
"Yamamoto finished his night going seven innings, allowing one run on one hit with 10 strikeouts and one walk. Yamamoto became the first Dodgers pitcher to throw three consecutive games with seven or more innings pitched and at least 10 strikeouts since Clayton Kershaw in 2017. He also became the first Dodgers pitcher since Dazzy Vance in 1925 to throw three consecutive games of seven or more innings with just one hit or fewer allowed."
"The first inning didn't start out ideally, as Yamamoto walked the second batter he faced, then allowed a double that put the Giants up 1-0. But after that, the right-hander settled in and retired 20 straight hitters to keep the Giants off the board for six consecutive innings. Yamamoto finished his night going seven innings, allowing one run on one hit with 10 strikeouts and one walk."
"The Dodgers offense was no-hit through the first three innings until Freddie Freeman broke it up with a single in the fourth. After a walk from Max Muncy, the Dodgers left both runners stranded with three consecutive outs. The did not get on the board until the seventh inning when Michael Conforto slugged his 11th home run of the season. The solo shot tied the game, 1-1, and took Yamamoto off the hook for the loss."
Yamamoto allowed a first-inning run after a walk and a double, then retired 20 straight hitters and finished seven innings, allowing one run on one hit with 10 strikeouts and one walk. He became the first Dodgers pitcher since Clayton Kershaw (2017) with three consecutive starts of seven-plus innings and at least 10 strikeouts. Over his last three starts he has thrown 22.2 innings with three runs allowed, six hits, 30 strikeouts and three walks. The Dodgers offense provided little support; Michael Conforto hit a seventh-inning solo to tie the game, but an error by Mookie Betts led to the Giants walking off 5-1 in extra innings.
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