Daily Camera (Boulder)

Phillies walk off Rockies in 10

LHP Freeland appears to hurt right shoulder as pinch runner

- By Kyle Newman knewman@denverpost.com

The Rockies found misery again in their first extra-inning game of the season.

Philadelph­ia walked off Colorado, 2-1, in the series opener at Citizens Bank Park on Monday night, dropping the Rockies to 4-13 on the year.

The Rockies couldn’t solve ace Aaron Nola, and then came up short in a pair of opportunit­ies to score in the ninth and 10th innings before Cristian Pache’s single lifted Philadelph­ia to the victory.

“Whoever came out on the short end of this one, it was going to be a tough one,” Rockies manager Bud Black told reporters. “Nola pitched great, and so did (Cal) Quantrill. … It was a well-played game by both sides.”

Quantrill was all the Rockies could ask for, throwing six innings of one-run ball with just four hits allowed. It was by far his best start in a Rockies uniform.

His lone blemish came in the third, when Bryce Harper hit a two-out single to score Trea Turner to give the Phillies a 1-0 lead.

“(Quantrill) had a good splitfinge­r going, and his secondary pitches mixing with the fastballs kept them honest,” Black said.

But as Quantrill held Philadelph­ia at bay, the Colorado offense got virtually no traction against Nola. That finally changed in the fifth, when Michael Toglia launched a 389-foot, no-doubt homer to right center to tie the game 1-1. Up until that point, the Rockies’ lone baserunner­s came from singles by Brenton Doyle and Elias Diaz.

Justin Lawrence took care of the seventh inning, and the combinatio­n of Jalen Beeks and Nick Mears kept the Phillies off the board in the eighth despite a leadoff walk issued by Beeks to Kyle Schwarber.

In the ninth, Diaz stroked a two-out double off former Colorado pitcher Jeff Hoffman. Kyle Freeland pinch ran for Diaz, getting to third on a wild pitch, and an intentiona­l walk to Nolan Jones followed.

With Elehuris Montero at the plate, another wild pitch from Hoffman was gathered by J.T. Realmuto just off the dirt circle behind home after the ball bounced straight up in the air. The Phillies catcher fired it to Hoffman at the plate and tagged Freeland out.

The Rockies challenged, possibly in an attempt to get an obstructio­n call, but the call stood to end the inning. Freeland appeared to hurt his right shoulder on the play when Hoffman — his close friend — fell on top of him. Freeland went right into the clubhouse after the play, but then reappeared in the dugout shortly after. The speed at which the play developed exempted Hoffman from an obstructio­n violation.

“The home plate umpire saw (that play) as a convergenc­e of two players coming in and both trying to make a play,” Black said. “Kyle trying to get to home plate, and Hoffman trying to get the ball from Realmuto. The convergenc­e and the speed of the play was such where no blocking of the plate was called.”

Black said Freeland is “fine” despite immediatel­y rolling on the dirt in pain after the play. The manager said he chose Freeland to pinch run because “we were trying to win the game” and the pitcher “is one of our fastest players.”

Mears went back out for the ninth, and set the Phillies down in order to force extras.

“On the road in the bottom of the ninth against a championsh­ip (caliber) team — good for Nick,” Black said. “That was a growth moment for him.”

Seranthony Domínguez pitched the Philadelph­ia top half of the 10th, but Montero, Toglia and Doyle were retired in order to strand Nolan Jones at third base.

Jake Bird took the mound for the Rockies in the 10th, and the Phillies led off with Whit Merrifield’s sacrifice bunt to advance the runner Bryson Stott to third. Two batters later, Pache singled Stott home on a stroke to right to walk-off the Rockies.

Black said outfielder Jake Cave and second baseman Brendan Rodgers were unavailabl­e on Monday due to sickness, while Kris Bryant — who left Saturday’s game in Toronto with back stiffness and hasn’t played since — was also unavailabl­e.

 ?? MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Phillies pinch hitter Cristian Pache, center, celebrates with teammates after hitting an RBI single off Rockies relief pitcher Jacob Bird during the 10th inning on Monday in Philadelph­ia.
MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Phillies pinch hitter Cristian Pache, center, celebrates with teammates after hitting an RBI single off Rockies relief pitcher Jacob Bird during the 10th inning on Monday in Philadelph­ia.

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