Rockies drop four-game series as losing ways against Dodgers continue

No, “I Love L.A.” didn’t blare out of the Coors Field speakers Thursday afternoon. But that didn’t keep the Dodgers from feeling right at home. Per usual.

Behind a strong start from rookie right-hander Gavin Stone, and homers from the top three hitters in their lineup — All-Stars Shohei Ohtani, Will Smith and Freddie Freeman — the Dodgers beat the Rockies 5-3 to clinch the four-game series.

Since 2018, Los Angeles is 74-33 vs. Colorado.

Down 5-0 after five innings, the Rockies made a game of it, and Ryan McMahon had an All-Star kind of day. In the sixth, he channeled his inner Brooks Robinson, digging out Miguel Rojas’ grounder down the third-base line and rocketing a throw to first to get Rojas by a half-step.

McMahon led off the eighth with a 462-foot blast to the second deck above the bullpens in right field to cut the lead to 5-3. McMahon turned on lefty Alex Vesia’s 2-0 fastball for his team-high 13th homer.

Stone dominated Colorado for the first five innings, however, allowing no runs on three hits. He lost his mojo in the sixth, issuing a leadoff walk to Sean Bouchard, a one-out walk to Michael Toglia and a single to Elehuris Montero to load the bases.

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Manager Dave Roberts saw the writing on the wall and replaced Stone with Blake Treinen, who promptly gave up a two-run single to Jake Cave. The Dodgers’ big lead had been cut to 5-2.

Stone took the Coors Field mound for the first time on a terrific roll. Over his previous nine starts, he was 6-1 with a 2.06 ERA.

Rockies veteran left-hander Ty Blach is a pitch-to-contact pitcher. Sometimes, his style works, and sometimes, it doesn’t. Thursday, it most definitely did not. The Dodgers blasted Blach for five runs on 10 hits, including the solo homers by Ohtani to lead off the game and back-to-back blasts by Smith and Freeman in the fourth.

Blach entered the game with a solid track record against the Dodgers, going 4-3 with a 3.13 ERA in 20 appearances (nine starts). Blach’s ERA was the eighth-lowest against the Dodgers among all active pitchers (minimum 50 innings pitched).

Friday’s pitching matchup

Nationals LHP DJ Herz (1-1, 3.77 ERA) at Rockies RHP Dakota Hudson (2-9, 4.89 ERA)

6:40 p.m. Friday, Coors Field

TV: Rockies.TV (streaming); Comcast/Xfinity (channel 1262); DirecTV (683); Spectrum (130, 445, 305, 435 or 445, depending on region).

Radio: 850 AM/94.1 FM

Hudson’s loss to Pittsburgh on Sunday (three runs allowed over 5 1/3 innings) was his ninth, the most in the National League. However, the right-hander has pitched much better lately, posting a 3.63 ERA over his last seven starts. He’s still looking for his first victory at Coors Field in a Rockies uniform. He’s 0-4 with a 7.16 ERA at home this season. He’s pitched well against Washington, going 3-1 with a 2.74 ERA, including a 1-1 record with a 2.40 ERA in three starts.

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Herz, a talented rookie, is coming off a history-making start. In the Nationals’ 4-0 win over Miami last Saturday, he joined former Nationals pitcher Stephen Strasburg as the only major league pitcher with 13-plus strikeouts and zero walks in one of their first three career starts. Strasburg did it on June 8, 2010, with a 14-strikeout game vs. the Pirates. Herz, who’s never faced the Rockies, limited the Marlins to one hit over six innings.

Pitching probables

Saturday: Nationals’ LHP Mitchell Parker (5-3, 3.06) at Rockies RHP Cal Quantrill (6-5, 3.43), 7:10 p.m.

Sunday: Nationals RHP Jake Irvin (5-6, 3.24) at Rockies LHP Austin Gomber (1-4, 4.36), 1:10 p.m.

— Patrick Saunders, The Denver Post

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