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Mookie Betts belts homer to lift Dodgers in Shohei Ohtani's return to Anaheim

Anaheim, California September 3, 2024-Dodgers Mookie betts celebrates his three-run home run against the Angels in the tenth inning at Anaheim Stadium Tuesday. (Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times)
Mookie betts celebrates his three-run home run against the Angels in the 10th inning. (Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

For nine innings Tuesday night, the Dodgers played with their food at Angel Stadium.

Only in extras, thanks to a four-run rally punctuated by Mookie Betts’ three-run homer, did they finally assert their dominance over the last-place Angels.

In the opener of this two-game Freeway Series, the Dodgers won 6-2 in front of a sold-out crowd of 44,731 in Anaheim, one split between Angels fans and a rowdy contingent of visiting Dodgers fans, all there to witness Shohei Ohtani’s return to his old home.

“Most importantly, it’s about winning the game and I’m glad we won,” Ohtani said through interpreter Will Ireton. “The biggest part of all this is really being able to play in this stadium and in front of these fans. That’s the part that was special for me.”

Ohtani provided some fireworks in the third inning, lining an RBI triple into the right-field corner and scoring on a Betts single.

After that, however, the Dodgers went quiet, striking out 16 times (including 10 against Reid Detmers, the Angels starter who entered with an earned-run average of more than 6.00) before finally breaking a 2-2 tie in the top of the 10th inning.

Mookie Betts celebrates his three-run home run with Shohei Ohtani in the 10th inning.
Mookie Betts celebrates his three-run home run with Shohei Ohtani in the 10th inning. (Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

Miguel Rojas got the scoring started in extras, hammering a first-pitch sinker from Angels right-hander Roansy Contreras into left field for an RBI single. Then, after Ohtani was intentionally walked with first base open, Betts provided the knockout blow, crushing a hanging, first-pitch slider to left for his 15th home run of the season.

“I understand their perspective,” Betts said of Ohtani getting walked in front of him. “So I was just trying to get a good pitch to hit.”

It was only the third time in Betts’ career that the batter before him was intentionally walked. The other two? Free passes to David Ortiz in 2016, according to SportsNet LA, when Betts was with the Boston Red Sox.

“It’s a tough situation to walk a guy that got $700 [million] to get to the guy that got $350 [million],” starting pitcher Walker Buehler joked of Ohtani and Betts. “He’s pretty good at baseball too.”

The late scoring barrage erased the Dodgers’ bevy of empty swings earlier in the game, as they set a season high for strikeouts and extinguished the fire in a lineup that entered red-hot coming off last weekend’s series win in Arizona.

Detmers, making his first start since June 1 after being recalled from triple A, kept the Dodgers off-balance with an improved fastball that touched 95 mph — resurfacing concerns about the team’s at-times-anemic ability to attack velocity.

The Dodgers didn’t do much better against the Angels bullpen, either, stranding a leadoff walk from Chris Taylor in the eighth before getting blown away by closer Ben Joyce –– who hit a season-high 105.5 mph with his fastball — in the ninth.

In the end, however, it all mattered little, with the Dodgers’ 10th-inning rally stretching their National League West lead to 5½ games entering Wednesday.

“You look back at the last couple weeks, we’ve played some intense baseball games,” manager Dave Roberts said after his team improved to 18-6 since Aug. 9. “So tonight against a team that’s trying to fight and play good baseball, some young players, it’s a game that you don’t want to let down.”

Shohei Ohtani celebrates after scoring a run against the Angels.
Shohei Ohtani celebrates after scoring a run against the Angels. (Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

In his first regular-season game in Anaheim since signing with the Dodgers last winter, Ohtani attracted all of the early attention. His first trip to the plate netted only a mild response from a crowd that still was filing in — and from Ohtani himself, who didn’t so much as doff his helmet as a graphic listing his Angels accomplishments quickly flashed on the videoboard.

After grounding out in his first at-bat, Ohtani drew a bigger reaction his second time up as he collected his seventh triple with a line drive to right.

“When you look back at today’s game, there were moments when we didn’t come through,” Ohtani said through his interpreter. “But there were times when we were able to capitalize and that’s the way we try to win some games. I think it’s a really good thing for us as a team that we were able to do that tonight.”

As for Betts’ big blast in the 10th?

“I’m not really surprised that Mookie came through in that kind of fashion,” Ohtani said. “It’s the kind of way we like to finish the game.”

The other positive sign for the Dodgers: Buehler’s performance in a five-inning, two-run, six-strikeout start, the second in a row in which the 30-year-old right-hander said he felt more like his old self coming back from a second Tommy John surgery.

Read more: Could Angels have kept Shohei Ohtani? Their non-offer lingers ahead of his Anaheim return

Like last week, Buehler threw more first-pitch strikes (12 of 21) and was particularly effective with the curveball, which accounted for four of his six strikeouts in an 83-pitch outing.

“Walker’s in compete mode,” Roberts said. “I think that’s important, when you’re in September [and] you’ve got a few starts left until we get to the postseason, and him trying to find some traction and get to being the pitcher that he was.”

Buehler did give up two home runs. Logan O’Hoppe hammered a 2-and-2 cutter that caught too much of the plate in the second inning. Taylor Ward sliced a drive the other way just inside the right-field foul pole in the fifth.

But for a pitcher trying to make a case for being in a potential postseason rotation, Buehler viewed the outing as another important step forward, lowering his ERA to 5.67 (the lowest it’s been since mid-June) in the process.

“I would’ve loved to have felt like this in April,” said Buehler, who has made four starts since returning from a hip injury last month. “But at the end of the day, I have a month to kind of more so put the finishing touches on how I feel as a major league starter and how I can help us win in the playoffs.”

Who else could help the Dodgers do that remains uncertain. Yoshinobu Yamamoto managed to throw only two innings in a rehab start with triple-A Oklahoma City on Tuesday night, which likely means he will need at least one more before returning. Tyler Glasnow and Clayton Kershaw both played catch before the game as they work to return from injuries too.

The one thing that is becoming more certain, though, is the Dodgers’ place in the postseason picture.

For a while Tuesday, they appeared headed toward the letdown Roberts warned about. But, as they’ve made a habit of lately, they found a way to salvage an important win.

“It’s always important to keep the momentum going,” Betts said. “Sometimes momentum is not going to be your way. You’re going to have find ways to create it. But any time, you just keep grinding.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.