Dodgers get closer in West

Published: September 8, 2012 

Dodgers Giants Baseball

Los Angeles Dodgers' Adrian Gonzalez points after scoring on a Hanley Ramirez double during the ninth inning of a baseball game against the San Francisco Giants in San Francisco, Saturday, Sept. 8, 2012. Giants catcher Buster Posey is in the background. The Dodgers won 3-2. (AP Photo/George Nikitin)

GEORGE NIKITIN — AP

Ramirez hits go-ahead double in the ninth innings as L.A. trims a game off San Francisco’s division lead

SAN FRANCISCO — Adrian Gonzalez has been around all of two weeks, and he is certain the Los Angeles Dodgers are a playoff team. Whether National League West champions or wild card, he’s not sure.

Hanley Ramirez helped the cause by hitting a go-ahead RBI double in the top of the ninth inning, and the undermanned Dodgers trimmed a game off their division deficit with a 3-2 win over the first-place San Francisco Giants on Saturday.

It will take plenty more timely hits down the stretch for the Dodgers to return to the playoffs after a two-year absence. They’ve been hard to come by, too.

“We’re getting there,” Gonzalez said. “I don’t know about winning the division. We’re getting there somehow.”

Gonzalez led off the ninth with a triple against Jeremy Affeldt (1-2), then Ramirez came through with a double to the gap in right-center — the Dodgers’ first hit in 15 tries so far this series with runners in scoring position.

Gonzalez, who came to Los Angeles in an Aug. 25 trade from the Red Sox, clapped his hands when he reached third in a rare display of emotion. An inconsistent swing has given him fits all season.

“You guys don’t go down the tunnel after at-bats. Helmets are being slammed and chairs are being thrown around,” Gonzalez said. “It’s actually true, absolutely.”

Ronald Belisario (5-1) pitched out of trouble in the eighth for the victory, helping Los Angeles snap a four-game losing streak to rival San Francisco in a key September weekend.

Buster Posey hit an RBI single in the first, and Brandon Belt added a go-ahead RBI with a groundout in the eighth for the Giants, who lead the Dodgers by 4½ games.

The Dodgers were without center fielder Matt Kemp because of his troublesome left shoulder. He received a cortisone shot and also won’t play Sunday. Infielder Adam Kennedy is expected to be done for the season after injuring his groin during Friday’s 5-2 loss. Manager Don Mattingly said Kennedy was hurt when the third baseman tried to barehand Hunter Pence’s infield bouncer for an RBI single in the sixth inning.

Los Angeles pulled through with players down as it has many times in 2012.

“It’s going to be a fight and we know it,” Giants manager Bruce Bochy said. “It’s our nature. We don’t do anything easy in our games. There’s a lot of baseball left.”

Pinch-runner Alex Castellanos scored the tying run on a wild pitch in the top of the eighth to chase Giants starter Matt Cain. Juan Rivera doubled to start the inning and A.J. Ellis sacrificed him to third, where Castellanos entered. Bobby Abreu came in to pinch-hit and Cain threw wildly on a full count for ball four as Abreu drew a walk.

Santiago Casilla, Friday night’s winning pitcher, relieved and escaped further damage but the Giants’ bullpen couldn’t pull off a second consecutive win.

Brandon League pitched the ninth for Los Angeles to earn his 11th save overall and second since joining the Dodgers from Seattle on July 30. He allowed Gregor Blanco’s two-out double before retiring pinch-hitter Hector Sanchez on a liner to third.

Cain, who tossed a perfect game June 13 at home against the Astros, worked into the eighth inning but wound up with a third straight no-decision. He allowed two runs and six hits in 71⁄3 innings, struck out five and walked two.

Cain shut down the middle of the Dodgers lineup most of the way just as Tim Lincecum did a night earlier. That included Gonzalez, who came in with four career homers and 13 RBI against Cain. Gonzalez’s triple was his first hit of the day after he grounded into an inning-ending double play in the first and a pair of flyouts.

Cain threw two wild pitches in a game for just the second time in his career.

Chris Capuano gave up two runs and five hits in seven innings but saw his winless stretch reach five starts. He is 0-2 and has one victory over his past nine outings.

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