3-1 count to keep the game tied.
Hoffman also began the ninth inning and simply could not find the strike zone. He walked the bases loaded, with his only out in the inning a sacrifice bunt by Alex Freeland. Hoffman threw 23 balls in his 33 pitches and walked five of his seven batters faced. But he earned the win because Mason Fluharty struck out Ohtani and got Betts to ground out to strand the bases loaded in the ninth.
The Dodgers left 16 runners in base. They were 1-for-10 with runners in scoring position, but the hit was a single that didn't drive home a run.
Freeman is the first Los Angeles Dodger with two bases-loaded walks in the same game.
Thirteen walks by Dodgers hitters are their most in a game since May 21, 1999, a 12-inning contest against the Braves. The last time they walked 13 times in a nine-inning game was May 24, 1981 at the Reds.
Hoffman is the first MLB pitcher since at least 1901 to walk five batters, pitch no longer than an inning, and be credited with a win.
Anthony Banda got the final out of the sixth inning to strand the tying run after Glasnow left. It's just the second time Banda has pitched on his birthday in the majors. His first birthday game in MLB was his third game as a rookie with Arizona in 2017, in which he allowed three runs in four innings. 'I think Torey [Lovullo] apologized for taking me out early,' Banda recalled earlier on Sunday.
Home runs: Shohei Ohtani (41), Freddie Freeman (14); Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (19), Addison Barger (18), Ernie Clement (8)
WP — Jeff Hoffman (7-4): ⅔ IP, 5 walks
LP — Alex Vesia (2-2): 1 IP, 2 hits, 1 run, 2 strikeouts
Sv — Mason Fluharty (1): ⅔ IP, 1 strikeout
The Dodgers hit the road, sort of, with a bus trip to Anaheim against the Angels. Yoshinobu Yamamoto gets the ball in the series opener on Monday (6:38 p.m.; SportsNet LA, FanDuel Sports Network West, KCOP 13), with right-hander José Soriano on the mound for the home team.
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