Helene Elliott

Dodgers gain ground and confidence during winning streak

Nomar Garciaparra's improbable catch is just latest in feats keeping the team in the thick of the pennant race.
Helene Elliott
September 8, 2008
Two on, two out, Dodgers leading by two in the ninth but straining to stay ahead of the Arizona Diamondbacks on the scoreboard and in the National League West.

Joe Torre, forced to manage and not merely fill out a lineup card, had used five pitchers, three third basemen and two second basemen. He brought Nomar Garciaparra off the bench in the seventh inning to play third base but moved him to the opposite corner in the next inning, only the second time Garciaparra had played first base in a game this season.

Jonathan Broxton retired the first two batters but was tagged for a double by pinch-hitter Chad Tracy and gave up a walk to Adam Dunn. He worked the count on Conor Jackson to 1-and-1 before unleashing a 98-mph fastball into the shadows created by the late-afternoon sun at Dodger Stadium.

Jackson, who had singled and walked in four previous trips to the plate, lined the ball toward the hole between first and second.

"I saw it off the bat, but then I lost it in the stands," Broxton said. "I heard it. He hit it hard."

Garciaparra launched himself off the ground, his left hand -- the glove hand -- extended as far as it could go. Improbably, impossibly, he caught the ball, its white cover gleaming against the brown leather as he plummeted face-first to the dirt.

Improbably, impossibly, the Dodgers held on for a 5-3 victory Sunday, extending their lead over Arizona to 1 1/2 games and increasing their winning streak to eight.

"That's baseball," said Garciaparra, who thrust his glove skyward in elation while the Diamondbacks walked off the field with stunned expressions.

"You can't explain it. You can't figure it out. You find somebody who does and I'll call him a liar."

The team that couldn't win a game from Aug. 22 to Aug. 29, dropping eight in a row, now can't lose.

The team that fell 4 1/2 games behind the Diamondbacks after a loss at Phoenix on Aug. 29 has made up six games in the standings in nine days and is a game ahead of Arizona in the All-Important Loss Column.

Explain that.

Impossible.

"We were pretty down a week ago Friday, when we lost and found ourselves five back on the loss side," Torre said. "We just had to see what we had and if we could bounce back.

"It's pretty incredible to expect to take those eight losses and turn it around."

Yes, the weakness of the NL West has allowed the Dodgers to make up a lot of ground. They've benefited from the synchronized nose-dives of the Diamondbacks' top two starters, Dan Haren and Brandon Webb, and they outscored Arizona, 19-5, in sweeping the three-game series here.

And yes, the Dodgers remain far from perfect. They struck out 12 times Sunday, 11 of those in five innings against rookie Max Scherzer. It's nothing short of mind-boggling that they're leading the division -- any division -- with a middle-infield combination of Blake DeWitt at second and Angel Berroa at short.

But here they are with 19 games left in the season, standing on top of the heap, gaining ground and confidence while they pull off improbable feats such as Garciaparra's catch almost every day.

"A nice way to end the game. A good way," James Loney said.

"That's the thing about this team. We have the depth with pinch-hitters, the bullpen, everything."





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