Muncy
walkoff homer powers Dodgers past Red Sox
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[October 27, 2018]
By Rory Carroll
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Max Muncy
slammed an 18th inning walkoff solo homerun as the Los Angeles
Dodgers outlasted the Boston Red Sox 3-2 on Friday in a
tension-packed marathon that entered the record books as the longest
World Series game ever.
After two losses in chilly Boston battling Fenway Park's quirky
features, the Dodgers were back home in warmer, friendlier
surroundings trimming the Red Sox lead in the best-of-seven series
to 2-1.
But the Dodgers, chasing their first World Series title in 30 years,
needed a record 18 innings and a record seven hours 20 minutes to
avoid being pushed into a 0-3 series hole from which only one team -
the 2004 Red Sox in the American League Championship Series - have
ever escaped.
As Muncy's towering shot off Boston reliever Nathan Eovaldi sailed
into the left field bleachers the capacity crowd let out a mighty
roar but the Dodgers will have little time to savour the hard-fought
victory with Game Four set for Saturday.
"I just wanted to have another good at-bat," said Muncy, who had a
pair of hits and scored twice. "I felt really good after the first
two at-bats, that I'd seen him (Eovaldi) well.
"He pitched lights out. He was unbelievable. But I was feeling good
about my at-bats.
"I was feeling good about that one. Got him 3-0. He fought back. He
kind of went the same sequence he did last at-bat, tried to go
backdoor cutter."
Almost lost amid Muncy's late inning fireworks was a superb
performance from Dodgers rookie starter Walker Buehler who pitched a
seven inning gem.
Buehler, who last year watched Game Two of the World Series between
Los Angeles and the Houston Astros from the Dodgers Stadium stands,
had a much different view on Friday and was the man in the spotlight
tossing seven shutout innings.
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Dodgers first baseman Max Muncy hits a walk off solo home run
against the Boston Red Sox in the 18th inning in game three of the
2018 World Series at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Richard
Mackson-USA TODAY Sports
Playing in his first World Series game, the 24-year-old delivered a
nerveless effort to silence the Boston bats allowing just two hits -
both singles - while striking out seven without a walk.
Alex Wood, however, would get credit for pitching a scoreless 18th
inning. Eovaldi took the loss working six innings giving up just
three hits, two runs, one earned.
After the Dodgers' Joc Pederson - in the third - and Red Sox's
Jackie Bradley Jr. - in the eighth - traded solo home runs the drama
looked set to end in the 13th when Eduardo Nunez chopped a ground
ball single back to Scott Alexander but the Los Angeles pitcher
botched the toss to first base allowing Brock Holt to come across
with the go ahead run.
But the Dodgers would answer in similarly wild fashion in the bottom
of the inning when Yasiel Puig lined a drive to second baseman Ian
Kinsler who could not make the throw to first, the error allowing
Muncy to score.
Muncy would decide the issue five innings later after both teams had
almost emptied their lineups using nine pitchers each.
(Reporting by Steve Keating in Toronto; Editing by Sudipto Ganguly)
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