CHICAGO -AP- Travis Wood and three other relievers combined for seven perfect innings after starter Jason Hammel left with cramps, and the Chicago Cubs held the Los Angeles Dodgers to one hit in a 2-0 victory Monday.
Hammel exited after his right hamstring cramped while warming up for the third inning. Wood (3-0) pitched four perfect innings in his longest stint of the season.
Justin GrimmPedro Strop and Hector Rondon pitched one inning each for the Cubs, with Rondon getting his ninth save. He has converted 20 straight save opportunities dating back to Aug. 14.
 
Cubs 'pen perfect for 7 innings in 1-hit win over Dodgers
 
 
Ben Zobrist extended his hitting streak to a career-high-tying 16 games. He singled leading off the fifth and reached third when right fielder Yasiel Puig misplayed the ball. He scored on Jason Heyward's infield single.
Anthony Rizzo drove home Heyward with a double to right.
Zobrist has reached base in his last 35 starts, the longest streak by a Cub since Starlin Castro's 40 in 2011.
The Cubs (35-14) have the best record in baseball and are a season-high 21 games over .500. They have won six straight since dropping eight of 12.
They entered Monday 6 1/2 games in front of the second-placePittsburgh Pirates in the NL Central.
The Dodgers had won six of seven entering this Memorial Day matinee. The Dodgers arrived at their Chicago hotel at 3:30 a.m. following a 4-2 win over Mets on Sunday in New York, but managerDave Roberts said before the game that his team had no problem with the quick turnaround.
"It makes it a lot easier after you win a game like we did last night," he said. "To be here (at Wrigley Field) in this environment, it's pretty exciting. But it's kind of business as usual."
Dodgers starting pitcher Alex Wood (1-4) gave up two runs on seven hits in five innings, striking out seven and walking three. His normal turn would have been last Friday, but he injured his left triceps swinging a bat in his previous start, May 21 in San Diego. Nineteen-year-old Julio Urias started in his place Friday.
MEMORIAL DAY LAMENT
Cubs manager Joe Maddon said his father, uncles and grandparents served in the military -- and that his Uncle Buzz was a POW.
"The one regret I have in my own personal life is the fact that I never did serve," Maddon said. "At the time, it was very unpopular. The Vietnam War was going on, and I was in college. At the time, you really thought you were very fortunate not to have to do that. But retrospectively, that would be the one life experience that I missed out on. I wish I hadn't."
 

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