The Morning Call (Sunday)

Phillies look like old selves as Mets rock Nola

- By Alex Coffey

There have been a few times this season when the Phillies have miraculous­ly won a game that in previous years they wouldn’t have won, prompting fans to suggest that this 2022 Phillies team is different.

Friday’s 7-2 loss to the New York Mets at Citizens Bank Park was not one of those games. It was a game full of tired tropes that defined Phillies teams of years past — namely bad defense and Aaron Nola struggling to pitch with two strikes— and one trope that has defined them at times this season: a failure to score with runners in scoring position.

We caught a brief glimpse of the 2022 Phillies in the bottom of the fifth inning. With runners on second and third and no outs, Kyle Schwarber hit a two-run single to right field. Rhys Hoskins grounded into a force out, and sprinted to first base as if a World Series depended on him being safe. In the next at-bat, Alec Bohm showed the same hustle, again, on a force out, and was narrowly called safe. J.T. Realmuto singled to move Bohm to third with two outs, but Nick Castellano­s hit a pop fly to center field and the inning was over.

The Phillies wouldn’t score any more runs after that. Mets starter Chris Bassitt held them to seven hits and two earned runs, with two hit batsmen and no walks. The Mets tacked on two more runs in the seventh inning, with a two-run single to right field by rookie Brett Baty off Andrew Bellatti. The Phillies are now 65-53.

Nola looks like last year’s Nola

Part of what has made Nola’s 2022 season so impressive is that he has shed many of the tropes that used to define him. In 2021, batters were hitting .186/.216/.311 off of him with two strikes; in 2022, they are hitting .152/.185/.253. He has stepped up in big moments, like his last start, on Aug. 13 in New York, when he allowed the Mets just one earned run over eight innings pitched in front of a packed house.

But on Friday night, Nola looked like the Nola of old. He was backed up by some poor defense (more on that in a moment), which certainly didn’t help him, but he also allowed five earned runs on two strikes and allowed the Mets’ lineup to work him deep into counts. He finished his night at 104 pitches and 75 strikes through five innings. He allowed eight hits, five earned runs, one walk and one home run, striking out nine.

Defense looks like last year’s defense

Friday’s game technicall­y had only one error — a faulty throw by third baseman Bohm to second base in the fifth — but it was full of other defensive misplays. Matt Vierling looked lost in left field, making two bad reads that resulted in two Starling Marte doubles, one in the third and the other in the fifth.

A few at-bats after the second Marte double, with Marte on third base and Francisco Lindor on first base, Lindor stole second and Marte stole home. Shortstop Bryson Stott’s throw home was wide, which allowed Marte to score.

The defensive highlight of the night was a diving catch made by Bradley Zimmer in his first game as a Phillies, but aside from that, it was pretty ugly.

 ?? CHRIS SZAGOLA/AP ?? Starling Marte slides in safely after stealing home during the Phillies against the New York Mets on Friday night.
CHRIS SZAGOLA/AP Starling Marte slides in safely after stealing home during the Phillies against the New York Mets on Friday night.

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