LOS ANGELES -- Kyle Tucker's first three at-bats produced hard-hit balls that resulted in outs. On his fourth, in Thursday's seventh inning, Shohei Ohtani broke to second base and Tucker turned on a full-count fastball out over the plate, lining it into the right-center field gap to further pad his new team's lead. It was precisely how the Los Angeles Dodgers envisioned it when they signed Tucker, the best free agent on the market, to a four-year, $240 million contract in January -- except the end.
Tucker attempted the Dodgers' indelible dance, in which they awkwardly sway their arms and their hips from side to side upon driving in runs, but Tucker got only halfway there. His arms moved, but his hips did not.
"Gotta maybe clean up the celebration thing a little more," Tucker admitted after his team's 8-2 drubbing of the Arizona Diamondbacks on Opening Day, "but we'll have plenty of time to work on that."
Indeed, it was merely one of 162 regular-season games, the first of what the Dodgers hope are many more wins and many more Tucker-aided runs -- but it provided a snapshot of what makes them so dangerous.
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