Dodgers tie MLB record with latest HR at home

LOS ANGELES -- No team in major league history has homered in more consecutive home games than these Los Angeles Dodgers.

They only got one against Sonny Gray and the Cincinnati Reds, and it was all they needed.

A.J. Pollock hit a three-run home run in the sixth inning, and the Dodgers tied the big league record by hitting a homer in their 32nd consecutive home game during a 3-2 victory on Wednesday.

Pollock broke open a scoreless game when he connected off Gray (0-3), providing the Dodgers with all of their runs in their fourth consecutive victory. The Dodgers don't ascribe much importance to their streak, other than the majors-best nine home victories generated from it.

"It's a cool stat, for sure,'' Pollock said. "Honestly, there's a lot of power on this team. These guys are really trying to do damage. They're trying to get pitches to hit, and we like hitting at home.''

Los Angeles has homered in every regular-season game at Dodger Stadium since Aug. 21, including 13 straight this season. While the Dodgers matched the mark set by the Colorado Rockies over three months of the 1999 season, they won't get the chance to break it until April 26, when they return from a road trip.

Gray remained winless with the Reds despite a fourth straight solid start, yielding only two hits and striking out nine over six innings. After the Reds intentionally walked Cody Bellinger, Pollock drove his low curveball into the left-field bleachers.

"The Dodgers, they've got a great lineup,'' said Gray, who was happy with the location of his fateful pitch. "They're going to grind. They're going to put pressure on you.''

The back-to-back defending National League champions are second in the majors this season with 38 homers in 20 games. They've hit a majors-best 27 homers in their 13 home games, starting with a record eight homers on Opening Day to pick up right where they left off in September, when they finished second in the majors behind the New York Yankees with 235 homers.

Walker Buehler (2-0) pitched three-hit ball into the seventh inning for the Dodgers, striking out eight and allowing one unearned run.

"He's kind of like [a] sports car,'' Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said of his prized right-hander, who gave up five earned runs in two of his first three starts this season. "If there's anything just not right, then he's off. He worked through it, and we needed that one.''

The Dodgers made two errors and allowed a run in the ninth, but Kenley Jansen persevered for his fifth save.

Yasiel Puig scored both of Cincinnati's runs against his former team, but the Reds have lost four straight. Cincinnati is 0-7 on the road.

Both teams finished the brisk game with just three hits, but Los Angeles wrapped up a six-game homestand with a three-game sweep of Cincinnati.

BUEHLER'S DAY

Buehler looked sharp from the early start at Chavez Ravine, hitting 99 mph with his fastball while retiring 17 of 18 batters following a leadoff walk. He even picked off a runner for the first time in his career in the second, catching Jose Iglesias off first after the shortstop got the Reds' only hit in the first six innings.

BELL RUNG (UP)

Cincinnati manager David Bell was ejected in the fifth inning after having words from the dugout with plate umpire Nick Mahrley. Bell, who got tossed for the second time already in his first season with the Reds, said he was thrown out for telling Mahrley to "pay attention to the game.''

"I didn't say one word the entire game about the strike zone,'' Bell said. "Some of our hitters were upset about a couple of calls. It was never over the line or anything, but when the umpire continued to look into our dugout -- which I understand why he was doing that, because guys were yelling -- I was just saying, 'I will take care of this. Pay attention to the game.'''

LITTLE RED MACHINE

The Reds went 3-for-29, and their team batting average is a majors-worst .200. "We believe in our offense, and we have confidence it's going to happen very soon,'' Bell said.

RARE POP

Joey Votto popped out to Bellinger in foul territory in the eighth inning. Incredibly, that's the first time the lefty-hitting Votto has popped out to the first baseman in his entire 1,592-game career, which began in 2007.

TRAINER'S ROOM

Dodgers: Justin Turner didn't start for the second straight game after getting hamstring tightness on Monday. He struck out as a pinch hitter in the eighth. ... Bellinger returned to the lineup after sitting out Tuesday. He was hit by a 96 mph fastball on Monday.

UP NEXT

Reds: Tanner Roark (0-0, 4.30 ERA) gets the ball Thursday to open a weekend series in San Diego. He has yet to pitch six full innings for Cincinnati.

Dodgers: Julio Urias (0-1, 5.27 ERA) takes the mound in Milwaukee on Thursday night. Urias also faced the Brewers last week in L.A., taking the loss while allowing five earned runs in five innings.