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Julio Urias' 20th win keeps Los Angeles Dodgers alive in NL West race

MLB

One last game, one last chance for the Los Angele Dodgers to grab a share of their ninth consecutive National League West title.

The playoff-bound Dodgers (105-56) must beat the Milwaukee Brewers again on Sunday and hope the rival first-place Giants (106-55) lose again to the Padres to tie for the title. That would send them and the Giants to a deciding Game 163 in San Francisco on Monday.

"If we don't win, it doesn't matter what anyone else does," third baseman Justin Turner said.

Julio Urias became the Dodgers' first 20-game winner since Clayton Kershaw in 2014, pitching one-run ball into the seventh inning as Los Angeles beat the Brewers 8-3 on Saturday night to extend the NL West race to the final day of the regular season.

"The only focus for us is to win tomorrow," manager Dave Roberts said. "That's all we can control."

The Giants lost 3-2 to San Diego earlier Saturday, reducing their lead to one game. The Dodgers were watching before their game began.

"There was a good buzz going around the clubhouse heading into the game knowing the opportunity for us," Turner said.

The Dodgers or Giants are guaranteed to have the most wins of a team that fails to finish first, bettering the 1909 Chicago Cubs and 1942 Brooklyn Dodgers, who had 104 wins each.

According to ESPN Stats & Information, it's the first time in MLB history that a division has multiple 105-win teams and the first time they were even in the same league. Neither the Dodgers nor Giants have led by more than five games all season.

Los Angeles won its 14th consecutive home game, tying a 100-year-old franchise record.

Urias (20-3) gave up one hit, struck out seven and walked two over 6⅓ innings in his 32nd start of the regular season, becoming the majors' only 20-game winner this year and the first Mexican-born pitcher to lead the majors in wins. The 25-year-old left-hander retired 16 in a row after allowing a double to Eduardo Escobar in the first.

"The focus, adrenaline and energy level was all at peak position knowing what was at stake," Urias said through an interpreter.

Urias left in the seventh as part of a double switch, handing the ball to Roberts, who grabbed his arm to chat before the pitcher walked off to a standing ovation from the crowd of 49,705.

"He just said, 'Great job, great season,'" Urias said. "I was very pleased and very happy with the ovation of the crowd."

He finished his first full season in the rotation with a 2.96 ERA and 195 strikeouts.

"It's a dream season. Very blessed and very thankful," Urias said. "I was very blessed all year to stay healthy."

Kershaw won 21 games in 2014, when he earned the last of his three Cy Young Awards. He watched from the dugout as Urias became the fourth Mexican-born pitcher to win 20 games in the majors, joining former Dodger Fernando Valenzuela and Milwaukee's Teddy Higuera (both 1986) and Esteban Loiaza of the Chicago White Sox (2003).

Urias hasn't lost since June 21 at San Diego. He is 11-0 with a 2.03 ERA since then.

"It's a feather in his cap winning 20 games. Those are hard to come by these days," Roberts said. "It'll be something he'll always remember and be proud of."

The Dodgers got a three-run homer from Turner in the first, a two-run blast by AJ Pollock in the fourth and a solo shot by Corey Seager in the fifth, giving them 17 homers in their past four games. Max Muncy's RBI double in the eighth made it 8-1.

Trea Turner went 2-for-4 to extend his career-high 18-game hitting streak and all but lock up the NL batting title with a .328 average. His closest competition, former Washington teammate Juan Soto, went 0-for-3 against Boston, dropping his average to .315.

Trea Turner will become the first Dodger to win a batting crown since Tommy Davis claimed back-to-back titles in 1962 and 1963.

Christian Yelich's fielder's choice groundout scored Willy Adames, who walked, to give the NL Central-champion Brewers an early lead. Urias walked Adames again with two outs in the sixth before Escobar struck out swinging to end the inning.

The Dodgers tied the franchise record for consecutive home wins set by the Brooklyn Robins. They won 14 in a row at Ebbets Field from April 21 to May 12, 1921. Los Angeles has won six in a row overall.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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