Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Harper gets back on track with two homers

- By Howard Fendrich

WASHINGTON» Bryce Harper showed up to Nationals Park, his old stomping grounds, about six hours before Wednesday night’s first pitch to get treatment for a bothersome back, then got a chance to stay off his feet a bit as the designated hitter instead of an outfielder.

All Harper did was smack a pair of homers to help his current club, the Philadelph­ia Phillies, keep their playoff hopes afloat — and push his former club, the Washington Nationals, to the brink of eliminatio­n a year after they won the World Series.

With Harper leading the way, and homers from Andrew McCutchen, Didi Gregorius and Andrew Knapp, too, the Phillies beat the Nationals 12-3 Wednesday night.

“We’re at the part of the season where I need to be on the field,” Harper said. “Nobody wants to hear any excuses.”

The Phillies are 28-29 and third in the NL East but still in the chase for a playoff berth with three games to play in this pandemic-truncated season.

The loss ended Washington’s modest — albeit seasonbest — four-game winning streak and left its record at 23-33.

“It’s really tough to come back every year,” said Nationals slugger Juan Soto, who homered in the ninth, “because everybody is expecting things from you and your team.”

Harper, who left the nation’s capital for a $330 million contract with the team up I-95 before last season, connected off Erick Fedde twice to reach 13 homers for the year — on a 94 mph sinker in the first inning and a 77 mph curveball in the sixth to make it 3-1.

Harper was walked intentiona­lly in his other three plate appearance­s. He is only the fourth player in MLB history with two homers and a

trio of intentiona­l walks in a game: Albert Pujols, David Wright and Claudell Washington are the others.

Zach Eflin (4-2) earned the win by giving up three runs in eight-plus innings.

The secret to his success with his curveball?

“I stopped throwing it like a baby,” Eflin said.

Fedde (2-4) allowed three runs in seven innings. But Kyle McGowin gave up McCutchen’s solo homer, and Ryne Harper served up three-run shots by Gregorius and Knapp.

Until Wednesday, Harper was hitting just .143 in nine games against Washington this season, with zero extra-base hits, one RBI and 14 strikeouts.

Manager Joe Girardi said Harper’s back has been bothering him off and on about four or five weeks.

“Some days are good. Some days are bad. I’ve just tried to stay in the lineup,” Harper said. “This is something that will get better in the offseason and get to full strength.”

for

 ?? NICK WASS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Phillies’ Bryce Harper, right, celebrates his home run with J.T. Realmuto during the sixth inning on Wednesday. It was Harper’s second homer of the night.
NICK WASS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Phillies’ Bryce Harper, right, celebrates his home run with J.T. Realmuto during the sixth inning on Wednesday. It was Harper’s second homer of the night.

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