Lodi News-Sentinel

» PHILLIES SHUT DOWN GIANTS IN ROUT

- By Matt Breen

PHILADELPH­IA — Carlos Santana placed his hands on his head Monday night and rounded first base with defeat. Trying desperatel­y to pull himself from a season-long funk, Santana had crushed a ball 410 feet and over the center-field fence. But San Francisco center fielder Gorkys Hernandez leaped against the Citizens Bank Park wall and grabbed it.

The Phillies blamed Santana’s slump on poor luck. Manager Gabe Kapler called him the unluckiest hitter in baseball. And here Santana was again, with his hands on his head and cursing his luck. Or so he thought. But the ball slipped from Hernandez’s glove in the fifth inning and landed for a home run. What once looked like a hard-luck out became one of the four homers the Phillies hit in an 11-0 win. Santana’s luck may be starting to shift.

Santana’s three-run homer was his fifth hit in the last four games. All five hits have been for extra bases. It took Santana 22 games to record his previous five extrabase hits. His OPS (.653) has risen 84 points since Friday. Santana is still hitting the ball hard, but he’s recently been finding a way to miss gloves. Barely. Santana is finally showing signs that his slump is starting to snap.

The Phillies’ home-run barrage accounted for 10 of their 11 runs and was plenty for Zach Eflin, who was greeted with a standing ovation as he walked off the mound with a 10-0 lead and two outs in the seventh. The right-hander struck out nine and walked three. He has allowed just one run in 122/3 innings over his first two starts of the season.

Eflin stressed throughout spring training that he felt at full strength for the first time since having surgery on both knees at the end of the 2016 season. Perhaps this is what a healthy Eflin looks like.

The pitcher’s velocity on Monday — Eflin threw his four-seam fastball Monday with an average velocity of 94.2 mph — is slightly increased from where it was last season. But more importantl­y, a healthy Eflin seems to be throwing his pitches with more conviction. He recorded 14 swinging strikes on Monday after averaging just 6.6 per start last season. He relied on the four-seam fastball for 52 percent of his 109 pitches and used it to send five batters down looking. Eflin’s pitches were not only faster, but they had more bite.

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