Dodgers can’t stop Rockies from rallying to walk-off win

Denver – It is a quirk of the calendar that has the dodgers playing four games with the Rockies of the last place between two crucial series with the Padres of the Archival.
The Colorado has the worst baseball record and will finish the last in the division for a fourth consecutive year. The Padres are the last team between the Dodgers and their title of 12th division in 13 seasons. The Dodgers swept them away last weekend at home and will play them again next weekend in San Diego.
However, the manager of the Dodgers, Dave Roberts, insisted that there would be no overlooking the modest rocks and not forward for the series of the Padres.
“Where we are, from noon to the end of August, all these matches count,” he said before Monday’s match. “So I don’t expect a disappointment.”
“We have work to do here,” he continued. “We control things, but we have to focus on the moment.”
This objective was a bit vague at the opening of the series, the Dodgers blow twice in a 4-3 defeat at Coors Field. The winning round marked with a withdrawal in the ninth round when the warming of Bernabel distinguished the Libeter Justin Wrobleski (4-5) to lead to Ezequiel Tovar.
Tovar was second after a double gift abandoned between the second goal Alex Freeland and the right field player Teoscar Hernández with a withdrawal from the ninth. Three throws later, Bernabel rebounded a simple in the middle and Tovar rebounded at home with the winning sleeve.
The victory was the first of the rocky in seven games against the Dodgers this season and first in 11 games from last year, which was disappointing for the hundreds of fans who released in crisp White Dodgers jerseys to see Shohei Ohtani Play. And Ohtani, who entered the series, striking .391 with six circuits, 17 products produced and 17 points in 17 games at Coors Field, did not disappoint, distinguishing the second throw from the left match Kyle Freeland.
He struck in the second round of his team on another simple in the second round, turning Freeland with a bad shot through the box. The first round of the Dodgers had marked two throws earlier on a Dalton sacrifice fly that Mickey Moniak caught with a jump in the center of the right center.
The rocks made Yoshinobu Yamamoto back down the third. After retiring the first six strikers, Yamamoto, launching a day after his 27th anniversary, walked Kyle Karros, the third goal player, the son of the former Dodger Star Eric Karros. Brenton Doyle followed with a single and continued second on a third to third which was too late to get Karros. Ryan Ritter then led into the two runners with a soft lining on the right.
Freeland lasted only four rounds, leaving with what seemed to be a bulb on his left hand after abandoning six strokes and a walk but failing four runners. Two rounds later, the dodgers went ahead against the Lift Jaden Hill, with Freddie Freeman opening the sixth with a walk, flying second and marking on a double with two withdrawals from Pinch-Hitter Alex Freeland.
Yamamoto, who equaled a summit of the season with seven lanches launched, failed to maintain his head when Tovar equalized the scoring with a solo circuit in his last work round.
Roberts then gave the game to his enclosure, which rarely proved a wise decision. After Edgardo Henriquez worked an eighth perfect, the rocks discouraged him after only three strikers.


