Rusin, Rockies blank Dodgers
Send a link to a friend
[June 09, 2016]
LOS ANGELES -- Chris Rusin
struggled about as much as a starting pitcher could as of late.
Since being moved from the Colorado Rockies' bullpen to the
rotation, Rusin was winless and hapless, unable to throw strikes
when he needed them most.
All that changed on Wednesday, when Rusin won a pitchers' duel
against Kenta Maeda at Dodger Stadium, helping the Rockies secure
the series win with a 1-0 win over the Los Angeles Dodgers.
"That's a big series for us. We needed that," Rusin said after
Colorado took two of three. "Hopefully we can run off a couple more
in a row. It was huge to come in and get a series win here at their
place."
Rusin (2-5) earned his first victory since April 13 and his first
this season as a starter, scattering three hits over six shutout
innings. His seventh start was his best of the season, matching his
season-best marks in innings pitched while walking only one batter
and striking out three.
"It wasn't about me being comfortable in the rotation or the bullpen
or whatever, it was just me trying to find my arm slot and rhythm
and timing with all my pitches," Rusin said. "I've been working hard
at it, and it paid off tonight."
Jake McGee retired the side in order in the ninth inning for the
save. He improved to 15-for-17 on save opportunities this season.
After giving up a leadoff single to Enrique Hernandez to start the
game, Rusin retired the next 10 batters in a row before getting out
of a bases-loaded jam in the fifth inning.
"Most of my pitches sink, so I get a lot of ground-ball outs," Rusin
said. "When that's working, it leads to what I want to do with all
my pitches. Sinker, slider, cutter -- it all worked."
Maeda (5-4) struck out a career-high nine batters but ultimately
took the loss, giving up one run on five hits and a walk over 6 2/3
innings. Maeda began the game by striking out the first four
batters, and he faced only three above the minimum through six
innings before pitching into trouble in the seventh.
"Kenta threw the ball great," Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. "To
go six-plus, punch out nine, give up one earned run, we've got to
win that game."
With one out in the Colorado seventh, Gerardo Parra doubled off the
center field wall. Nick Hundley flied out to left field but hit the
ball hard enough that it warranted a mound visit. Left-handed
reliever Adam Liberatore appeared to have been summoned from the
bullpen, but Maeda's translator was waved off, and the right-hander
remained in the game.
Daniel Descalso then singled to the left-center gap to drive in
Parra, and Roberts finally removed Maeda for Liberatore.
On his initial mound visit, Roberts came out merely intending to
gauge how Maeda felt, never intending to summon Liberatore. Roberts
expected a pinch hitter if Liberatore came into the game, and he
liked the matchup of Maeda against Descalso.
"They were going to make a move, and I had to decide, 'Do I feel
that Kenta can get Descalso out?'" Roberts said. "And at that point
in time, I felt that he could get him out. He threw a breaking ball,
maybe a little elevated, but it was a soft liner to left field and
(Descalso) got a base hit. If you take soft contact, I'll bet on
soft contact getting outs."
Maeda wasn't ready to come out.
[to top of second column] |
Rockies starting pitcher Chris Rusin (52) throws in the first inning
against Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit:
Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports
"I definitely wanted to pitch. I wanted to make sure I got off the
mound at the end of the inning," Maeda said, through an interpreter.
"I already saw the reliever coming out of the bullpen, so I thought,
'That's too bad.'"
Colorado relievers Chad Qualls, Boone Logan, Carlos Estevez and
McGee made the run stand up with three shutout innings.
The Dodgers threatened in the fifth inning, loading the bases with
one out, thanks in part to a fielding gaffe. The Rockies had two
infielders at first base to field a sacrifice bunt by Maeda but
never touched the bag. However, Hernandez struck out and Justin
Turner grounded out to third base to end the inning.
"Fifth inning, to get out of the jam was a little bit of Houdini
there," Rockies manager Walt Weiss said. "I don't know how he did
it. We messed up the bunt coverage, and that inning could have went
south in a hurry, but Rusin picked us up there. Big-time performance
by him tonight."
NOTES: The Dodgers released UT Alex Guerrero, effectively making him
a free agent. The Dodgers still will be responsible for his $7.5
million salary this year and next, aside from the major league
minimum, should Guerrero sign with another team. He is owed a
pro-rated portion of $5 million this season; his salary this year
and next includes a $2.5 million signing bonus due on Jan. 15 each
year. Guerrero injured his knee in spring training and had not
appeared in a major league game this season. ... RHP Brandon
McCarthy (Tommy John surgery) will begin a rehab assignment Saturday
with Class A Rancho Cucamonga, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said on
Wednesday. McCarthy will be limited to three innings. He is on track
to return after the All-Star break. ... Rockies SS Trevor Story and
1B Mark Reynolds were given the day off from the starting lineup.
Reynolds appeared as a defensive replacement.
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|