The Oklahoman

Phillies’ 6-run ninth stuns the Cardinals

- Dave Skretta

ST. LOUIS – The Philadelph­ia Phillies showcased plenty of plucky resilience all season, bouncing back from a poor start and the firing of their manager to qualify for the postseason for the first time in more than a decade.

It was going to take more than a tworun deficit in the ninth inning Friday to keep them down.

Even against the playoff-tested St. Louis Cardinals.

Philadelph­ia rallied for six runs in the ninth, silencing a sellout crowd at Busch Stadium and sending Jean Segura and the Phillies to a 6-3 victory in the opening game of their National League wild-card series.

It was the first time in 94 postseason games that St. Louis, an 11-time World Series champion, had blown a lead of at least two runs going into the final frame, according to Sportradar.

“It’s what we do. We fight,” said Alec Bohm, who was plunked on the shoulder by Cardinals closer Ryan Helsley with the bases loaded to drive in the first run. “We’re never out of it. That’s just kind of who we are.”

Asked how it felt in the dugout during the go-ahead rally, Phillies manager Rob Thomson – who replaced Joe Girardi after their poor start to the year – replied simply: “Electric.”

That’s because the Cardinals, who were 74-3 on the season when leading after eight innings, were poised to put another one away after Juan Yepez hit the first go-ahead pinch-hit homer in franchise history with two outs in the seventh.

But after struggling all afternoon against José Quintana and the St. Louis bullpen, the Phillies finally got their offense going. JT Realmuto began the decisive rally with a single off Helsley, and walks for Bryce Harper and Nick Castellano­s loaded the bases before the All-Star closer plunked Bohm.

The Cardinals training staff checked on Helsley, who jammed a finger on his pitching hand earlier in the week in Pittsburgh, and he was replaced by Andre Pallante. He gave up Segura’s goahead single through the right side of the infield.

“It was exactly what I wanted,” Pallante said. “It just got through.”

Edmundo Sosa added another run when he brazenly scored on Bryson Stott’s grounder to first base, and Brandon Marsh drove in another run when a tough hop got past Cardinals shortstop Paul DeJong.

“Unfortunat­ely,” Cardinals manager Oliver Marmol said, “that last inning got away.”

By the time Kyle Schwarber added a sacrifice fly, Phillies reliever Zach Eflin had plenty of wiggle room in the ninth.

It looked as if Eflin might need it, too, when Nolan Arenado and Dylan Carlson reached base and Nolan Gorman hit a two-out RBI single to right. But Eflin responded by striking longtime Cardinals star Yadier Molina to end it.

 ?? JEFF ROBERSON/AP ?? The Phillies' Nick Castellano­s (8) and Bryce Harper (3) celebrate after scoring on a single by Jean Segura during the ninth inning against the Cardinals on Friday.
JEFF ROBERSON/AP The Phillies' Nick Castellano­s (8) and Bryce Harper (3) celebrate after scoring on a single by Jean Segura during the ninth inning against the Cardinals on Friday.

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