The Morning Call (Sunday)

Hoskins’ heroics enough for victory

Solid outings from both starters keep score low until late in game

- By Alex Coffey

The Phillies and Pirates battled it out until the very end on Friday, which obviously is more impressive feat for the Pirates, who entered the game with a 40-59 record, than it is for the Phillies.

But the Phillies came out with the 4-2 win, neverthele­ss, in dramatic fashion.

Starter Bailey Falter gave the Phillies one of the best starts of his young career, but the Phillies’ offense largely was dormant, putting up only eight hits and two runs through nine innings on Friday night. The game stayed tied at 2-2, thanks to scoreless performanc­es in the eighth and ninth inning from José Alvarado and Seranthony Domínguez, and went into extra innings, when their offense heated up.

With Garrett Stubbs as the automatic runner on second base, Rhys Hoskins crushed a two-run home run 410 feet to center field to give the Phillies a 4-2 lead. Alec Bohm followed that up with a single, and Nick Castellano­s added a single of his own to send Bohm to third base with one out. Matt Vierling grounded into a double play, but reliever Connor Brogdon held down the lead with a 1-2-3 10th inning, and the Phillies got the win. They now are 53-47.

Bounce-back outing from Falter

Interim manager Rob Thomson had some kind words for Falter before Friday’s game, words that proved to be prescient.

“We’ve had a couple of pretty good starts (from Falter),” Thomson said. “The one in Seattle, and there was another one earlier in the season. If he comes out and he hits his spots with his fastballs and mixes his pitches and throws strikes and gets ahead, stays ahead, he’s an effective guy.”

Falter was coming off of a

few bumpy starts; in his last outing on July 24, he gave up four earned runs against the Chicago Cubs in five innings. But he seemed to clean things up considerab­ly against the Pirates.

Falter went six innings, allowing five hits (one home run), two earned runs and one walk with eight strikeouts. Like Thomson said, he was hitting his spots and was efficient with his pitches. By the time he exited the game, he was at 80 pitches and 56 strikes.

Falter’s six innings pitched and eight strikeouts were career highs for him. Unfortunat­ely for Falter, it was on a night that the Phillies’ offense struggled to show up.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States