The Los Angeles Dodgers and defending champion Philadelphia started off on the right foot as the home teams prevailed on the opening day of the National League playoffs on Wednesday.
Matt Kemp got the Dodgers humming early with a first-inning homer en route to a 5-3 win over St Louis and the Phillies rode pitcher Cliff Lee to a 5-1 rout of Colorado in Game 1 of their NL division series.
“I was trying to be aggressive,” Kemp said. “I put a pretty good swing on it and drove it to right field. Our bullpen is great. They got the job done.”
PHOTO: REUTERS
The Dodgers wasted no time getting to Cardinals starting pitcher Chris Carpenter and then got help from the bullpen to seal the victory.
The clubs established a Major League Baseball playoff record for a nine-inning game by stranding a combined 30 men on base.
Rafael Furcal earned three hits, including a triple, and knocked in a run for the Dodgers, who captured their second consecutive NL West title. Casey Blake finished two-for-four with a run batted in.
“When you win a game you are not nearly as tired, but at this time of year tired doesn’t enter into the equation,” Dodgers manager Joe Torre said.
The teams were to meet again yesterday for Game 2 of the best-of-five series.
It took just three pitches for Los Angeles to score off Cy Young candidate Carpenter. He surrendered four runs on nine hits and walking four in five innings.
The Dodgers got a stellar performance from their pitchers. Randy Wolf gave up two runs on six hits and walked five in 3-2/3 innings. Jeff Weaver posted the final out in the fourth and looked just in solid in the fifth to record the victory.
Ronald Belisario tossed a perfect inning for Los Angeles.
Kuo Hong-chih of Taiwan struck out pinch-hitter Troy Glaus to strand two runners in the seventh.
George Sherrill and closer Jonathan Broxton finished it off.
Mark DeRosa went three-for-five with an RBI for the Cardinals.
St Louis has dropped nine of their last 11 games dating back to the regular season.
Philadelphia’s Lee, making his post-season debut on the mound, scattered six hits, allowing a run only when the Rockies were down to their last out.
“I tried to treat it like a normal game,” Lee said. “Obviously there’s more excitement. I just tried to force that into more strikes and making them swing the bat. I’m excited we got the win. Hopefully that carries over to tomorrow.”
Philadelphia, which hosted Game 2 yesterday before the scene shifts to Colorado for Game 3 and a fourth if needed, was swept out of the 2007 playoffs by the Rockies, who lost that year’s World Series to Boston.
Philadelphia’s Raul Ibanez had two hits and drove in a pair of runs while Ryan Howard and Jayson Werth plated runners with extra-base hits off Colorado starter Ubaldo Jimenez.
Lee struck out five and baffled Colorado batters most of the day, retiring 16 in a row in one stretch.
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