Dustin May’s Dodgers debut spoiled by loss to Padres
The first man out of the dugout Friday night, Dodgers rookie Dustin Mayexcitedly skipped to the mound to begin his big league career. When he walked off the rubber for the final time six innings later, on the hook for a defeat despite a solid major league debut, he felt a different set of conflicting emotions.
For the first five innings, May surrendered only a single unearned run. But he failed to escape the sixth, letting the San Diego Padres score three times to take the lead en route to their eventual 5-2 win in front of 50,780 at Dodger Stadium.
“I just left some pitches up, they hit them,” May said. “They weren’t down like they were earlier in the game. They hit the mistakes. Just got to improve.”
In recent years, new stars have continued to appearin the Dodgers’ ever-expanding universe of young talent. That nucleus — which has grown to include Alex Verdugo, Walker Buehler, Will Smith and several others — orbits around Cody Bellinger, who became the fastest player iclub history to reach 100 home runs Friday.
For long stretches, May appeared to enter that stratosphere alongside them. The 21-year-old third-round pick in 2016, who had to block out trade rumors the last two years while climbing the Dodgers’ minor league ladder and becoming the franchise’s top pitching prospect according to MLB.com, kept the ball on the ground with high-velocity, high-spin-rate sinkers.
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The first man out of the dugout Friday night, Dodgers rookie Dustin Mayexcitedly skipped to the mound to begin his big league career. When he walked off the rubber for the final time six innings later, on the hook for a defeat despite a solid major league debut, he felt a different set of conflicting emotions.
For the first five innings, May surrendered only a single unearned run. But he failed to escape the sixth, letting the San Diego Padres score three times to take the lead en route to their eventual 5-2 win in front of 50,780 at Dodger Stadium.
“I just left some pitches up, they hit them,” May said. “They weren’t down like they were earlier in the game. They hit the mistakes. Just got to improve.”
In recent years, new stars have continued to appearin the Dodgers’ ever-expanding universe of young talent. That nucleus — which has grown to include Alex Verdugo, Walker Buehler, Will Smith and several others — orbits around Cody Bellinger, who became the fastest player iclub history to reach 100 home runs Friday.
For long stretches, May appeared to enter that stratosphere alongside them. The 21-year-old third-round pick in 2016, who had to block out trade rumors the last two years while climbing the Dodgers’ minor league ladder and becoming the franchise’s top pitching prospect according to MLB.com, kept the ball on the ground with high-velocity, high-spin-rate sinkers.
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