Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Nola pitches 9-inning shutout, Phils beat Cards

Aaron Nola goes nine innings for first time as Phillies blank Cardinals »

- By Dan Gelston

PHILADELPH­IA » Aaron Nola laughed when he said he was ready to fight if Phillies manager Joe Girardi didn’t let him start the ninth inning No rumble needed. “I knew he had never had a nine-inning shutout and that was important to him and that’s why I let him go,” Girardi said.

Nola struck out 10 and threw a two-hitter for his first nine-inning shutout in the majors, leading the Philadelph­ia Phillies to a 2-0 win over the St. Louis Cardinals on Sunday.

Bryce Harper homered and had three hits.

Nola threw a pair of doublehead­er-shortened complete games last season, including a shutout. But he never pitched into the ninth inning over his first 142 starts.

First baseman Rhys Hoskins tossed Nola the ball and saluted the righty after the final out. Nola (11) threw 109 pitches and did little more than give a small fist bump when he completed the milestone.

Nola pitched like the ace the Phillies need if they want to get back to the playoffs for the first time since 2011. Nola allowed only two singles and retired 13 straight going into the eighth. He did not walk a batter.

Nolan needed to become a stopper — and he came up big a day after the Cardinals’ 9-4 win, shutting down for a day the critics that say he’s not a true ace in a division loaded with stars like Max Scherzer and Jacob deGrom.

“For sure I hear it and, no it doesn’t bother me,” Nola said.

He took no-decisions in his first two starts and lost his last outing, when he needed 92 pitches to get through five innings against the New York Mets. Nola had a nine-pitch first on Sunday, and struck out two in the second, setting the tone for one of the more dominant starts of his career.

Harper sat out Saturday’s loss after waking up with tightness in his lower back. The Phillies’ star outfielder looked fine when he crushed his third homer of the year into the second deck in right. His 111.8 mph shot off righty John Gant (01) went 425 feet.

Harper came in batting .238 — yet ranked a solid 11th with a .994 OPS. He also walked and doubled off Gant, and Harper singled off reliever Giovanny Gallegos in the seventh.

Because of the balky back, Harper said he might need a game or two a month off the rest of the year to protect his health for the long haul and would be “smarter and more cautious off the field.”

“September, October, absolutely, I’m going to go out there and do my job to win games,” Harper said.

Gant struck out five and walked five in five innings.

Alec Bohm touched him for a sacrifice fly in the fifth inning for a 2-0 lead.

Nola has long been considered Philadelph­ia’s ace, often by success like his 17-win season in 2018. Sometimes by default, when he won 17 games combined over the last two seasons at the top of an underwhelm­ing staff.

“I think of you look at his numbers every year, it says ace,” Girardi said.

Yadier Molina led off the second with a single. That was the Cardinals’ only hit until Paul DeJong singled to open the eighth. Nola struck out Austin Dean to end the eighth and earn a rousing ovation from 10,876 fans.

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 ?? LAURENCE KESTERSON - FOR THE
ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Aaron Nola delivers a pitch in the ninth inning of the Phillies 2-0 victory over the
Cardinals on Sunday.
LAURENCE KESTERSON - FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Aaron Nola delivers a pitch in the ninth inning of the Phillies 2-0 victory over the Cardinals on Sunday.
 ?? LAURENCE KESTERSON — FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Phillies starter Aaron Nola, right, smiles as he shakes hands with manager Joe Girardi after pitching a complete game Sunday’s in a 2-0victory over the Cardinals.
LAURENCE KESTERSON — FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Phillies starter Aaron Nola, right, smiles as he shakes hands with manager Joe Girardi after pitching a complete game Sunday’s in a 2-0victory over the Cardinals.

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