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  • Dodgers Get Trip Off to a Bad Start

    Dodgers Get Trip Off to a Bad Start

    Maddux has a poor outing as L.A. begins a 10-game stretch with a lackluster
    6-3 loss to the Brewers, who had dropped 10 in a row.

    Los Angeles Times
    September 5, 2006

    By Steve Henson, Times Staff Writer ([email protected])

    MILWAUKEE - Sleepless nights often are followed by disturbing days. So
    the Dodgers might have expected their 6-3 loss to the Milwaukee
    Brewers on Monday the moment they checked into their hotel shortly
    after midnight.

    The Armenian Youth Federation was partying hard in the ballroom, and
    the din didn't let up until 5 a.m. They were friendly enough kids,
    telling Nomar Garciaparra they missed him in Boston and, oh yeah,
    they missed him in Chicago too.

    But the discordant music, the whoops and hollers, the tinkling glasses,
    this was no way to begin a 10-game, three-city trip during a tight
    pennant race.

    In case the Dodgers wondered, the throbbing beat they heard through
    their walls came from an oud (a string instrument used by ancient
    Egyptians) and a dumbeg (an hourglass-shaped drum with a lambskin
    head).

    The beat went on at Miller Park. The Brewers ended a 10-game losing
    streak by pounding Greg Maddux like a dumbeg, scoring three runs in
    the fifth inning and two in the sixth.

    It marked the third time in his last four starts Maddux (12-12)
    has been hit hard.

    "They had good at-bats," he said. "I missed my locations a few times,
    but they hit me too."

    One blow was literal. With a runner on second and one out in the
    fifth inning with the score tied, 1-1, Maddux stopped Brady Clark's
    comebacker with his leg. The ball rolled only a couple feet in front
    of him, but he couldn't locate it, looking to the back of the mound and
    taking a step toward the rosin bag as if he'd mistook it for the ball.

    "I just couldn't find it," he said. "It's hard to see sometimes."

    The result was a single that opened the floodgates. Seven of the
    next 10 batters had hits, all against Maddux except the finale, a
    two-run double by Tony Graffanino in the sixth on a pitch by reliever
    Giovanni Carrara.

    It was quite an outburst from a team that batted .213 and averaged
    fewer than three runs during its 10-game skid.

    "Greg got a couple of pitches up and over the middle of the plate,"
    Manager Grady Little said. "He's certainly had better days with
    his command."

    Dodgers starters are following poor days with poorer ones. Only
    Derek Lowe is pitching consistently well, Chad Billingsley's next
    start was pushed back again because of his strained side, Brad Penny
    isn't getting deep into games and Maddux more closely resembled the
    struggling pitcher who posted a 4.69 earned-run average in 22 starts
    with the Cubs than the savior who had been 3-0 with a 2.37 ERA in
    six starts with the Dodgers.

    "If we have to continue going into the bullpen in the sixth inning,
    it will be difficult," Little said. "Our bullpen is deep, but if we
    need those guys early on a regular basis, it will catch up with us
    in a hurry."

    Carrara, back with the team after being designated for assignment
    two weeks ago, replaced Maddux with the bases loaded and the score
    4-3. He got two strikes on Graffanino but couldn't get him out.

    The Dodgers' offense, feisty to that point, withered. Right-hander Dave
    Bush (10-10) lasted 7 1/3 innings, and two relievers had no trouble.

    The best opportunity came in the sixth. Kenny Lofton led off with
    a single, stole his 25th base and scored on a single by J.D. Drew,
    who also doubled twice. Jeff Kent hit a ground-rule double and Andre
    Ethier walked, loading the bases with one out.

    Wilson Betemit struck out, however, and although Russell Martin
    singled to bring in Drew, Kent was thrown out at the plate by left
    fielder Corey Hart, leaving the Dodgers behind, 4-3.

    At least they were able to catch up on their sleep Monday night. The
    Armenian Youth Federation checked out after an invigorating breakfast
    of basturma (cured Armenian beef), eggs and foule (fava beans).

    It wasn't the first time the Dodgers have shared a hotel with a
    boisterous group. About 20 years ago a gospel singers convention
    kept them awake in Atlanta, and more than 40 years ago in Milwaukee,
    revelers were so loud that several players ducked into a theater
    during the day to catch a few winks before the game.

    This is no time for fatigue. The Dodgers' lead over the San Diego
    Padres in the National League West shrank to two games, thanks to
    the Padres' 7-5 victory over Colorado.

    "If we keep playing this way on this trip," Little said, "we'll be
    doing everything we can to keep the race close."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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