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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Sport
Andy McCullough

Dodgers' possession of first place is short lived after 4-2 loss to Mets

LOS ANGELES _ The Los Angeles Dodgers spent fewer than 28 hours in first place. A day after crushing Arizona's spirit with a walk-off victory, the Dodgers stumbled through a 4-2 defeat to the New York Mets and let Colorado pull ahead in the National League West. Ownership of the loss belonged to Kenta Maeda, who served up a tiebreaking, three-run homer in the ninth inning to Mets outfielder Brandon Nimmo.

In order to reach the ninth inning tied, the Dodgers had to waste scoring opportunities in the seventh and the eighth inning. The group produced a run in the ninth inning, but Matt Kemp could not replicate his heroics from the previous two days. He grounded into a game-ending double play when he represented the tying run.

The offense was muffled for the first six innings by Mets ace Jacob deGrom. He permitted a solo home run to Justin Turner in the first inning and allowed only two more Dodgers to reach base from there. Alex Wood lasted only five innings, but held the Mets to one run.

Maeda gave the Mets the lead in the ninth. He was pitching in his second inning of the night, as the Dodgers played without Kenley Jansen, who had appeared in the previous three games. Maeda crumbled in the ninth. He gave up a leadoff double, hit a batter and slopped a slider over the plate to Nimmo. Nimmo crushed the pitch and crushed the Dodgers hopes of extending their winning streak to four games.

The Dodgers returned to the diamond after the emotional peak of a series victory over Arizona. The team vaulted into sole possession of first place with three comeback victories against the Diamondbacks. Kemp delivered the decisive blow against Arizona reliever Archie Bradley on Saturday and again on Sunday, the latter a walk-off double that led to a joyous mosh pit down the third-base line.

Standing before them Monday were the fourth-place Mets, the sort of club the Dodgers must punish if they intend to hold off Arizona and Colorado. Manager Dave Roberts suggested the presence of deGrom would keep his club sharp.

"When you've got arguable the best pitcher in the National League going against us tonight, I don't think it's going to be a problem for us to get up," Roberts said.

DeGrom is the consensus favorite to win the National League Cy Young Award. He entered Monday with a 1.68 earned-run average. The Dodgers were one of the few teams to make him look ordinary. In an outing at Citi Field in June, the Dodgers taxed deGrom for three runs in six innings.

"The stuff is electric," Roberts said. "Ultimately, you're going to have to beat him with his fastball."

Justin Turner practiced that blueprint in the first inning. He hammered a 96-mph fastball. The solo homer landed a dozen rows deep in the left-field bleachers.

A quirk of deGrom's season is his record. He carried an 8-8 mark to the mound on Monday, a testament to the woefulness of his teammates. He devised a solution to their ineptitude in the fifth inning: After Wood walked outfielder Jay Bruce and gave up a single to catcher Devin Mesoraco, deGrom cracked a two-out, game-tying single into right field.

The hit brought Roberts to the mound. Wood had given up five hits and walked two batters on his walk to collecting 11 outs. Roberts permitted Wood to procure one more, a flyout by Mets shortstop Amed Rosario, before turning the game over to the bullpen.

The Mets created openings for their hosts. Mets third baseman Todd Frazier muffed a grounder from Yasiel Puig in the fifth; Andrew Toles struck out as a pinch hitter to strand Puig. Rosario fumbled a grounder cracked by Turner at the end of a 12-pitch at-bat. DeGrom whiffed Manny Machado with a slider and induced a groundout from Max Muncy to end the inning.

The Dodgers produced only two hits against deGrom. But he needed 109 pitches to complete six innings. Mets reliever Seth Lugo took over in the seventh. He was greeted with a double by Alex Verdugo, who lined a first-pitch fastball into the right-center gap. Cody Bellinger moved Verdugo to third with a single into left field.

Verdugo advanced no further. The hitters added another chapter to their wretched season with runners in scoring position. Yasmani Grandal struck out. Puig pounded a 2-0 slider from Lugo into the ground for a 6-4-3 double play.

Another opportunity was squandered in the eighth. Turner took a two-out walk off reliever Drew Smith. Machado stung a 98-mph fastball and hit a rocket into right field. The ball jumped the wall for a ground-rule double, keeping Turner at third. He ended the inning there when Enrique Hernandez flied out.

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