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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Sport
Mike DiGiovanna

Freese's bat leads Dodgers over Giants

SAN FRANCISCO _ On the last day of April, the tall, wiry slugger who was the driving force behind the Los Angeles Dodgers offense for the first month took a back seat and let his teammates take him for a little joy ride.

A quiet night for Cody Bellinger_by his standards_featured plenty of loud contact from the rest of the Dodgers, who banged out three home runs_including Justin Turner's first of the season_and two doubles in a 10-3 victory over the San Francisco Giants before 32,017 in Oracle Park.

All five extra-base hits, including David Freese's game-turning three-run homer in the fourth inning and Enrique Hernandez's two-run shot to cap a six-run rally in the sixth, and the 10 RBIs were by right-handed hitters against left-handed pitchers, who have given the Dodgers problems.

The Dodgers entered Tuesday with a .266 average and .830 on-base-plus-slugging percentage against right-handers and a .237 average and .753 OPS against lefties. They are 15-7 against right-handed starters and 5-5 against lefties.

"We take pride in what our job description is_we want to do our part," Freese said. "Belly is not always going to have the best April in major league history. We have to keep working and picking up the slack."

Walker Buehler, leaning heavily on a four-seam fastball that averaged 95.8 mph, allowed three runs and six hits in 5 1/3 innings, striking out six and walking one to improve to 3-0. Reliever Dylan Floro retired the five batters he faced in the sixth and seventh, and Yimi Garcia retired six straight in the eighth and ninth.

Freese broke out of a two-week funk with his homer, which turned a 1-0 deficit into a 3-1 lead, and a single that helped spark the six-run sixth. Chris Taylor and Austin Barnes added two-run doubles before Hernandez's two-run homer.

Turner then led off the seventh with a homer that barely cleared the center-field wall, only the third homer in 479 career plate appearances before May 1 for the notoriously slow-starting third baseman.

"I was relieved," said Turner, who was hitting .188 (six for 32) against left-handers before Tuesday. "It was nice to finally get that out of the way so you can stop talking about me being the only guy on the team without a home run."

Turner has a solid .287 career batting average in March and April but a .287 slugging percentage, three homers and 43 RBIs, his lowest power output of any month. Can he explain why he gets off to such slow starts slugging-wise?

"Can you explain why?" Turner said to reporters. "Then neither can I. I have no idea. It's just the way it is, I guess."

Freese was hitting .059 (one for 17) against left-handers before Tuesday and was in a 1-for-18 overall slump that dropped his average from .350 in mid-April to .205.

"I'm getting my walks here and there and seeing the ball OK," Freese said. "But when I want to hit it, I'm just a little anxious, a little aggressive, instead of trusting that that effortless feeling is going to create a good swing ... and more sleep."

Freese seemed to fall into that familiar trap in the fourth inning Tuesday night with Turner (walk) and Bellinger (single) aboard with no outs.

Freese worked a 3-and-1 count against Giants left-hander Drew Pomeranz and took a mighty hack at a 90-mph fastball, fouling the pitch off. Freese was not deterred. He fouled off a pair of down-and-in knuckle-curves before getting another 81-mph curve up in the zone, a pitch he can handle.

Freese swatted a high fly ball to right field that hit the top of the wall, just above the Levi's Landing sign, for a three-run homer and a 3-1 lead.

"The game could have gone either way right there," manager Dave Roberts said, "so for him to drive in three flipped it on them."

Freese followed Bellinger's leadoff walk in the sixth by poking a single to right off left-hander Ty Blach to advance Bellinger to third. Max Muncy walked to load the bases and Taylor, who entered with a .167 average, drove a two-run double over the head of right fielder Steven Duggar for a 5-1 lead.

Barnes doubled to right-center for two more runs and a 7-1 lead, and Hernandez followed with his homer to left, his sixth of the season, for a 9-1 lead.

Freese, a starter for most of his first nine big league seasons, didn't blame his recent struggles on the challenges of a reduced role.

He was a platoon player after an Aug. 31 trade from Pittsburgh to the Dodgers last season and hit .385 with a 1.130 on-base-slugging-percentage, two homers and nine RBIs in 19 games. Freese hit .364 (eight for 22) with two homers and six RBIs in 14 post-season games.

"It's definitely a tough role, but I can handle it," Freese said. "I've handled it before. You just want to do your part. That's the most frustrating thing, even when you're winning, which we are. It can hide some of your struggling aspects, but man, you just want to do your part."

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