Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Dodgers embarrass Phillies in blowout

- By Rob Parent rparent@21st-centurymed­ia.com @ReluctantS­E on Twitter

PHILADELPH­IA >> When the reborn Phillies and their nearly half-billion-dollar offseason improvemen­t project were heading to lovely L.A. at the end of May, there was much speculatio­n about how they’d fare against the Dodgers in a meeting of what everyone might consider the best of East vs. West in the National League.

The Dodgers promptly swept them. And before long, the Phillies would set about proving they are far from the Eastern powerhouse they appeared they might be in the early weeks of the season.

Reluctantl­y welcoming the Dodgers to town Monday night for a four-game set, these East beasts from South Philly only seem intent on proving just how much of a disaster they could turn out to be.

After three innings of pitching no-hit ball, Zach Eflin blew up in the fourth inning, as the Dodgers scored six runs in that frame ... then just kept scoring and scoring en route to a 16-2 laugh-out-loud rout of the sad-sack Phils.

“It was not a good night for us in short,” Gabe Kapler said. “I’m not going to get into any descriptio­ns.”

One descriptio­n of this season is all you need: Since the Phillies headed to L.A. to start that series on May 31, through this embarrassi­ng loss to the Dodgers Monday night, the Phillies are 15-23. They have fallen from a lofty NL East top spot perch to third place in the division. They are drowning.

Cheering and chanting along while they sunk and stunk again were three sections of Dodgers fans in the right-field seats, providing a perfect audio backdrop to a game that John Middleton and his collective partners probably won’t be replaying on their DVRs Tuesday morning.

General manager Matt Klentak might want to take an extra gander at it as he contemplat­es what could be a July 31 trade deadline that impacts jobs from the clubhouse to the front office.

After Scott Kingery hit a solo home run in the third, the Dodgers scored six runs off Eflin in the top of the fourth.

Alex Verdugo began the assault with a single to center and scored on Justin Turner’s double to left center. Max Muncy’s infield hit was enough to plate Turner.

After Corey Seager walked, Enrique Hernandez singled to center to deliver Muncy. Seager scored on an Austin Barnes bunt, and Joc Pederson delivered Hernandez with an infield single.

“As a starting pitcher, it’s my job to go out and put up zeroes and keep the game as close as possible,” Eflin said. “And I haven’t been doing that. So I have to continue to work on my pitches, my strengthen­ing, my bullpens.

“Things are going to get better.”

Cody Bellinger’s first home run made it 7-1 in the fifth. In the seventh, Muncy and Bellinger hit back-toback home runs and the Phillies trailed, 9-1.

That essentiall­y cemented what would be Eflin’s sixth loss in his last eight decisions. But the Dodgers continued to pour it on in a fiverun eighth. After Pederson doubled, Verdugo clubbed a two-run single to right. Hernandez walked with the bases loaded, Turner scoring to make it 14-1.

Outfielder Roman Quinn finally pitched the Phillies out of the inning.

But he would allow two more in the ninth ... then strike out himself in the bottom of the ninth to end the guffaws coming from the right-field stands.

“We got beat tonight and we got beat pretty badly,” Bryce Harper said. “We can’t play like that. We’ve got to go out there and grind and get those runs in, especially against a good Dodgers team. We have to do our job.”

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 ?? MATT SLOCUM — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Dodgers’ Austin Barnes, right, steals home past Phillies catcher J.T. Realmuto, left, during the fourth inning Monday in Philadelph­ia.
MATT SLOCUM — ASSOCIATED PRESS The Dodgers’ Austin Barnes, right, steals home past Phillies catcher J.T. Realmuto, left, during the fourth inning Monday in Philadelph­ia.

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