Los Angeles Times - 27.08.2019

(Sean Pound) #1

SPORTS


TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2019:: LATIMES.COM/SPORTS


D


SAN DIEGO — After a
three-game simulation of
October baseball opposite a
fellow World Series contend-
er at Dodger Stadium over
the weekend, the Dodgers
returned to late August’s
doldrums Monday at Petco
Park to face an inferior divi-
sional opponent playing out
the string. They were back to
punching down, not that it
was their choice, and hold-
ing another round of audi-
tions for when October actu-
ally arrives and the games
matter.
The setting was different,
the vibe was too. The result
was not. The Dodgers, stuck
in their deepest offensive
slump this season, could not
overcome a forgettable sixth
inning en route to a 4-3 loss
to the San Diego Padres.
They have scored 13 runs
over their last six games and
have gone 3-3 during the
span. All three wins have
come by one run — two via
walk-off hits.
“This is baseball,” Dod-
gers third baseman Justin
Turner said. “I mean, if you
guys expect us to score 10, 12
runs every single night, you
guys are out of your minds.
So just got to keep working.
Keep trying to put together
ABs, and stuff like this hap-
pens throughout the course
of a season to every single
team, no matter how good or
bad they are.”
Monday’s troubles were
stoked by the Dodgers’ dis-
agreements with home-
plate umpire Rob Drake’s
strike zone. Batters were
irked by Drake consistently

Dodgers


stoop


and still


don’t


conquer


Drop in their level of


competition doesn’t


help team stuck in its


worst slump of season.


SAN DIEGO 4
DODGERS 3

By Jorge Castillo

[SeeDodgers,D5]

NEW YORK — The
sour memories
Serena Williams
carried from her
previous match at
Arthur Ashe Sta-
dium — the U.S.
Open final loss to
Naomi Osaka in
September that devolved into a
controversial and confusing spec-
tacle — weren’t reflected in her
strong performance Monday. But
she made it clear she can’t be
counted out here, and that she
hasn’t forgotten the infamous
occasion that polarized the tennis
world.
Back on the showcase court at
the Billie Jean King Tennis Center
for her first match at this year’s
U.S. Open, Williams was intense
and businesslike in a 6-1, 6-1
thrashing of Maria Sharapova.
Williams took 59 minutes to defeat
Sharapova for the 19th time in a
row, a streak that excludes a walk-
over in Sharapova’s favor in the
fourth round of the 2018 French
Open.
“I just feel like her game really
matches up well against mine,”
Williams said after improving her
record against Sharapova to 20-2.
“I always said her ball somehow


lands in my strike zone. I don’t
know. It’s just perfect for me.”
Williams, seeded eighth, wisely
controlled her emotions as well as
she controlled the play against the
unseeded Sharapova. Trying
again for a record-tying 24th
Grand Slam event singles champi-
onship, she was efficient and calm,
a distinct contrast to her unbri-
dled anger in unleashing a tirade
at chair umpire Carlos Ramos in
last year’s final because of what
she considered unfair and sexist
calls against her. Asked Monday
for her reaction to U.S. Tennis
Assn. officials deciding Ramos
won’t officiate her matches this
year she replied, “I don’t know who
that is.”
OK then.
No. 3 men’s seed Roger Federer
didn’t match Williams’ efficiency
in winning his first-round match at
Ashe. The 20-time Grand Slam
event champion stumbled early
against 190th-ranked Sumit Nagal
of India and committed 19 un-
forced errors in the first set but
recovered his timing and serving
ability in time to pull out a 4-6, 6-1,
6-2, 6-4 victory.
“Credit to him for really playing
a solid first set,” said Federer, who
acknowledged he was surprised by
Nagal’s early poise. “It’s never easy

SERENA WILLIAMSreturns a shot on the way to a 6-1, 6-1 victory over Maria Sharapova in a first-round women’s match of the
U.S. Open, where the American is seeking a seventh title and a record-tying 24th Grand Slam event singles championship.


John G. MabangloEPA/Shutterstock

Court of public dominion


Williams cruises and Federer prevails after slow start at U.S. Open


ROGER FEDERERacknowledges the Arthur Ashe Stadium
crowd after rallying for a four-set victory over Sumit Nagal.

Kena BetancurAFP/Getty Images

HELENE ELLIOTT


[SeeElliott,D6]

Markese Stepp can’t
catch. That’s what Mike
Jinks was told.
As a disciple of the Air
Raid offense, Jinks took
close note of that intel upon
his arrival at USC as the run-
ning backs coach.
Stepp had otherwise im-
pressed in limited work a
year ago during a redshirt
season, routinely flashing
the sort of dynamic, one-cut,
power running style long fa-
vored by the Trojans.
But in a new system that
demanded its running backs
be all-purpose, three-down
weapons, there were legiti-
mate concerns about how a
230-pound battering ram ru-
mored to have stone hands
might fit.
Months later, thinking
back on it, Jinks can’t help
but laugh.
“We got lucky,” he said
with a smile. “Nobody really
knew that [Stepp] could
catch like he can.”
As Jinks would later


come to understand, nobody
had ever asked. All of his life,
Stepp had been a bruising,
physical runner, so adept at
barreling through contact
that he did not need to mas-
ter much else.
“In high school, I was big-
ger than some of the line-
men,” Stepp recalled. “I
guess I was always that type
of running back.”
It was a perfect fit for Ca-
thedral High in Indianapo-
lis, where the pounding, pro-
style rushing attack was a
way of life. Not only could
Stepp overwhelm defenses

The standout scenes
from the Rams’ game Sat-
urday were easy to overlook.
After all, Los Angeles’
starters were on the side-
lines again during the team’s
10-6 preseason win over the
Denver Broncos. Their sur-
rogates offered the most
compelling moments in-
stead.
There was KhaDarel
Hodge pumping his arm for-

ward, pantomiming a first
down after one of his three
catches; Darious Williams’
primal yell, preceded by his
athletic pass breakup; USC
alumnus Jalen Greene’s
touchdown catch, which was
punctuated with the Tro-
jans’ two-finger “V” celebra-
tion and which compen-
sated for his dropped pass
and false start in the plays
prior; defensive back Dont’e
Deayon’s postgame stroll
along the side of the stands,
soaking up every second of
an NFL stage on which he’s
desperate to remain.
Each player is a cut can-
didate this preseason,
mostly journeymen jockey-
ing for the team’s final few

Jockeying for the


final Rams spots


[SeeRams,D3]

Preseason finale


against Houston key


for players battling to


make 53-man roster.


By Jack Harris

Fewer playing
prep football

Southern California in
line with national
trends that show drop
in participation, a
survey finds. D2

Venezuela winter
ball not an option

Trump’s executive
order results in MLB
ban on playing in the
country, affecting
Angels players. D3

SEASON OPENER

USC vs.
Fresno State
AT THE COLISEUM
Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
TV:ESPN

USC’s Stepp is catching on


Powerful back works to show that he can be a receiving threat


By Ryan Kartje


MARKESE STEPPknows that the Trojans’ new
Air Raid offense requires versatile running backs.

Wally SkalijLos Angeles Times

[SeeStepp,D5]

Magic number
Combination of Dodgers
wins or losses by the divi-
sion’s second-place team
that will clinch the Na-
tional League West title.

11

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