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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Joe Torre
has a feeling his team is starting to come together. The Dodgers are getting healthy, too.
Los Angeles welcomed back
Nomar Garciaparra
and
Andruw Jones
from the disabled list with an impressive win against its archrival.
Andre Ethier
homered and hit a go-ahead two-run double in the sixth,
Derek Lowe
won for the first time in three starts and the Dodgers rallied to beat the Giants 10-7 on Friday for their fourth straight
victory in their first visit of the season to San Francisco.
''It was a sloppy game. We were lucky to win. We made too many mistakes,'' Torre said. ''I'll take it though. ... Derek didn't
have his best day but he battled and kept us close.''
Just when it looked as if San Francisco starter
Jonathan Sanchez
was headed for another win, rookie reliever
Osiris Matos
(0-1) allowed five unearned runs in the sixth. Left fielder
Fred Lewis
made a costly mistake when he dropped a routine line drive by Garciaparra to start the inning. Pinch-hitter
Delwyn Young
hit a tying RBI single two batters later and, one out later, Ethier began a stretch of three straight doubles that scored
runs.
''Just a mistake. Just an error,'' Lewis said. ''It cost us the game.''
Russell Martin
's RBI double in the sixth was his first hit in 14 at-bats against San Francisco.
Andy LaRoche
added a solo homer leading off the ninth against
Brian Wilson
.
Neither
Keiichi Yabu
(sore shoulder) nor
Tyler Walker
(right thigh) were available out of the Giants' bullpen, so manager
Bruce Bochy
opted to stick with Matos.
''Matos was throwing the ball well. He had some bad luck,'' Bochy said. ''You look back and wish you'd done something a little
different. Believe me, I look back.''
Los Angeles had nine extra-base hits to help Lowe's cause - getting two doubles and two RBIs by Garciaparra in his first game
since late April because of a left calf injury.
The Dodgers rallied from a 5-2 deficit in the opener of a series that's important for both teams leading up to the All-Star
break, with every club in the NL West still in contention.
''I got to turn a double play. It was nice to get that out of the way,'' Garciaparra said. ''I'm not trying to hold back.
I want to do what I can. This is the most innings I've played in two months. Go out there, play shortstop. It's not weird
but I haven't been there in a while.
''I'm seeing the game from a different angle but it felt like a familiar place. The more you keep playing, the more you learn.
This division is still up for grabs.''
Lowe (6-8) went five innings for the decision, and
Takashi Saito
worked the ninth for his 15th save in 18 chances.
Lewis had more trouble in left in the seventh, but the ball glanced off his glove and center fielder
Aaron Rowand
was there to make the barehanded catch for a quirky putout scored 7-8.
''It was a tough day out there for Freddy,'' Bochy said. ''(On Garciaparra's line drive) he had it right there. He just clanked
it. It was a pretty routine play. You don't see that happen. It came at an inopportune time.''
Sanchez keeps racking up strikeouts, but had little to show for seven on Friday. He didn't help himself by walking in two
runs in the third.
The left-hander has 109 Ks, joining
Tim Lincecum
and
Matt Cain
among Giants starters with more than 100 before the All-Star break. Sanchez had won six of his last seven starts and two straight.
After
Matt Kemp
led off the game with a single, Sanchez got three straight outs including Martin and
Jeff Kent
swinging.
Rowand doubled and drove in two runs and Lewis stole home for the second time in three days. Lewis and
Randy Winn
pulled off a double steal for the second day in a row, and Lewis then added an RBI double in the fourth to make it 5-2.
Ethier hit a leadoff homer in the fifth, only the third longball allowed by Sanchez in his last nine starts.
Surprisingly, this is the Dodgers' first visit to the Bay Area to face their division rival.
''That's the unbalanced schedule,'' said Torre, the Dodgers' first-year manager. ''I'm not a big fan of that but come September
you're glad you're playing the division.''
Jones, the Dodgers' center fielder, came back from right knee surgery, struck out four times - the 11th time in his career
he's had four or more Ks in a game.
Notes: Kemp stole his 18th base. ... Friday marked the 25th anniversary of Giants' pitching coach
Dave Righetti
's no-hitter of the
Red Sox
for New York at Yankee Stadium. Highlights of his gem were shown on the big screen. ... Giants LHP
Noah Lowry
, who has not pitched this season after surgery on his forearm, will travel to Arizona during the team's upcoming road trip
to begin playing catch. He is no longer having the pins-and-needles irritation in the nerves. ''I'm starting to turn the corner,''
Lowry said. Manager
Bruce Bochy
acknowledged it would be great for Lowry to get back on the mound before the end of the season to boost his spirits heading
into the winter. ... The game drew 40,447, the Giants' seventh sellout.
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