Los Angeles Times

Paxton’s first outing just good enough

In his Dodgers debut, left-hander works out of jams, shines in the clutch.

- By Jack Harris

After the hysteria of homeopenin­g weekend, one that culminated with Sunday’s dramatic win against the St. Louis Cardinals, the Dodgers’ performanc­e Monday night felt much more like a routine, weekday work shift.

There was little flash. Not much pizzazz. But, behind a scoreless five-inning start from James Paxton and back-breaking three-run home run from Teoscar Hernández in the sixth, there was plenty of substance in an 8-3 win over the San Francisco Giants at Dodger Stadium.

Paxton epitomized the victory in his team debut, working in and out of trouble to help the Dodgers (5-2) protect an early lead.

Signed to an incentive-laden $7 million deal this offseason, Paxton put nine runners on base in his 97-pitch outing (four hits, five walks). He retired the side in order only once, letting runners reach scoring position in three of the other four innings.

However, the veteran lefthander never cracked, not even with the bases loaded following a pair of two-out walks in the fifth.

Instead, Paxton stranded eight runners while holding the Giants (2-3) hitless in four at-bats with runners in scoring position. He racked up five strikeouts with a heavy dose of four-seam fastballs, which accounted for 70% of his pitches. And in the most pivotal moment of the game, he extinguish­ed the fifth-inning threat by inducing a soft groundout from Wilmer Flores.

The Dodgers gave Paxton some early support, manufactur­ing one run in the first on a Mookie Betts triple and Shohei Ohtani groundout, then two more in the third after Betts walked, Ohtani doubled, Freddie Freeman hit an RBI single and Will Smith added a sacrifice fly.

It wasn’t until the sixth, when the Giants cut the lead to 3-1, that Hernández put the game out of reach, launching a hanging sidearm slider from San Francisco reliever Tyler Rogers deep into the left-field pavilion.

The home run was Hernández’s fourth of the season — all of them have come in the last four games — tying him with Betts for the early major league lead.

Betts, who kept his batting average above .500 with a two-for-three performanc­e Monday, helped the Dodgers pile on in the seventh, sparking a three-run rally with his second double of the night.

Freeman, who had a team-high three hits, and Smith, whose batting average is sitting exactly at .500, added their second RBIs of the night in the seventh, as well — effectivel­y clocking the team out as they wrapped up a fourth win in their last five games.

 ?? Photograph­s by Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? LEFT FIELDER Teoscar Hernández is greetd by Mookie Betts after his three-run home run in the sixth inning Monday. Hernández has four homers this season, tying Betts for the MLB lead.
Photograph­s by Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times LEFT FIELDER Teoscar Hernández is greetd by Mookie Betts after his three-run home run in the sixth inning Monday. Hernández has four homers this season, tying Betts for the MLB lead.
 ?? ?? STARTER James Paxton put nine runners on base in his 97pitch Dodgers debut and retired the side in order only once.
STARTER James Paxton put nine runners on base in his 97pitch Dodgers debut and retired the side in order only once.

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