Phillies can't pull off another comeback vs. Tigers as Skubal beats Wheeler originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia
The Phillies didn’t have a second straight comeback win in the tank Saturday.
Despite the Phils’ three-run seventh inning and two-run eighth, the Tigers earned a 7-5 victory at Citizens Bank Park.
Tarik Skubal beat Zack Wheeler in a very high-quality pitching matchup. The 2024 American League Cy Young winner logged seven innings and conceded three runs and five hits. Skubal had 10 strikeouts and zero walks.
Wheeler allowed four runs (three earned) and nine hits in six-plus innings. He also struck out 10 and walked no one.
Wheeler and Skubal each recorded their first three outs on strikeouts. Skubal added three more to his tally in the second inning and finished the frame with a 99.4 mph heater that Otto Kemp watched for strike three.
True to form, Skubal combined precise command with swing-and-miss stuff. He threw strikes on 26 of his first 33 pitches. On the season, Skubal now has 181 strikeouts and 19 walks.
With Skubal dealing, the Phillies’ task appeared rather daunting after Colt Keith and Kerry Carpenter bashed solo shots over the right-field wall in the third inning to put the Tigers up 2-0.
Wheeler righted the ship in the fourth by striking out the side. He worked around a pair of one-out singles in the fifth by striking out Carpenter and inducing a Riley Greene groundout.
Just about all of the Phils’ contact against Skubal was weak and nowhere near the fences until nine-hitter Weston Wilson lined a double to right-center with one out in the sixth inning.
Skubal evaded any damage. Trea Turner grounded out to third base, which brought Kyle Schwarber to the plate. The Phils’ slugger hit a shallow fly ball down the left-field line and Greene made a great play in foul territory, nabbing a sliding catch. Skubal raised his arms in celebration as he walked off the field.
Detroit then expanded its lead in the seventh. Kemp committed an error at third and Javier Baez homered to end Wheeler’s day. A Gleyber Torres dinger off of Tanner Banks gave the Tigers another insurance run.
Wheeler went out of his way to take the blame for the inning, saying postgame that he asked Phillies manager Rob Thomson to start the seventh.
Those seventh-inning runs wound up mattering, since Skubal was not destined to cruise to a shutout.
Bryce Harper led off the bottom of the seventh with a single and J.T. Realmuto followed with an RBI double. Nick Castellanos’ first-pitch bomb cut the Phillies’ deficit to 5-3. He smashed a Skubal changeup 428 feet.
Matt Strahm couldn’t pitch a clean eighth inning. The Tigers caused two-out trouble and a Baez grounder trickled over the third-base bag, turning into a two-RBI triple.
Again, the Phillies prevented Detroit from feeling comfortable. Brandon Marsh delivered a pinch-hit single to begin the bottom of the eighth and eventually rounded the bases on a Harper homer to left-center against Tigers reliever Will Vest.
Max Lazar kept Detroit’s lead at two runs by tossing a 1-2-3 top of the ninth. Kyle Finnegan still picked up a low-stress save, though. Harrison Bader grounded out to shortstop, Kemp struck out, and Bryson Stott flew out to left to wrap up the Tigers’ win.
Sunday night’s game will decide the three-game series. Cristopher Sanchez (9-3, 2.55 ERA) is set to face Charlie Morton (7-8, 5.42 ERA).
“I loved it,” Thomson said of the Phillies’ comeback effort. “They just kept coming, and that’s what this team does. I don’t think that they ever believe that they’re out of a ball game.
“They just kept fighting, even with Skubal out there. That’s good to see. We put this behind us, come out here tomorrow and win a series.”
Alvarado back in town soon
Thomson said pregame that Jose Alvarado will come to Philadelphia on Monday before the suspended reliever’s rehab assignment.
Thomson said he’s talked to Alvarado “once” since the lefty was suspended 80 games for testing positive for exogenous testosterone. Alvarado is ineligible for the 2025 playoffs but can pitch in the regular season starting on Aug. 19.
“I know what his program’s been,” Thomson said. “He’s thrown a bunch of bullpens, he’s had a bunch of BP sessions. He feels like he’s good to go.”
Lehigh pitching plans
Aaron Nola was at Citizens Bank Park on Saturday after going three scoreless innings Friday for Triple A Lehigh Valley.
Thomson expects his second rehab start will likely be next Wednesday.
“Probably four (innings), 65, 70 (pitches), something like that,” Thomson said.
Both David Robertson and Joe Ross are scheduled to pitch again out of the IronPigs’ bullpen on Sunday.