The Dodgers had the game in hand, then let it slip away in a hurry.
Los Angeles took a 3-1 lead into the eighth inning Tuesday night, but a messy multi-error frame opened the door for the Colorado Rockies and turned a winnable game into a 4-3 loss. It was the Dodgers’ second straight night giving away a late lead against Colorado, only this time there was no comeback waiting to save them.
Justin Wrobleski did everything he could to keep the Dodgers on track. The left-hander worked seven innings, allowed one run, struck out nine and walked one while giving up six hits.
Colorado’s only damage against him came in the fifth, when a pair of one-out singles led to a run. Wrobleski has now gone seven innings in three straight starts, allowing six runs over those 21 innings, and he’s reached that mark in seven of his 15 starts this season.
His numbers keep looking sharper, too: a 2.69 ERA, a 1.02 WHIP and 73 strikeouts in 100.1 innings.
Shohei Ohtani gave the Dodgers the kind of start they wanted, launching a leadoff homer in the first inning for the 300th home run of his career. That made him the fifth-fastest player in MLB history to reach 300, getting there in 1,102 games, not counting any appearances he made only as a pitcher. He also became the first Japanese player to reach the milestone and the first player in MLB history with 300 home runs and 100 stolen bases in his first nine seasons.
Ohtani added another line to the record book as well, passing Babe Ruth on the all-time pitcher strikeouts list by a player who also hit 300 home runs. Ohtani now has 765 strikeouts and 300 homers, while Ruth finished with 501 strikeouts and 714 home runs. No other player with at least 300 home runs has struck out more than 11 hitters.
The Dodgers’ other runs came on a bases-loaded walk by Andy Pages and a single from Alex Freeland, who finished with three hits.
Then came the eighth, and everything unraveled.
Will Klein entered with a 3-1 lead, walked the first batter he faced, then gave up a one-out single. He got a ground ball that should have ended the inning with a double play, but Miguel Rojas booted it and a run scored.
Jack Dreyer came in next, and Jake McCarthy dropped down a sacrifice bunt that brought home the tying run while producing the out at first. On the next play, Alex Freeland, covering first, threw wildly to Rojas at third, and the ball rolled into the dugout as the go-ahead run crossed the plate.
It was the Dodgers’ first multi-error inning of the year, and it cost them what should have been their 61st win.
Los Angeles still had a chance in the ninth, putting the tying and winning runs on base with no outs and the top of the order due up. But the rally never turned into runs, and the Dodgers walked away with another late collapse instead of a series-clinching win.
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