“This is the United States of America — the wealthiest country in the history of the world. It is indecent to rip food out of the mouths of children and everyday Americans,”
Los Angeles committed a season-high four errors, two of which led to all three Mets runs.off hard-luck loser Landon Knack (2-2), who permitted one earned run and four hits in six innings for the NL West leaders. He struck out five, walked none and set down 11 straight during one stretch.
The slugger connected on the next pitch after third baseman Max Muncy booted a two-out grounder by Soto, who beat a rushed throw to first.It was the 236th career homer and 10th this season for Alonso, who had gone 16 games and 65 at-bats without a longball — both career worsts.Senga struck out five and walked four in 5 1/3 innings of five-hit ball. He retired cleanup batter Will Smith on a bases-loaded grounder to end the fifth.
Ryne Stanek induced an inning-ending double play in the sixth, Max Kranick pitched two perfect innings and Reed Garrett worked a one-hit ninth for his fifth major league save and first this season.Center fielder Tyrone Taylor
to stop the Dodgers’ early momentum in the first. Already leading 1-0, they had runners at second and third with nobody out when Smith sent a flyball to shallow right-center. Taylor sprinted in and to his left to make the catch, then threw out Mookie Betts at the plate for a double play. Betts was initially ruled safe, but the call was overturned following a replay challenge.
Senga went 202 batters and a career-best eight games without allowing a home run untilBut back-to-back bogeys followed after Scheffler hit tee shots into bunkers at Nos. 12 and 13. He got those strokes back with birdies at Nos. 16 and 17, only to miss the fairway at No. 18 to finish with another bogey.
The only player to win the Byron Nelson and Colonial in the same season was Ben Hogan in 1946. Scheffler earlier this monthwhen matching the PGA Tour’s 72-hole scoring record at 31-under 253 for an eight-stroke win.
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump signed executive orders Friday intended to quadruple domestic production ofwithin the next 25 years, a goal experts say the United States is highly unlikely to reach.