Moving Teoscar Hernández in lineup pays off for Dodgers in sweeping win over Tigers

Dodgers right fielder Teoscar Hernández runs to first base after hitting a two-run double against the Detroit Tigers.
Dodgers right fielder Teoscar Hernández runs to first base after hitting a two-run double against the Detroit Tigers in the fifth inning of a 7-3 win Saturday at Dodger Stadium. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

Based on the Dodgers’ original lineup, Teoscar Hernández would have been in the dugout during the biggest at-bat of Saturday night’s game.

Originally, on a night the Dodgers gave normal No. 2 hitter Mookie Betts a scheduled day off following his battle with a stomach virus last week, the team had switch-hitter Tommy Edman following leadoff man Shohei Ohtani in the batting order.

About an hour before first pitch, however, the team announced a late change.

Read more:Mookie Betts' walk-off homer in 10th keeps Dodgers undefeated: 'We just don't quit'

In the new lineup, Hernández was bumped up to second from the cleanup spot. Edman, who has been a significantly worse hitter from the left side of the plate since joining the Dodgers last year, was dropped to eighth against Detroit Tigers right-hander Reese Olson.

The switch meant that, when the Tigers intentionally walked Ohtani with a runner on third and two outs in the fifth, it was Hernández who came to the plate in what was then a tied ballgame.

Sometimes in baseball, those are the fine margins on which games can be decided.

Dodgers pitcher Roki Sasaki delivers during the first inning Saturday at Dodger Stadium.
Dodgers pitcher Roki Sasaki delivers during the first inning Saturday at Dodger Stadium. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

On cue, Hernández produced the biggest swing of the Dodgers’ 7-3 win over the Tigers in his pivotal fifth-inning at-bat, lining a two-run double inside the third-base bag to help the Dodgers extend their perfect record to start the season to 5-0.

Like the four wins that preceded this one, the Dodgers’ performance was far from flawless. Rookie phenom Roki Sasaki failed to get out of the second inning in his first career Dodger Stadium start, struggling with his command again in a two-run, four-walk, 1 ⅔-inning outing.

The Dodgers’ bats, meanwhile, managed just two early runs off Olson; the first via a Freddie Freeman solo home run in the first, the second when Andy Pages ran through a stop sign from third-base coach Dino Ebel in the second inning ...

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