Cubs beat up erratic Aaron Nola as Phillies' losing streak reaches six games originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia
CHICAGO – Six pitches.
Three quick outs.
The night couldn’t have begun any better for Aaron Nola.
Then the second inning happened.
And the Phillies were on their way to another loss, this one by the score of 5-1 to the Chicago Cubs on Monday night at chilly Wrigley Field.
That’s six losses in a row, 10 in the last 12 games, if you’re keeping score at home. The Phillies, with their high expectations and $300 million-plus payroll, are 8-14 for the first time since the 99-loss season of 2015.
Prior to his team’s latest loss, manager Rob Thomson mentioned the need for his pitchers to start having some quick innings.
As if on cue, Nola responded in the first inning. He struck out Nico Hoerner on three pitches, retired Michael Busch on two and Alex Bregman on one.
That was the highlight of the night for Nola.
He labored through a 27-pitch second inning and allowed three hits and two walks as the Cubs put four runs on the board, three coming on a 424-foot, three-run homer to center by Dansby Swanson.
Nola allowed two more hits, a walk and a sacrifice fly in the third as the Cubs went up, 5-0.
That was plenty for Cubs’ right-hander Colin Rea, who pitched 6 2/3 innings of one-run ball to beat the Phillies for the second time in a week. Rea kept the Phillies’ hitters off balance with a seven-pitch mix, led by a fastball that averaged 93.8 mph and a splitter that he threw 17 percent of the time.
The Phils are 1-4 Nola’s five starts, 0-3 in his last three. He has an ERA of 5.06. He allowed 10 base runners on six hits and four walks in 4 1/3 innings Monday night. A two-out walk to Pete Crow-Armstrong kept the second inning alive for Swanson. With a 3-1 count, Nola threw a 91.5 mph sinker right down the middle and Swanson crushed it to center.
It was another slow night for the Phillies’ offense, which has scored just 10 runs in this six-game losing streak.
The Phils had a chance to bruise Rea in the second inning but left the bases loaded when Rafael Marchan struck out.
Finally, the Phillies put a run on the board in the fourth when rookie Justin Crawford doubled to left-center.
Alec Bohm continued to struggle for the Phillies. He went hitless in three at-bats to slip to .133 before walking in the eighth. That walk put two men on base with two outs for Bryson Stott. He popped to third base to end the threat. For the night, the Phillies went 0 for 7 with runners in scoring position and left 10 men on base.