LOS ANGELES—Trea Turner homered and doubled as the Los Angeles Dodgers started fast and held off the San Diego Padres 5–3 on Tuesday night in their NL Division Series opener.
Behind 17-game winner Julio Urías, the Dodgers raced to an early 5–0 lead and appeared to be on their way to another blowout of the Padres.
Los Angeles dominated in the regular season, owning a 14–5 advantage and outscoring San Diego 109-47. The 111-win Dodgers claimed the NL West and the Padres finished second, 22 games back.
With Sandy Koufax watching from the owners’ box, Urías retired the first eight batters he faced until Austin Nola doubled with two outs in the third.
Chris Martin, who had two saves this season, pitched a perfect ninth for a save. Struggling closer Craig Kimbrel was left off the Dodgers’ roster for this best-of-five matchup.
Game 2 is Wednesday night at Dodger Stadium before the series shifts south to San Diego.
The Padres were coming off a win in the decisive Game 3 of the wild-card series Sunday night over the Mets in New York.
The Dodgers, who had five days off after drawing a bye, showed no signs of rust.
In the first, Turner hit a 419-foot shot into the left-field pavilion for his second career postseason homer and first as a Dodger.
Two batters later, Will Smith doubled and scored on Max Muncy’s two-out single for a 2–0 lead.
The Dodgers batted around in the third, tacking on three more runs.
Turner doubled leading off and after Freddie Freeman flied out, Smith stepped in and doubled to deep left-center, nearly the same spot where Turner’s ball landed. Gavin Lux doubled to the right-field corner with two outs, driving in Smith and chasing Mike Clevinger.
Steven Wilson came in and promptly walked Trayce Thompson to load the bases.
Choking up, Cody Bellinger initially was thought to have been hit by a pitch and took first base as Muncy was forced in. But upon video review, it appeared the ball hit the knob of the bat. Bellinger was called back to the plate and Muncy returned to third.
Bellinger was then safe at first on an error by first baseman Wil Myers, scoring Muncy. The ball hit off the heel of Myers’ glove and he missed it on the pickup, leaving no chance to make a play on the speedy Bellinger.
The Dodgers’ offense—baseball’s highest-scoring this season—went quiet after the third. Their lone baserunner was Freeman, who walked. Mookie Betts and Freeman were a combined 0 for 7 with two strikeouts.
The Dodgers hadn’t played a must-win game since mid-June before running away with the division. But they found themselves in trouble in the fifth.
That’s when the Padres finally got to Urias, closing to 5–3 after he gave up three straight hits.
Myers led off with an opposite-field solo shot to left. Trent Grisham had an RBI grounder that scored Jake Cronenworth, who had singled. Nola’s sacrifice fly scored Ha-Seong Kim, who doubled.
San Diego threatened again in the sixth against Evan Phillips, but the defense bailed him out.
Juan Soto drew a leadoff walk. Booed heavily by the crowd of 52,407, Manny Machado followed with an infield trickler that the Dodgers hoped would roll foul. It did not, and went for a single.
After pinch-hitter Josh Bell struck out, Myers came up as the potential go-ahead run.
Myers grounded into an inning-ending double play, started by second baseman Gavin Lux. He flipped to Turner, and the shortstop double-clutched before firing to first to get Myers.
Urías allowed three runs and four hits in five innings. The left-hander struck out six and walked none.