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Dodgers can’t overcome Yency Almonte’s three-run meltdown in loss to Reds

The Dodgers did not have a second miraculous comeback in them this week, their seventh-inning rally against the Cincinnati Reds falling a run short in an eventual 6-5 loss before a crowd of 48,280 in Chavez Ravine Friday night.

Three days after scoring four runs in the ninth inning and one in the 10th for an 8-7 comeback win over the Toronto Blue Jays, the Dodgers fell behind 6-2 after reliever Yency Almonte’s three-run meltdown in the seventh.

But they nearly pulled even in the bottom of the seventh after a line change in which the left-handed-hitting David Peralta and James Outman replaced the right-handed-hitting Kiké Hernández and Miguel Rojas at the bottom of the order.

Peralta led off the seventh with a pinch-hit ground-rule double to right field off Reds right-hander Lucas Sims, and Outman walked. Mookie Betts capped a nine-pitch at-bat with a walk to load the bases.

Reds manager David Bell, who signed a three-year extension through 2026 before the game, pulled Sims in favor of right-hander Ian Gibaut, who gave up an RBI single to Freddie Freeman that cut the lead to 6-4 and advanced Betts to third.

Will Smith flied out to medium right field, Betts holding at third, and J.D. Martinez struck out swinging on a 92-mph cut-fastball for the second out.

Amed Rosario, making his Dodgers debut after Wednesday’s trade from the Cleveland Guardians, grounded an RBI single to right-center to pull the Dodgers to within 6-5. Max Muncy, facing left-hander Alex Young, drove a ball to the warning track in center, but TJ Friedl hauled it in to end the inning.

The Dodgers trailed 3-2 when Almonte, who had lowered his ERA from 6.75 on June 15 to 4.43 with 15 straight scoreless outings in which he gave up seven hits, struck out 18 and walked three in 14⅔ innings, started the seventh and got Joey Votto to ground to shortstop for the first out.

The inning disintegrated quickly from there. Spencer Steer poked a slider 357 feet into the left-field seats for his 15th homer of the season and a 4-2 lead. Tyler Stephenson singled to left-center. Will Benson walks. Almonte threw a wild pitch, putting runners on second and third.

Amed Rosario singles in the seventh inning during his Dodgers debut Friday against the Reds.

Amed Rosario singles in the seventh inning during his Dodgers debut Friday against the Reds.

(Ashley Landis / Associated Press)

Elly De La Cruz was intentionally walked to load the bases. Almonte hit Friedl on the back knee with an 84-mph sweeper to force in a run that made it 5-2. Matt McLain walked on four pitches to force in a run for a 6-2 lead.

Almonte was pulled in favor of right-hander Phil Bickford, who prevented further damage–and Almonte’s ERA from ballooning past 5.02–by getting Jake Fraley to line out to first base and Jonathan India to pop out to first base to end the inning.

The Reds hit for the cycle against Dodgers starter Bobby Miller in a span of five batters in the first inning, De La Cruz leading off the game with a triple to right field, Friedl hitting an RBI groundout, McLain doubling to right and Fraley hitting a two-run homer off the right-field foul pole for a 3-0 lead.

It did not appear that Miller would last long after throwing 33 pitches in the opening frame, but the rookie right-hander started ditching his 100-mph fastballs in favor of his 80-mph looping curveballs and blanked the Reds on two hits with five strikeouts over the next four innings.

The Dodgers trimmed the deficit to 3-1 in the first inning when Freeman walked with one out and scored on Martinez’s two-out RBI double to left-center field. They pulled to within 3-2 in the fourth but ran into an out on the basepaths, preventing a bigger inning.

Rosario led off with a double to left-center, and Muncy flied out to center. Chris Taylor walked, and Hernández popped out to first for the second out.

Rojas chopped a grounder past diving first baseman Joey Votto and into right field to score Rosario to make it 3-2, but Rojas rounded the base too aggressively and was caught in a rundown between first and second.

Taylor took third on the hit and drifted too far off the bag during the Rojas rundown. Cincinnati second baseman India threw to De La Cruz at third, and De La Cruz fired to catcher Stephenson, who tagged out Taylor to end the inning.

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