New York Post

D’backs aiming to fight back behind rook Pfaadt

- By DAVID BRANDT —AP

PHOENIX — Brandon Pfaadt had some good moments on the mound during the regular season, but he struggled to contain the long ball, giving up 22 homers in just 96 innings.

Now the Diamondbac­ks are turning to the rookie right-hander for Game 3 of the NL Championsh­ip Series in an effort to slow the homer-happy Phillies, who have built a 2-0 lead in the best-of-seven playoff series thanks to six homers.

If that doesn’t sound ideal for Arizona, well, it’s not.

“Yesterday was a really frustratin­g outcome,” Diamondbac­ks manager Torey Lovullo said Wednesday, a day after Philadelph­ia’s 10-0 rout at Citizens Bank Park. “We didn’t perform up to our capabiliti­es, didn’t meet our expectatio­ns. We’ve got to find a way to get this turned around.

“Our mindset is one well-played game could lead to one win and we’re right back in the series.”

The two-game deficit is the first adversity the surprising Diamondbac­ks have experience­d this October. They finished just 84-78 in the regular season, earning the last NL playoff spot as the No. 6 seed, but they won their first five games of this postseason while sweeping the Brewers in a best-of-three wildcard series and the Dodgers in a best-of-five division series.

That success came to a screeching halt in Philadelph­ia. Kyle Schwarber has three home runs in the series, including a pair in Game 2, while Bryce Harper, Nick Castellano­s and Trea Turner have also homered.

“They’re a hot team. We knew they were a hot team,” Lovullo said. “They’re built to slug.”

The good news for the Diamondbac­ks is that Pfaadt is coming off one of his best outings this year. The 25-year-old threw 4 ¹/₃ scoreless innings in Game 3 of the NLDS, helping Arizona complete a sweep the 100-win Dodgers and a lineup that included former MVPs Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman.

The difference is the Dodgers were scuffling. The Phillies, most certainly, are not.

Pfaadt said he hopes of change of scenery to the desert can help the Diamondbac­ks.

“We went through Milwaukee’s lineup. We went through the Dodgers’ lineup,” Pfaadt said. “I think we can hold our own. If we show that, coming into our ballpark, limiting damage, getting the momentum on our side, I think we can come out on the strong end.”

Lovullo has said that even if Pfaadt is pitching well in Game 3, he’ll likely face 18-to-22 batters. Arizona used that strategy with Pfaadt against the Dodgers, yanking him at the first hint of trouble, and it led to the series-clinching 4-2 victory.

“It’s about going out, landing pitches, and not placing the ball in the nitro zones,” Lovullo said.

Arizona had just four hits in each of the first two games of the NLCS for a .129 batting average. The defense has not been crisp; three fielders let a short pop-up fall for a base hit in the seventh inning of Game 2.

Lovullo said the Diamondbac­ks need the synergy from offense, defense and pitching to recover.

“Grinding out at-bats, having mature at-bats, driving up pitch counts, catching pop-ups, picking up the baseball,” Lovullo said. “You know, the pitching and defense goes hand in hand, and we find a way to score five runs or more and win a baseball game by just being a really smart, stubborn baseball team in all areas.”

The Diamondbac­ks weathered a 7-25 stretch in July and August that knocked them out of the NL West lead, but recovered to reach the NLCS for the first time since 2007.

“We’ve been playing meaningful baseball games for about the past 45 days,” Lovullo said. “So we’re battle-tested from an emotional standpoint. We know that one quick turn, one quick moment, can turn the tide.”

 ?? USA TODAY Sports ?? BRAND’ NEW: Rookie Brandon Pfaadt started Arizona’s NLDS clincher vs. the Dodgers and will face the Phillies in Game 3 of the NLCS with the D’backs trailing 2-0.
USA TODAY Sports BRAND’ NEW: Rookie Brandon Pfaadt started Arizona’s NLDS clincher vs. the Dodgers and will face the Phillies in Game 3 of the NLCS with the D’backs trailing 2-0.

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