Baseball Ramirez, Martin power Dodgers to 2-0 lead

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Bench Warmer
CHICAGO -- Manny Ramirez and the Dodgers look ready to run the shaky Chicago Cubs out of the playoffs early and extend their championship drought to 100 years.

Piniella's Problems

The Cubs have been pitiful in the playoffs under manager Lou Piniella. Thursday's loss dropped Chicago to 0-5 overall in his tenure. Here's a look at the numbers:


W-L 0-5
Runs per game 2.2
Hits per game 7.2
Team ERA 5.86
Ramirez hit a mammoth homer to increase his postseason record, Russell Martin had a three-run double and the Los Angeles Dodgers took advantage of four errors by the clumsy Cubs in a 10-3 victory Thursday night that gave them a 2-0 lead in the best-of-five NL division series.


"We're going to L.A., we need one more win. We're not there yet," Ramirez said. "They're the best team in the National League and anything could happen."

But unless the Cubs can show some semblance of the team that won 97 games this season, they're headed to another disappointing finish. Each infielder made an error during the game and the Dodgers scored four unearned runs in the second inning to jump ahead 5-0.

"It wasn't good baseball. In fact, the last two days, that's probably been the two worst games we've played all year," frustrated manager Lou Piniella said. "It wasn't fun to watch, I'll tell you that." Fast Facts

• The Dodgers take a 2-0 series lead and need just one win for their first postseason series victory since the 1988 World Series.

• The Cubs have now lost eight straight postseason games.

• Manny Ramirez hit his record 26th postseason homer. He's the first Dodgers player with homers in back-to-back playoff road games since Kirk Gibson in 1988.

• Joe Torre recorded his 78th playoff win (most all-time) on the 12th anniversary of his first.

-- ESPN research
Chicago became the 23rd major league team to lose the first two games at home in a best-of-five playoff series, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. Only one has come back to win -- the 2001 New York Yankees against Oakland.


Of course, that Yankees team was managed by Joe Torre, now in the Dodgers' dugout.

"When you give extra outs, chances are they're going to be capitalized on, and that's what we were able to do," Torre said.

The series switches to Dodger Stadium for Game 3 on Saturday night. Rich Harden will face Hiroki Kuroda, who pitched a four-hit shutout against the Cubs in Los Angeles on June 6.

"We're going to come out and try to jump on them again at home. That would be nice," Billingsley said.

Just a few days ago, Cubs fans were excited about the team's chances of winning its first World Series title since 1908. But suddenly, Chicago is on the brink of elimination. The Cubs must win two consecutive games in Los Angeles to get the series back to Wrigley.

Billingsley shut down Chicago's slumping lineup and Ramirez's 26th postseason home run landed on the roof of the batter's eye club in center, at least 450 feet away. It was his second jaw-dropping shot in two nights.

Meanwhile, the four errors by Chicago tied a division series record.

"This is a tough field. You're probably not going to see as many mistakes at Dodger Stadium because the playing surface is so good," said Martin, who capped the second-inning rally with three-run double. "The playing surface is the same for both teams. We just didn't make as many mistakes as them."

Billingsley allowed five hits and a run in 6 2/3 innings against the Cubs, who haven't played like the team with the NL's best record or one that went 55-26 this season in its home park.

After losing 7-2 in Wednesday night's opener when starter Ryan Dempster walked seven, they played tight -- even with ace Carlos Zambrano on the mound. Chicago dropped its eighth straight playoff game overall.

Billingsley said it "kind of" looks as though the Cubs are pressing.

"I'm not surprised, but I'm in shock," Zambrano said about his teammates' wobbly defense. "We have a good fielding team."

Consecutive errors by normally reliable Mark DeRosa and three-time Gold Glove winner Derrek Lee led to the Dodgers' five-run second.

Andre Ethier hit a leadoff single and when he took off for second on a hit-and-run, Cubs shortstop Ryan Theriot, who was headed to the bag, couldn't reach James Loney's bouncer. The single went off Theriot's bare hand and into left field, putting runners at the corners.

With the crowd chanting "Let's Go Z," Zambrano got a third strike past Matt Kemp for the first out. Blake DeWitt hit a hard grounder to second that was made for a double play, but DeRosa fumbled it -- the error allowing Ethier to score and putting runners at first and second.

Next, Lee muffed Casey Blake's grounder to first for another error, loading the bases before Billingsley struck out. But Rafael Furcal dragged a bunt past the pitcher's mound toward second and beat DeRosa's throw for an RBI single and a 2-0 lead.

With the bases still loaded, Martin drove a three-run double to left-center and a crowd of 42,136 at Wrigley Field fell silent as L.A. went ahead 5-0.

"It allowed me to be more aggressive," Billingsley said. "I didn't have to be too fine and I was still attacking hitters and keeping them off balance. That was a big thing for me to get the off-speed across."

Chicago's third error, this one on third baseman Aramis Ramirez, allowed Billingsley to reach in the fourth.

Manny Ramirez hit a solo shot in the fifth and Kemp had an RBI double off Neal Cotts in the seventh to make it 7-0.

Zambrano worked 6 1/3 innings, giving up seven runs -- three earned -- with seven strikeouts.

In the fifth, Ramirez leaned into the ivy-covered wall in left field to catch Jim Edmonds' fly. He flipped the ball to center fielder Kemp, who playfully slapped Ramirez on the shoulder.

Furcal and Ramirez each had an RBI single in the eighth.

The Cubs' postseason losing streak dates to the 2003 NLCS. They squandered a 3-1 lead against Florida, losing Game 6 when they were five outs from the World Series. Chicago dropped three straight to Arizona in the first round last year and now is in jeopardy of being swept again.

Chicago ended the shutout bid in the seventh when DeRosa and Edmonds hit consecutive two-out doubles. After Geovany Soto singled to make it first and third, Cory Wade came in to retire Kosuke Fukudome.

DeRosa added a two-run double in the ninth.

Game notes
The gametime temperature was 56 degrees, but the cool conditions didn't bother the warm-weather Dodgers for the second straight night.
 
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