The Morning Call (Sunday)

Despite an improved Wheeler outing, Phillies fall to Brewers

- By Alex Coffey Alex Coffey is a reporter for The Philadelph­ia Inquirer.

Zack Wheeler has not looked like Zack Wheeler of late. In his first two outings of the regular season he was unable to pitch past the fifth inning. His velocity was down, which isn’t ideal for a power pitcher who relies primarily on his fastball. The Zack Wheeler that fans are used to seeing can hit 98 mph, 99 mph, or even 100 mph, and do it with control. He can pitch well — and deep — into games. Those two outings were not the Zack Wheeler fans were used to seeing.

So, given that context, Saturday’s game — which the Phillies ended up losing, 5-3, to the Brewers — was an important one for the right-handed pitcher. After a shortened spring training, that was shortened even more after he had a bout with the flu, Wheeler is still in the process of ramping up, which could be why his velocity was down. But Saturday would have been his fifth spring training start — which means that we should be seeing something close to the normal Zack Wheeler, soon. On Saturday, we did.

Wheeler averaged 95.9 mph on the radar gun against the Brewers, after averaging 94.5 mph in his start last week. He mostly cruised through his first four innings of work, allowing two hits and no runs with three strikeouts over that span.

In the fifth inning, he ran into some trouble, but it wasn’t all on him. Kyle Schwarber made a throw from left field that fell way short, bouncing to J.T. Realmuto after Lorenzo Cain reached home plate, and Willy Adames stole home as Christian Yelich stole second base.

For the most part, Wheeler was not allowing hard contact. He didn’t allow any walks, and was able to make it deeper into his start on Saturday than he was in his first two outings. His final was five innings pitched, seven hits, four earned runs, and five strikeouts. It’s not the Zack Wheeler fans are used to seeing, but he’s getting close.

Phillies score early, but don’t score enough

The Phillies put some runs on the board early on Saturday, but not enough to account for the Brewers’ four-run fifth inning. A Nick Castellano­s RBI double scored Bryce Harper in the first inning, and a Jean Segura RBI single and a Castellano­s sacrifice fly gave the Phillies a 3-0 lead entering the fourth inning.

But the Phillies weren’t able to build any momentum past the fourth inning, and certainly weren’t able to build any in the eighth and the ninth inning, when they were facing Devin Williams and Josh Hader.

The Phillies’ offense finished their night with seven hits, three runs and just one walk.

Friday’s late game report

On Friday, the Phillies finally came through with clutch hits when they really needed to.

In the bottom of the eighth inning, Bryce Harper, Nick Castellano­s and J.T. Realmuto all knocked in singles to load the bases for Kyle Schwarber with no outs. But Schwarber struck out, and it seemed like an all-too-familiar pattern was about to set in. Until the next at-bat.

Alec Bohm came up with another clutch hit, crushing a four-seam fastball to right field that scored both Harper and Castellano­s. And then, in the at-bat after that, Johan Camargo followed Bohm with a hard-hit single of his own, driving in Realmuto to give the Phillies a 4-2 win.

 ?? MATT SLOCUM/AP ?? Philadelph­ia Phillies starting pitcher Zack Wheeler wipes his face after the fifth inning against the Milwaukee Brewers on Saturday in Philadelph­ia.
MATT SLOCUM/AP Philadelph­ia Phillies starting pitcher Zack Wheeler wipes his face after the fifth inning against the Milwaukee Brewers on Saturday in Philadelph­ia.

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