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Dodgers are still fenced in

L.A. hitters continue to struggle in 10-5 loss at Arizona. Their only power is of warning-track variety, and frustration is starting to show.

April 09, 2008|Dylan Hernandez, Times Staff Writer

PHOENIX -- The ball looked like it had a chance, and when Andre Ethier saw it caught at the warning track as he was rounding first base, he stopped, kicked dirt and slammed his helmet to the ground.

What nearly was a score-tying three-run home run in the seventh inning went down as a simple F-9.


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So it went for the Dodgers, the swing that could change the game never coming Tuesday night in their 10-5 loss to the Arizona Diamondbacks.

Their flailing offense was shut down on this night by Doug Davis, who was two days away from surgery to remove a cancerous thyroid gland.

The loss was the third in the last four games for the Dodgers, who got their only meaningful runs on a two-run double by Jeff Kent in the sixth that reduced their deficit to 5-2.

The Diamondbacks blew the game open an inning later by pounding Ramon Troncoso for four runs.

Andruw Jones continued to struggle, his 0-for-3 night dropping his average to .103. Like Ethier, Jones didn't conceal his frustration, staring at home plate umpire Ron Kulpa upon being called out on strikes with Kent on second in the sixth.

The Dodgers were two for 11 with runners in scoring position, making them five for 31 in such situations over their last four games. They left nine runners on base.

"We were fighting uphill," Manager Joe Torre said. "The last couple of nights, we fell behind early and every time we cut the margin, they kept extending it."

With their offense having been held to three or fewer runs in five of their first seven games, the Dodgers got the kind of start from Chad Billingsley that they could ill afford.

Billingsley served up a three-run home run to Mark Reynolds in the first inning. The homer was Reynolds' third in the series, which concludes today, and fifth of the season, the most in the majors.

Billingsley never made it out of the third inning, when he gave up two more runs, and left the game with the bases loaded and the score 5-0.

Reliever Hong-Chih Kuo forced Chris Young to ground into an inning-ending double play to prevent further damage.

Billingsley threw 70 pitches to get seven outs, only 32 for strikes. He walked three batters, all of them in the second inning to load the bases, and hit two others. Four of his five runs were earned.

"It was a battle from the first pitch," Billingsley said. "I rushed myself. I was overly aggressive. I was tense, I never really relaxed."

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