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The Orange County Register
The Orange County Register
Sport
Bill Plunkett

Dodgers’ Julio Urias leads one-hit shutout of Mets

NEW YORK — The Dodgers sure could use a guy like that.

Dodgers left-hander Julio Urias’ first half of the season did not fit with his profile of an emerging ace – or do much to enhance the payday he is headed toward in free agency. His first game back after a stint on the injured list with a hamstring injury wasn’t much to look at either.

But Urias was dominant Friday night, holding the New York Mets — a possible future employer? — to one hit over six scoreless innings as the Dodgers returned from the All-Star break with a 6-0 victory.

With the Arizona Diamondbacks losing in Toronto, the Dodgers moved into sole possession of first place in the National League West.

Urias has now put together back-to-back starts that live up to the standard he set the past two seasons. He has allowed just two runs on four hits while striking out 15 in 12 innings over his past two starts.

Friday was Urias’ first scoreless outing since April 4 and only the second in 13 starts this season. He had seven last season.

With the Dodgers’ starting rotation in tatters and propped up by three rookies, the Dodgers need Urias to channel that performance every five days until further notice.

Urias managed to turn in that scoreless performance despite giving up a leadoff home run to Brandon Nimmo in the first inning. Nimmo’s drive hit the top of the wall in right-center field and was initially ruled a home run.

The call was overturned on replay, leaving Nimmo with a double — and giving Urias a mulligan.

He took advantage of it, retiring 11 of the next 12 batters and not giving up another hit in his six innings. The Mets had three more baserunners — a walk, a hit batter and a catcher’s interference call — against Urias, but none advanced past first base.

The Dodgers’ offense didn’t have trouble getting to first base against Mets starter Justin Verlander — despite not getting a hit until the fifth inning.

Verlander (who has thrown three no-hitters in his career) walked six, including three in a row with one out in the fifth inning, before he gave up the Dodgers’ first hit of the game, a sinking liner to left by Mookie Betts that drove in their first run. Freddie Freeman followed with a two-run double.

Miguel Rojas added an insurance run in the sixth with a two-out RBI single off lefty reliever David Peterson. J.D. Martinez hit a solo home run in the eighth and James Outman led off the ninth with a double, working his way around to score.

Outman was on base four times in the game — two walks, a single and a double — and scored twice.

Yency Almonte, Caleb Ferguson and Ryan Brasier combined to retire the final nine Mets in order, closing out the one-hitter.

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