Lodi News-Sentinel

Santana drives in five runs as Phillies rout Giants

- By Matt Breen

PHILADELPH­IA — Carlos Santana, so confident that his slump would turn around, said last week to check back in September and see what his stats looked like. Fans might not need to wait that long.

The first baseman’s five RBIs in Wednesday night’s 11-3 trouncing of San Francisco gives him 12 in the last six games. His batting average (.189) has risen 46 points in May, and his OPS (.698) is 127 points higher than it was at the end of April. Santana is finally having success, and he is trending in the right direction. At this rate, he could invite fans to check his stats at the end of May.

Santana’s RBI double in the first inning was his 10th straight hit for extra bases. He added two-run singles in the fifth and sixth to tie a career-high for RBIs in a game.

The win clinched the series win after four-straight series losses. The Giants entered Philadelph­ia winners of 13 of their last 16 and seemed to be a stiff test. The Phillies passed with ease. A win Thursday afternoon will complete their second four-game sweep of the season and put the Phils into a tie for first place — at least until the Braves and Marlins play in the evening.

Santana’s success is a reflection of a lineup that is starting to click. The Phillies scored 26 runs in the first three games of the series, and every starter reached base Wednesday, with four players driving in runs.

Maikel Franco drove in two runs, including a 435foot homer in the fourth. Rhys Hoskins, who was left out of the starting lineup for just the second time this season, drove in a run in the sixth with a pinch-hit sacrifice fly. The Phillies lineup — including Santana — was built to hit. After a slow month, they seem to be coming around.

Santana’s first-inning double provided a boost for starting pitcher Nick Pivetta, who struck out seven in five scoreless innings. He allowed four hits and no walks but was limited by a high pitch count. It was a start Pivetta needed after lasting less than two innings in his last start and registerin­g a 15.00 ERA over his last two outings.

The Phillies entered the season with high expectatio­ns for Pivetta, and he fulfilled them for his five starts. Wednesday night was a return to that.

The right-hander relied on his four-seam fastball to induce six swing-and-misses. His curveball garnered weak contact, and his slider picked up two of Pivetta’s

seven strikeouts. Outfielder Gorkys Hernandez lunged at Pivetta’s slider in the second inning, and he missed so wildly that his bat hurtled toward the mound. It missed Pivetta, and the inning ended with a nasty strikeout.

The Phillies were already ahead by eight runs when Santana came to the plate in the sixth with runners on second and third. A win was in sight, but a final blow would be welcomed. Santana poked a single to center. Two runs scored. A win felt even safer.

Santana rounded first, pointed to the sky, and rubbed his hands together toward his teammates, who cheered in the dugout. This was the Santana the Phillies expected when they signed him this offseason. They don’t have to wait until September.

Yankees rally late against Red Sox to win 8th in a row

NEW YORK — From 7 back to one ahead.

Not bad work in fewer than

three weeks.

The Yankees continued an absurdly hot, not to mention historic, stretch Wednesday night, rallying for a 9-6 victory over the Red Sox in front of a sellout crowd of 47,088 that shook Yankee Stadium in the late innings at an October volume.

The Yankees (26-10) trailed 6-5 going into the bottom of the eighth before getting a two-run triple by Brett Gardner and a two-run homer by Aaron Judge. They won their eighth straight and 17th game in 18 tries.

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