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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Sport
Andy McCullough

Things get hot, feisty down south as Dodgers romp over Padres

SAN DIEGO _ Dave Roberts curled his lips into a snarl. His eyes flared with rage. He pointed at San Diego manager Andy Green and screamed across the diamond.

"You and me," Roberts said. He spat and swore.

Roberts shouted the challenge toward Green as a placid Friday evening at Petco Park descended into chaos before the second inning of a 10-2 Dodgers victory. A gripe about the Padres stealing signs led to a confrontation between Roberts and Green, which led to both benches clearing and both managers earning an ejection.

After umpire Greg Gibson issued a warning during the bottom of the first, he convened Roberts and Green to explain the ruling. The meeting was brief but contentious. Green leaned toward Roberts and said something as the discussion ended. Green walked back toward his dugout. Roberts did not.

Gibson put his hand on Roberts' chest. Roberts shook free, ran over and bumped Green. As both benches emptied, Gibson grabbed Roberts and yanked him away. The two teams met at the plate, with Alex Wood jawing with former Dodgers hitting coach Mark McGwire, while first base coach George Lompard tried to keep the peace. When the two teams returned to their dugouts, Roberts stood at the top of the steps, hollering at Green. Behind him, his players looked bewildered.

Infuriated by Green, Roberts spent the final eight innings inside his clubhouse. He exited with his team already ahead by four runs, the product of a first-inning grand slam by Austin Barnes. Wood (9-0) prevented the Padres from pulling the game within reach. He logged six innings of one-run baseball. He struck out the side in the second and again in the third, finishing the evening with eight. He became the first Dodger to start a season 9-0 since Rick Rhoden in 1976.

After the blast from Barnes, and the fireworks between Roberts and Green, Justin Turner hit a two-run shot in the fourth. Chris Taylor coaxed out a bases-loaded walk in the fifth. An inning later, Barnes launched a three-run homer to push his RBI total on the evening to seven. The Dodgers ended June in fitting fashion, slugging their opponent into submission.

When Joc Pederson went deep Thursday in Anaheim, the Dodgers set a franchise record with 50 homers in a month. The power surge zoomed the club into first place in the National League West. The team Friday with a 20-7 record in June. Yet, Roberts was not searching for laurels upon which to rest.

"They do take pride in their power," Roberts said before the game. "I think we're trying to get them to take pride in the quality of their at-bats. But I think that everyone loves the homer. And they've played big for us in the month of June."

On the last day of the month, his team met his standard, combining brute force with taxing at-bats in the first inning. Turner opened the door with a two-out single against Clayton Richard. Cody Bellinger worked a walk. So did Logan Forsythe. The bases were loaded for Barnes.

Richard tried to spin a cutter. Barnes hammered it to center field. It was the first grand slam of his career _ and the last moment of normalcy for the early evening.

In the bottom of the inning, outfielder Jose Pirela led off with a double. During the next at-bat, Wood became convinced Pirela was relaying signs toward the plate. After outfielder Manuel Margot checked his swing on a 2-and-2 changeup, Wood whirled around and barked at Pirela.

Gibson visited with Wood near the mound. Then he issued a warning to both benches. Neither manager understood why.

"What happened?" Green said. Across the diamond, Roberts was equally confounded. "What's going on?" Roberts said.

Wood calmed down and escaped the inning. He struck out first baseman Wil Myers for the second out. Yasiel Puig dove to snag the third out. As he sprawled across the grass, Puig planted a kiss across the baseball's seams.

There was little love to follow. Gibson and crew chief Sam Holbrook called the two managers together after the catch. From here, the evening jumped the track.

The night before, on the final day of the Freeway Series, the Dodgers reacted with disdain when Angels infielder Yunel Escobar forced the benches to clear after getting hit by reliever Brandon Morrow. The Dodgers felt Escobar had little reason to be upset. A night later, the anger from their manager looked visceral.

It was unclear what drew Roberts' ire. He spent six years as a member of the Padres organization. San Diego hired Green before the 2016 season, the same winter Roberts landed his gig with the Dodgers. Roberts is the reigning NL manager of the year, and his team appears bound for another October in the playoffs. Green manages a collection of rookies and also-rans.

As the imbroglio played out, Green appeared less upset than Roberts. Gibson held Roberts' jersey and Forsythe stood nearby keeping him at bay. Inside the scrum, Clayton Kershaw extricated Wood, who had been shouting at McGwire. Turner stepped in to argue with McGwire.

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