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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Sport
Mike DiGiovanna

Dodgers go long, then blank A's, 4-0

LOS ANGELES_The clean two-out single to center field that broke up Hyun-Jin Ryu's no-hitter with two outs in the fifth inning Tuesday night took the pressure off Dodgers manager Dave Roberts.

There would be no agonizing over whether to extend a starter who missed virtually all of 2015 and 2016 because of shoulder and elbow injuries well beyond a reasonable pitch count, no flashbacks to the times Roberts removed Rich Hill from a perfect game and Ross Stripling from a no-hitter.

Oakland right fielder Steven Piscotty eliminated that stress with his hard grounder up the middle, ending Ryu's bid for history. Ryu could live with that. It was the only hit the Korean left-hander allowed in six sparkling innings of a 4-0 victory over the Athletics before an announced crowd of 41,243 in Dodger Stadium.

"When I saw the ovation, then I started thinking about that ... we've had to deal with that situation numerous times already," Roberts said. "It's something I haven't been used to, but it's a credit to our starting pitchers. I was just happy to see him throw the baseball the way he did tonight."

Making his second start of the season and first since he allowed three runs, five hits and walked five in 3 2/3 innings against Arizona on April 2, Ryu effectively mixed a fastball that touched 91 mph with a sharp cut-fastball, well-located changeup and a slow, looping curve.

He struck out eight_four looking_and walked one. Of his 90 pitches, 60 were strikes. He retired 13 of the first 14 batters, his only blemish before Piscotty's hit a one-out walk to Matt Chapman in the first.

"He was working in and out, front to back_he was really pitching with a lot of conviction, especially in to the right-handers," Roberts said. "That's something that, hopefully for him and our pitching staff, will build that momentum."

With a four-run lead, Roberts pulled Ryu in favor of left-hander Tony Cingrani, who threw a scoreless seventh. Stripling wobbled in the eighth, allowing a walk and a two-out ground-rule double to Marcus Semien before getting Matt Chapman to fly to right with runners on second and third to end the inning.

Stripling then allowed one-out singles to Khris Davis and Matt Olson in the ninth, a threat that brought Roberts and, soon thereafter, closer Kenley Jansen, who is struggling to find his usual rhythm and velocity, to the mound.

The big right-hander, his cut-fastball ranging from 89-92 mph but with good movement, struck out Jonathan Lucroy and got Piscotty to ground out to shortstop to notch his second save in as many games.

"Nobody's worried about Kenley," Dodgers center fielder Chris Taylor said. "His stuff is too good. He's the best closer in the game."

The Dodgers, who had four homers in their first nine games, hit three of them Tuesday night, by Taylor, Corey Seager and Matt Kemp, who highlighted an 11-hit attack that was an offensive outburst by their standards.

The Dodgers entered Tuesday ranked last in the National League in average (.213) and on-base-plus-slugging percentage (.578) and 14th in runs (29) and homers. The top three batters in the order, Taylor, Seager and Yasiel Puig, combined to hit .205 (23 for 112) with no homers and five RBIs.

Two batters in against A's starter Sean Manaea, a left-hander who had a 1.17 ERA with 11 strikeouts and one walk in 15 2/3 innings of his first two games, those numbers began to trend upward.

Taylor, leading off the first, drove a center-cut, 90-mph fastball 393 feet into the left-field pavilion for a home run for a 1-0 lead.

Seager was presented with his 2017 Silver Slugger Award before the game. Then he went out and acted like one, crushing a 90-mph inside fastball deep into the right-field pavilion for a 2-0 lead. According to Statcast, the ball left Seager's bat at 109 mph and traveled 440 feet.

Kemp, leading off the sixth, somehow stayed inside on a 91-mph, low-and-inside fastball from right-hander Liam Hendriks and drove it over the right-center field wall for his first homer as a Dodger since 2014. Cody Bellinger singled to right and scored on Logan Forsythe's double to left for a 4-0 lead.

"Taylor and Seager going back to back was big for us," Roberts said. "Guys put together better at-bats. It's starting to come."

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