Saturday, October 17, 2020

Dodgers strike early, hold on to force Game 7 in NLCS

ARLINGTON, Texas — Apparently, it’s not over until they say it is.

Others said it was after the Dodgers lost the first two games of this National League Championship Series or when they were pushed to the brink of elimination after Game 4. But the Dodgers have forced this NLCS to the limit.

Corey Seager homered (again). Walker Buehler behaved like a big-game pitcher (again). Mookie Betts made the play of the day (yes, again) and the Dodgers white-knuckled their way through the final three innings to beat the Atlanta Braves, 3-1, in Game 6 on Saturday.

“We did what we had to do to force a Game 7,” Dodgers third baseman Justin Turner said.

“But we’re not done. We still have a lot to accomplish. We’ve got a big one tomorrow. We’ve got to get prepared, come in and fight for every pitch and find a way to win a ballgame.”

Put aside your fantasy football team for a day. By winning back-to-back games after falling behind 3-1 in the best-of-seven series the Dodgers have flipped the odds to their favor for Game 7 (beginning at 5:15 p.m. PT).

When an LCS (American or National League) featuring a 3-1 lead is pushed to a Game 7, the team that faced a 3-1 deficit has won Game 7 in seven of nine instances (before Saturday’s ALCS Game 7).

The Dodgers’ hitters – particularly their lefties – were tamed by Max Fried’s ability to throw his breaking pitches for strikes in Game 1. Fifty of his 96 pitches in six innings that night were either curveballs or sliders. Thirty-two of them were strikes. The Dodgers swung at 18 of them, missed eight. Seven of those swings and misses were by Seager, Max Muncy or Cody Bellinger.

This time around, Fried’s first five breaking balls were fouled off, hammered for a 413-foot home run by Seager (his third in four at-bats), taken twice by Muncy as he worked a walk (for the seventh consecutive postseason game) and ripped into right field for an RBI single by Bellinger.

“He kept us off-balance with that all night the last time we faced him. So we figured we’d see it early and we’d try to attack it,” Seager said.

“We weren’t really sure Game 1. You hadn’t faced the guy. You don’t really have that much knowledge. You kind of watch him throwing against other teams but we’re kind of different. Guys normally pitch us differently. It’s a battle that first game to kind of see it out, feel it out.”

Seager’s homer was his fifth in this NLCS (tying the record for any postseason history while setting the NLCS and franchise records) and sixth of the postseason (a Dodgers record). His 11 RBIs in the NLCS and 15 in the postseason are NLCS and franchise records, respectively.

Turner followed Seager’s latest longball with one of his own (on a sinker) and the Dodgers were off to a 3-0 head start following the first inning.

Fried was elusive the rest of the day. The Dodgers had eight hits and drew four walks in his 6-2/3 innings, but only one Dodgers runner advanced past first base after Bellinger’s RBI single. Ground balls by Seager and Turner in the fourth couldn’t make anything of that.

Meanwhile, Buehler and Betts were extending themselves to keep the Braves off the scoreboard.

As a rookie in 2018, the Dodgers gave Buehler the ball in Game 3 of their Division Series against the Braves, looking to close the series out in Atlanta.

In the bottom of the second, though, the Braves loaded the bases against Buehler who fell behind 3-and-1 to Ronald Acuña Jr.

Acuña crushed a grand slam and the Dodgers went on to lose that game, 6-5, closing the series out at home instead.

Nine postseason starts farther into his evolution as a big-game pitcher, Buehler looks back at that an important part of his education.

“I’ve failed in those moments. I can handle that failure,” he said Saturday. “I’ve been through it and I’ve been good after it. That failure doesn’t really scare me anymore. Obviously, you don’t want to fail. But there’s a different feeling when you’re not scared of that failure.

“I don’t think you think about it. But I think it obviously plays a role. … Those failures teach you things.”

He was faced with a similar situation Saturday at Globe Life Field.

The Dodgers had just given him a lead but the Braves led off the top of the second with three consecutive singles, loading the bases with no outs. A wizened Buehler responded with 10 consecutive pitches thrown at 98 mph or higher. He struck out Austin Riley on three pitches (98, 98 and 99), made veteran Nick Markakis look helpless on a called third strike (99.7 mph) then got Cristian Pache to bounce an 0-and-2 slider to Seager.

“(Catcher Austin) Barnes steered me through it and that’s all there really is to it,” Buehler said. “The way he was able to guide me through that inning was as good as I’ve ever seen.

“You have all these gameplans and things that you want to do or want to try and do. At the end of the day, I think Barnes has the best view of the baseball and what it’s doing out of my hand of anyone on the baseball field. Him and Will (Smith), I’m going to trust what they see and what they want to do more than my guess.”

That might have been the highlight of the day for the Dodgers. But Betts stole the show.

With two outs and a runner on first in the fifth, Marcell Ozuna drove a fly ball 378 feet to right field. Betts met it at the wall, leaping up and catching it at the height of his jump.

He landed as a 5-foot-9 bundle of adrenaline. The veins on his neck stood out as he screamed repeatedly “Let’s goooo!” – with an adjective occasionally tossed in – high-stepping back to the dugout.

“That’s an unbelievable play by an unbelievable player at a big moment,” Seager said. “That’s what you need at this time of year.”

Buehler got through six innings, the third time in his postseason career he has thrown at least six scoreless innings in a start (matching Clayton Kershaw for the most in Dodgers history), and the counting of outs began.

Blake Treinen gave up a run in the seventh while getting his three. Pedro Baez retired the side in the eighth and Kenley Jansen reclaimed the ninth inning for the second consecutive game, retiring the side for his 18th postseason save.

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