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Carlos Rodón crumbles, Aaron Judge keeps struggling as Dodgers ice Yankees for 2-0 World Series lead



LOS ANGELES — Shortly before Game 2 of the World Series began, Ice Cube emerged from an opening in the center field wall at Dodger Stadium.

Dressed in a shiny blue Dodgers jacket, a matching hat and Nikes, the rapper made his way from the warning track to the mound and then home plate. Each step came with a bar, as the Los Angeles native performed “Bow Down” and “It Was A Good Day” in an effort to hype up his hometown crowd.

A dancing Alex Verdugo — a former Dodger — also enjoyed the performance, even if the first song ended with a shot at his Yankees.

“Bow down to a team that’s greater than you,” O’Shea Jackson Sr. demanded while pointing toward the Yankees’ dugout. He then asked a roaring Chavez Ravine, “Are we going to win Game 2 or what?” before transitioning to his second song.

The answer turned out to be yes, as the Dodgers took Game 2, 4-2, on Saturday. After getting walked off in Game 1, the Yankees now face a 2-0 series deficit with the Fall Classic heading back to New York.

Carlos Rodón played a large part in the Yankees’ inability to tie the series, as their No. 2 starter only lasted 3.1 innings in the first World Series start of his career. The lefty allowed four earned runs and six hits, including three homers, over his short outing.

“This lineup’s pretty potent,” Rodón foreshadowed on Friday. “They can definitely swing it.”

The Dodgers’ first homer came from the red-hot Tommy Edman, who pulled a solo shot in the second inning. Juan Soto quickly tied the game with a bases-empty blast of his own off Yoshinobu Yamamoto in the third.

However, well-established Yankees killer Teoscar Hernández and Freddie Freeman — the Dodgers’ Game 1, grand slam hero — hit back-to-back bombs in the bottom of the inning.

Hernández logged a two-run shot. Meanwhile, all three of the dingers Rodón surrendered came on fastballs, which he threw at a 60% clip.

While the longball victimized Rodón on Saturday, Yamamoto didn’t flinch after Soto took him deep.

The Japanese star looked like he was worth the 12-year, $325 million contract the Dodgers gave him — and outbid the Yankees with — last winter. With countless people watching him and Shohei Ohtani back home, Yamamoto cruised for 6.1 innings.

Soto’s homer marked the Yankees’ only hit off the righty. They added a run in the ninth when a Giancarlo Stanton single ricocheted off third base, scoring Soto.

No other Yankee had a memorable night at the plate, but Aaron Judge disappointed again while going 0-for-4 with three strikeouts. The presumed American League MVP is now 6-for-40 with 19 strikeouts this October, continuing a stretch of poor playoff production that dates back a few years.

“He’s so good and so mentally tough and good at dealing with all of it,” Boone said of Judge before Game 2. “So I want him to get results, obviously, and I want him to get hot and get going, but I feel like he will.”

It wasn’t all on Judge, as the Yankees failed to score with the bases loaded and one out in the ninth after Anthony Volpe struck out and pinch-hitter Jose Trevino flew out.

That said, the Yankees need Judge to find his groove if they want to come back in this series. With Yankee Stadium set to host its first World Series game since 2009 on Monday, the odds are not in the Bombers’ favor.

But this group has preached resiliency all season and shown an ability to bounce-back after adversity. That didn’t happen Saturday, but the Yankees will try to change their fortunes with Clarke Schmidt making his first World Series start in Game 3.

Walker Buehler will start for Los Angeles as it seeks a 3-0 lead following an off day. At the time of publication, it was unclear if Ohtani will be available for that game, as the superstar hurt his shoulder on a late stolen base attempt in Game 2.



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