Phillies' bats silent, defense poor in second straight loss to Reds originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia
CINCINNATI – The fundamentally sound baseball that helped the Phillies win eight of 10 games recently abandoned them Wednesday at Great American Ballpark. That helped the Cincinnati Reds to an 8-0 win.
The Phillies’ bats didn’t help either as they stayed quiet for the second consecutive game with just three hits, 10 strikeouts and five men left on base. Monday, their lone run came on a Bryce Harper solo shot in the ninth inning in a 6-1 loss. There was a total of five runs scored by the Phillies this series.
Starter Cristopher Sánchez was cruising in the fourth with two out and nobody on before a two-out walk to Austin Hays and an RBI double by Noelvi Marte. After getting through an easy fifth, Sánchez unraveled in the sixth and gave up several hits behind him.
Reds shortstop Elly De La Cruz singled with one out. After Sánchez got Miguel Andujar to pop out to second, Hays doubled down the left field line to score De La Cruz. Marte then singled to score Hays, and that’s when the Phillies turned into Little League imitators in the field.
Marsh scooped Marte’s single on two hops and made a strong throw home to J.T. Realmuto, who leaped to knock it down. Error on Marsh.
“The overthrow from Marsh, I understand it, Thomson said. “He’s trying to throw the guy out at the plate because that puts us down three and then we’re in a big hole. He was trying to throw it in the air and just threw it a little bit too high.”
Sánchez then picked it up and threw wildly to third, allowing Marte to score. Error on Sánchez. He was able to get the final out of the sixth but his night was over after allowing seven hits and three earned runs.
“On a personal note I think it was a bad start,” said Sánchez. “We lost the game. I always try to go out and have as many scoreless innings as I can to keep the team in the fight. Today just wasn’t the case.”
The Reds weren’t done after they chased Sánchez after 81 pitches. Jordan Romano came into the game in the seventh and gave up three hits and four runs, all coming on an Andujuar grand slam to left.
Oddly, the Reds scored all their runs in the game with two outs.
“We got to get the (bats) going, but we faced pretty good pitching on this trip,” said Rob Thomson. “But we got to find a way to beat good pitching.”
Cincinnati started Hunter Greene, a pitcher who hadn’t thrown in the big leagues since June 3 due to a groin injury. He also didn’t impress much in his rehab as in four minor league starts he allowed 10 hits, nine earned runs and four home runs in 13 innings. But he stymied the Phils by allowing no runs and just three hits in his six innings. He also struck out six.
“Power stuff,” said Thomson. “He had power fastball, power slider, then he broke out the split. He had really good stuff. He was on today. He was throwing strikes.”
A ten-game road trip through three cities started so promising, with a combined three-game sweep against the Texas Rangers then a win against the Reds in the series-opener. Perhaps a four-game visit to the lowly Washington Nationals will be just the remedy the team needs.
Plus, there could be reinforcement coming in the shape of Aaron Nola. He seems ready to return to the team on Sunday. That game would normally be a start for Ranger Suárez, but the team has yet to announce who their starter will be.
“Just two bad games,” said Bryce Harper. “Obviously we didn’t play well the last two. Got to clean that up going to D.C. Big weekend ahead and hopefully win the series there.”