James Paxton gives up 12 hits and nine runs in Dodgers' blowout loss to Giants


The “opener” in what was supposed to be a “bullpen game” for the San Francisco Giants outlasted the Dodgers’ starter, which should provide a hint at how things went for the visiting team on a sun-splashed Sunday afternoon at Oracle Park.

Dodgers left-hander James Paxton was pummeled for nine earned runs and 12 hits in four innings of an eventual 10-4 loss to the Giants, failing to give his team a chance to win or provide much-needed length after eight relievers combined to throw eight innings in Saturday’s 14-7, 11-inning victory.

Meanwhile, reliever Spencer Bivens, a 30-year-old rookie who was expected to go two, maybe two-plus innings for the Giants, threw five one-run, four-hit innings with three strikeouts, the right-hander punctuating his 60-pitch outing with a full windup and violent fist pump after he struck out Shohei Ohtani with an 82-mph sweeper to end the fifth.

Paxton, who gave up only two earned runs and seven hits in 18 innings of his previous three starts, was tagged for a run and two hits in the first inning, two runs and four hits in the second, a run and two hits in the third and five runs and four hits in the fourth.

But the Dodgers’ bullpen didn’t even begin to stir until Patrick Bailey lined a two-run double to left for a 7-0 lead in the fourth. Only when Matt Chapman followed with a two-run homer to left for a 9-0 lead did right-hander Michael Petersen begin to warm up.

Paxton struck out Luis Matos and got David Villar to ground out shortstop to end the fourth, pushing his pitch-count at 89, but manager Dave Roberts wouldn’t let the veteran go any longer.

Petersen replaced Paxton to start the fifth and threw two scoreless one-hit innings, right-hander Yohan Ramirez added a scoreless seventh, and Austin Barnes hit a two-run double in the top of the ninth.

About the only other bright spot for the Dodgers was Chris Taylor, who hit a solo homer to center field off Bivens in the fifth and an RBI double to right-center off Landen Roupp in the seventh.

Taylor started at third base, a position the veteran utility man will be playing more of in the coming days, Roberts said.

Third base has been a problem spot since Max Muncy suffered a rib-cage strain on May 15, the slugger’s replacements — mostly Cavan Biggio and Kiké Hernández — batting .156 (21 for 135) with 40 strikeouts in 39 games since Muncy went on the injured list.

Taylor was one of baseball’s worst hitters for the first two months of the season, batting .095 (eight for 84) with a .305 OPS, one extra-base hit, eight RBIs, 38 strikeouts and nine walks in 36 games through June 6.

But Taylor hit .318 (seven for 22) with a .921 OPS, one homer and a triple over his next nine games and had two hits and a walk in four at-bats Sunday to bump his season average to .154 and his OPS to .511.

“I think with Chris, I see better at-bats,” Roberts said. “I think his swing has leveled out more. It’s more conducive to line drives. He’s not under fastballs as much as he used to be. The swing-and-miss is down. So for me, he’s earning more opportunities, and I’m going to give him more runway at third base.”

What does “runway” mean to Roberts?

“I don’t know what that means,” Roberts said, “but he’s going to play more than he has in the last few weeks.”

Paxton’s start looked more like a crash-landing. He minimized damage after the Giants loaded the bases with no outs in the first on a Jorge Soler double, Austin Slater walk and a Heliot Ramos single, the Giants scoring only once on Chapman’s sacrifice fly.

Paxton gave up two more runs and four hits in the second, an inning that would have been even worse had the Giants not run into an out. Villar led off with a single to shallow right. Nick Ahmed singled to left, and Tyler Fitzgerald flared a hit to right.

San Francisco third base coach Matt Williams waved Villar home, but Villar, who would have scored easily, stopped at third. Ahmed raced around second, thinking Villar would score, and was thrown out at second by cut-off man Freddie Freeman.

Soler lined an RBI double over the head of center fielder Andy Pages, who froze on the ball before breaking back, for a 2-0 lead, and Slater’s sacrifice fly to right made it 3-0.

The Giants pushed the lead to 4-0 in the third when Matos doubled to left-center and took third when Pages fumbled the ball at the wall for an error and Villar lined an RBI double down the right-field line. Bailey and Chapman then capped the five-run fifth with their two-run hits.



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