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  Thursday, Jun. 8 9:10pm ET
Park wins third straight
 
  RECAP | BOX SCORE | GAME LOG

LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Dave Hansen was again the man in a pinch for the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Chan Ho Park
Dodgers pitcher Chan Ho Park heads to first base after laying down a sacrifice bunt during the fourth inning Thursday.

Hansen hit a tiebreaking homer while batting for pitcher Chan Ho Park in the seventh inning Thursday night. It gave Los Angeles a 5-2 victory over the Houston Astros.

Hansen's 82 career pinch-hits with the Dodgers -- including a club-record 18 in 1993 -- are second only to coach Manny Mota on the team's career list.

Hansen drove a 1-2 breaking pitch from Chris Holt (3-7) just inside the right-field pole with one out for his third homer -- all as a pinch-hitter.

"That's part of preparation," Hansen said. "I'm not a home run hitter, but I've got to take a chance when the score dictates. I took a chance earlier in the at-bat, but he made a great pitch. So I was surprised when I got the curveball, but that's what happens when you get the bat under the ball."

Nine of Hansen's 20 career homers have come as a substitute swinger. His home run ended a season-worst string of 36 consecutive innings without one by the Dodgers, who are on a club-record pace with 88 in 57 games.

"Dave has a great deal of patience at the plate, he's selective and he's an aggressive hitter," Mota said. "He knows what he can do and he has the ability. And he knows that, when they sent him up with the game on the line, he's got to swing the bat."

Eric Karros, who had two RBIs, made it 4-2 with an RBI ground-rule double that knocked out Holt with none out in the eighth. Shawn Green scored moments later on Joe Slusarski's wild pitch.

Park (7-4) allowed two runs, five hits and three walks over seven innings. The right-hander struck out six en route to his third straight victory.

"He's really coming into his own out there and pitching with a lot of confidence," Dodgers catcher Chad Kreuter said. "When the other team gets guys in scoring position, he really bears down and gets guys out."

Alan Mills started the eighth and hit his first batter, Craig Biggio, who rolled the ball back to the mound while Mills walked toward home plate to get a new one from umpire Chris Guccione.

Mitch Meluskey followed with a single before Mills struck out Jeff Bagwell. Terry Adams came in and struck out Ken Caminiti and retired Moises Alou on a close call at first base after a nice play behind second by shortstop Alex Cora.

Alou was immediately ejected by umpire Jerry Meals after arguing the call, then kicked his batting helmet halfway to second base.

Mike Fetters got three outs for his first NL save, and first since 1998 with Oakland.

The loss dropped the three-time defending NL Central champs' record to 21-38, worst in the majors.

"We haven't figured out why," Holt said. "This is by far a better team than we're putting out there. You can ask a lot of these guys in here, and they don't know what the heck's going on, either. We're busting our butts out there and giving it everything we've got."

After falling behind in the second inning on Alou's seventh homer, the Dodgers took a 2-1 lead in the third on two-out RBI singles by Green and Karros, whose hit ended an 0-for-11 career drought against Holt.

But Biggio led off the sixth with his second homer of the season, and first in 187 at-bats since April 10 at Enron Field against Pat Hentgen of St. Louis.

Holt, trying to win consecutive starts for the first time this season, was charged with five runs and nine hits in seven-plus innings.

The game was a makeup of an April 17 rainout, only the second game postponed by inclement weather at Dodger Stadium in 12 years, and just the 17th in the ballpark's 39-year history.

Game notes
It looked like a scene out of "Kojak." Prior to batting practice, Mills was on his knees in front of Adams' adjacent locker, meticulously forming an outline of a dead body with masking tape on the carpet of the Dodgers' clubhouse. Apparently, Mills wanted to send a not-so-subtle message to Adams about encroaching into his space. When Kevin Brown walked by and asked "Who died?," Mills pointed up at the nameplate above Adams' locker. ... The crowd of 23,648 was the smallest at Dodger Stadium since last Sept. 1, when 23,616 watched Milwaukee beat the Dodgers 5-4. ... Alou's homer came on the first pitch he saw against the Dodgers this season. The injury-prone outfielder missed the other five meetings because of an injured right calf that cost him 16 games.

 


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