Dodgers: Cody Bellinger’s grand slam caps off insane 11-run first inning

Dodgers OF Cody Bellinger (Photo by Tom Pennington/Getty Images)
Dodgers OF Cody Bellinger (Photo by Tom Pennington/Getty Images) /
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Raise your hand if you were nervous after the St. Louis Cardinals took a 1-0 lead when Paul Goldschmidt took Walker Buehler deep in the top of the first.

Don’t lie, Los Angeles Dodgers fans, we saw some of you on Twitter not too happy about it.

Well, how are you feeling now? All it took was 20 minutes for the defending champs to open up a 10-run lead … in that very same inning.

And it was capped off with Cody Bellinger’s first home run of the 2021 season, which happened to be a grand slam.

The Dodgers scored 11 runs in the first inning against the Cardinals.

Let’s break this one down for all the folks who weren’t able to see what happened.

Carlos Martinez took the mound for the Cards. He lasted 0.2 innings. But when the damage was done, he was charged with TEN earned runs on six hits and four walks. And all it took was 39 pitches.

It all started with a Mookie Betts leadoff double. Then Max Muncy walked. Then Justin Turner drove in Betts with a single and an error advanced Muncy to third and Turner to second. Then Bellinger drove in Muncy and Turner with a long single. Then Chris Taylor walked. Then Gavin Lux singled, Bellinger scored on another error, and all the runners advanced a base. Then Austin Barnes walked.

It wasn’t until the pitcher’s spot in the lineup that the Cardinals were able to record an out. Betts came up again and delivered an RBI single. Muncy flied out. Turner walked. Then Bellinger delivered the likely final blow.

And how funny was this error? That first inning had it all.

Somewhere, thousands of Braves fans just hid under their bed. The Dodgers’ last 11-run first inning? That came in October against Atlanta in Game 3 of the NLCS, which featured a 15-3 Dodger’ victory and a colossal momentum shift in that series, which ultimately resulted in a World Series berth.

We hate to get ahead of ourselves, but the offensive barrage on Wednesday night just clinched us another series … eight innings early.