Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Early exit for deGrom, comeback win for Phils

- By Mike Cranston

PHILADELPH­IA » Jacob deGrom felt great in his return from the disabled list. He didn’t allow a run or even a hit.

Trouble was, deGrom lasted only one inning,

DeGrom needed 45 pitches to get three outs, and pinch-hitter Nick Williams had a go-ahead, three-run homer off Paul Seward in the sixth inning that carried the Phillies over the Mets 4-2 Sunday.

“I don’t think I’ve ever seen somebody throw 40-something pitches and not give up a run,” Mets manager Mickey Callaway said.

After missing a start because of a hyperexten­ded right elbow, deGrom said he had control of only his fastball and slider as he walked his first three batters. New York removed him as a precaution because of the length of the inning and the 59-minute rain delay that preceded it.

“He felt fine. We just didn’t feel good sending him back out,” Callaway said. “We can’t do that to anybody. That’s a lot of pitches for one inning.”

Philadelph­ia fouled off 20 pitches in the first. That led to a strange scenario of deGrom being pinch-hit for in the second inning of a scoreless game.

“I was kind of surprised, honestly,” deGrom said. “I definitely would have liked to have gone back out there. The reasoning, I understand. But who wants to pitch one inning as a starter?”

Cesar Hernandez, Aaron Altherr and Odubel Herrera each walked on six pitches. DeGrom struck out Rhys Hoskins, got Carlos Santana to ground back to the mound and fanned Maikel Franco to end a 10-pitch at-bat. That extended deGrom’s scoreless streak to 19⅓ innings, the longest active streak in the majors.

The pitches were deGrom’s most in a big league inning, topping his 37 at a rookie in the first inning at Atlanta on July 2, 2014.

“I’d like to think I would have been able to figure it out,” deGrom said. “But who knows?”

The first inning lasted 39 minutes and produced no runs. The Phillies’ Aaron Nola (6-1) worked out of a bases-loaded, one-out jam by striking out Wilmer Flores and retiring Michael Conforto on a ground out.

Philadelph­ia trailed 1-0 when Williams batted for Nola and connected on a slider with two outs off Sewald (0-3), the second of four Mets relievers. It was a highlight in a difficult season for Williams, who has been relegated mostly to the bench.

“This spot is maturing me a lot,” he said. “It’s a spot I’ve never been in, and I think it’s helped me grow as a player and a person. I think I am learning the game a lot better, and the chances I do get I think are helping me to become a complete hitter.”

Carlos Santana added an eighth-inning homer off Jeurys Famila as the Phillies won for the fifth time in six games.

Yoenis Cespedes’ sixth-inning homer was the only run off Nola, who allowed nine hits in six innings. Asdrubal Cabrera hit an RBI double in the seventh against Tommy Hunter.

Edubray Ramos worked around a walk in the ninth for his first big league save as the Phillies improved to 8-14 against the NL East. He replaced struggling closer Hector Neris, Friday.

“We’re going to be creative,” manager Gabe Kapler said of his closer situation.

New York has lost 17 of 25 after an 11-1 start, dropping nine of its last 11.

Luis Guillorme pinch hit for deGrom in the second and singled in his first major who blew a save league at-bat.

STREAKING

Herrera’s first-inning walk extended his on-base streak to 41 games. He added a single. He is tied for the Phillies’ fifth longest on-base streak with Pete Rose (1982) and Don Hurst (1929). Mike Schmidt holds the record (56 in 1981-82).

 ?? DERIK HAMILTON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Phillies outfielder Odubel Herrera, Cesar Hernandez Sunday. left, celebrates a victory over the New York Mets with
DERIK HAMILTON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Phillies outfielder Odubel Herrera, Cesar Hernandez Sunday. left, celebrates a victory over the New York Mets with

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