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Lowe dominant as Dodgers silence Braves
LA DODGERS 2, ATLANTA 1
 


By Jonathan Raber
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

LOS ANGELES (Ticker) -- With runs coming few and far between,
the Los Angeles Dodgers continue to survive on stellar pitching.

Derek Lowe allowed two hits in 7 2/3 innings and Matt Kemp
homered to lead the Dodgers to a 2-1 victory over the Atlanta
Braves on Wednesday.

Los Angeles, which has won three of its last five despite not
scoring more than three runs in any contest, once again let its
starting pitching lead the team to a victory, getting its second
dominating performance in three days.

"Our pitching staff has really been what's carrying us all year,
it's been keeping us in ballgames," Dodgers catcher Russell
Martin said. "Derek Lowe was just doing his thing out there,
keeping the ball down, staying aggressive and keeping the
hitters off-balance."

Lowe's stellar pitching line came just two days after rookie
Hiroki Kuroda threw a one-hitter against the Braves. The
Japanese import took his perfect-game bid in the series opener
into the eighth inning.

"You have to tip your hat to these guys," Braves manager Bobby
Cox said. "They've got maybe the best total pitching staff
we've seen."

Lowe (7-8) retired the first 18 batters he faced before rookie
Gregor Blanco opened the seventh with a line-drive single up the
middle. The sinkerballer allowed just one more hit - a solo
homer by Jeff Francoeur in the eighth - and walked one while
striking out four.

"I felt like this was the type of game that was going to be
low-scoring," Lowe said. "I did the same thing I do every
start, just try to prepare."

After a shaky start to the campaign, Lowe has been sharp of
late, maintaining an ERA of 2.65 over his last 10 outings.

Braves starter Tim Hudson (9-7) was nearly as good as his
counterpart despite getting tagged with the loss. The
righthander went seven innings, allowing two runs and four hits
with four strikeouts and two walks.

Lowe and Hudson each held the opposition hitless until James
Loney doubled to open the fifth. As a result of Lowe's mastery
in this contest, Atlanta went a combined 0-for-36 over the first
four innings of this three-game series.

"When (Lowe) goes once through the lineup and breezes through
it, you know he is going to be good for at least seven
(innings)," Martin said. "And he's been like that for a long
time. Today was just one of those days where he was executing
pitch after pitch."

One inning after Loney recorded the first hit of the game, Kemp
made Hudson pay for falling behind in the count early in the
sixth. After fouling away a pitch with a 3-0 count, Kemp
drilled a fastball over the wall in left-center field for a 1-0
advantage.

Following a leadoff single by Nomar Garciaparra and an
intentional walk to Martin two batters later in the seventh, the
beleaguered Andruw Jones - who was booed by the home crowd prior
to each at-bat - drove in his second run since being activated
from the disabled list on July 4 with a hard-hit single up the
middle.

Jones said after the game that he was still "a week away" from
having his surgically repaired right knee back to normal.

"I decided to come early because of the injury to Juan Pierre
and the team (being) in a situation where we can take over first
place," Jones said. "I wanted to come back and see more major
league at-bats, not minor league."

Francoeur cut the deficit to 2-1 with his ninth homer. Lowe
exited two batters later in favor of Jonathan Broxton after
issuing a two-out walk to Mark Kotsay, but the Braves were kept
off the board when Martin threw out the runner trying to steal
second.

Takashi Saito picked up his 17th save by working a perfect ninth
inning, sending the Braves to their 24th straight one-run loss
on the road in the process.

With the win, which took exactly two hours to play, the Dodgers
(45-46) moved back into a tie atop the National League West
Division with the Arizona Diamondbacks. It also gave Los
Angeles its fourth straight series win.

 
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