Chris Taylor drove in the go-ahead run with a bloop single as part of a four-run ninth, Max Muncy hit two of Los Angeles' (cheap Los Angeles Dodgers championship rings) six homers and the Dodgers won their 12th straight over Colorado by beating the Rockies 12-8 on Thursday night.
This was another late-inning win over the Rockies for the Dodgers, who also got a three-run homer from pinch-hitter Kike Hernandez in the ninth. Los Angeles won three straight home games against Colorado last weekend -- all in walk-off fashion.
"It's just a staple for us -- the resiliency and playing with grit," Taylor said. "We've been really good late in the game."
Taylor played a big part by delivering his fourth hit of the game, a one-out RBI single off Wade Davis (1-3) that dropped over the head of first baseman Daniel Murphy. Hernandez later extended the lead by homering off Davis. It was with Hernandez's sixth career pinch-hit homer.
"They're a great team," Davis said. "When you make mistakes you're going to pay for them."
Pedro Baez (3-2) pitched a scoreless eighth to earn the win. Kenley Jansen struck out Garrett Hampson to end the game with two on in a non-save situation.
On a hot evening, the baseballs were soaring everywhere. The Dodgers (championship sports rings) knew it was going to be that sort of game in batting practice, when Muncy launched a ball that landed over the third deck in right.
"This is one of the few places where I try to let it eat in batting practice," Muncy said. "Yeah, I guess we knew it was flying at that point."
The teams combined for 33 hits in the first of a four-game set. In the last series at the hitter-friendly park, the Padres and Rockies set a modern-era record by combining for 92 runs in a four-game series.
Muncy had a two-run homer in the seventh and a solo shot in the second, one pitch after Cody Bellinger homered. Alex Verdugo and Justin Turner had back-to-back homers in the fifth.
This marks the second-longest losing streak to one team in Rockies history. Colorado dropped 16 straight to Atlanta from 1993-94.
"The worm will turn, I know that," Rockies (mlb championship rings) manager Bud Black said. "Right now things are going their way ... but the worm will turn."
Charlie Blackmon finished a homer shy of the cycle. Ryan McMahon hit a solo shot in the seventh.
Lately, everything seems to be going Bellinger's way at the plate. His 27th homer of the season popped out of the glove of center fielder David Dahl and over the fence. Bellinger is one away from matching the Dodgers' record for most homers before the All-Star break, which is held by Gil Hodges (1951) and Duke Snider (1955).
Walker Buehler had a rare rough evening in allowing a career high in runs (seven) and hits (13) over 5 2/3 innings. His ERA jumped from 2.96 to 3.43.
This was a much different performance than a week ago against Colorado, when he threw a complete-game masterpiece. In that contest at Dodger Stadium, he scattered three hits and struck out 16 batters.
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