Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Phillies edge Padres in Game 3

- By Dan Gelston

PHILADELPH­IA >> Kyle Schwarber led off with his latest scintillat­ing home run, Jean Segura atoned for a run-scoring error with a go-ahead single and the Philadelph­ia Phillies edged the San Diego Padres 4-2 on Friday night to take a 2-1 lead in the NL Championsh­ip Series.

Game 4 is Saturday at Citizens Bank Park.

The Phillies returned home to another packed house for the first NLCS game in the city since 2010 and are now only two wins away from playing for their first World Series championsh­ip since 2008.

The Phillies can take solace they survived the Padres without playing their best baseball. Outside of Schwarber’s homer — Schwarbomb­s as they’re affectiona­tely known in Philly — the big bats were pretty quiet. Segura and Rhys Hoskins also made costly errors that made the game closer than it ever needed to be.

Yet starter Ranger Suarez survived shoddy fielding to earn the win. He walked none and allowed only two hits and one earned run over 68 pitches in five sharp innings. Zach Eflin and Jose Alvarado each tossed scoreless innings and Seranthony Dominguez earned a sixout save as the Phillies head into a Game 4 expected to be largely a bullpen game.

With one out and a runner on in the ninth, Dominguez struck out Jurickson Profar on a fullcount check swing that sent the outfielder into a rage. Profar cursed out the plate umpire, threw his helmet and kicked it as he stormed off the field.

Padres postseason ace Joe Musgrove couldn’t get out of the sixth inning and left the mound to Alec Bohm exhorting the crowd to get louder after his RBI double to right in the sixth past a diving Juan Soto made it 4-2.

Musgrove scuffled from the first batter.

Schwarber worked a full count and then smashed his second solo homer of the series into the right field seats. Schwarber, who led the National League with 46 homers, also hit a jaw-dropping, 488-foot solo drive in Game 1. Alas, this blast only sailed 405 feet.

The Phillies seemed poised to jump on Musgrove in the inning after Hoskins and J.T. Realmuto walked.

Musgrove acknowledg­ed this week that he had been “beaten down by the crowds” early in his postseason career. The Phillies fans — another sellout crowd of 45,279 went wild on every pitch — were frothing when Bryce Harper came to hit.

Harper, though, hit into a double play and Musgrove retired Nick Castellano­s on a grounder to escape further damage. Musgrove threw 22 pitches without an out, then needed only pitches two pitches to get three outs.

Musgrove pitched out of another jam in the second when Bryson Stott, who hit a one-out double, was stranded on third.

Suarez, meanwhile, had struggled of late and walked five in 3 1/3 innings in his Game 2 NLDS start at Atlanta. But hey, this is what makes baseball so great — it was Suarez who mowed down the Padres in rapid succession.

The lefty threw only six pitches in the third inning. Suarez, who went 10-7 this season, could have pitched deeper in the game but manager Rob Thomson wants him fresh for another outing if the series goes long.

 ?? TIM NWACHUKWU — GETTY IMAGES ?? The Phillies’ Kyle Schwarber (12) tosses his bat after hitting a solo home run during the first inning against the Padres in Game 3of the NL Championsh­ip Series at Citizens Bank Park on Friday in Philadelph­ia.
TIM NWACHUKWU — GETTY IMAGES The Phillies’ Kyle Schwarber (12) tosses his bat after hitting a solo home run during the first inning against the Padres in Game 3of the NL Championsh­ip Series at Citizens Bank Park on Friday in Philadelph­ia.

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