Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH

  

TEXT SIZE: A A A A
email this
print this
reprint or license this
RELATED STORIES
 
Box Score
 
Myers: 'back on track'
 
Blanton to join rotation, as Eaton heads to bullpen
SAVE AND SHARE


Phillies fall to Marlins, 9-5

MIAMI - A sloppy game that at times resembled beer-league softball ended with good baseball theater today.

The Phillies were down by four runs, and they had the bases loaded with one out in the ninth inning.

Their next two batters were Ryan Howard and Pat Burrell, who have 54 home runs between them.

"I've got faith that we're going to tie the game there," manager Charlie Manuel said. "We've got two big guys who can hit the ball out of the yard."

Manuel paused.

"But the pitcher did a good job," he said with resignation.

Florida Marlins closer Kevin Gregg struck out Howard on three pitches, the final one a 94-m.p.h. fastball that the majors' leading home-run hitter swung through. Gregg then got Burrell to bounce into a fielder's choice on a 2-0 fastball (95 m.p.h.) on the fists.

Ball game. Marlins 9, Phillies 5.

"That's one of those situations that if you don't want to be in, you shouldn't be playing," said Burrell, who had belted his 24th and 25th homers earlier in the game. "He beat me with that pitch. That's frustrating."

The Phils, who had started the day leading New York by a game atop the National League East standings, were just 3 for 13 with runners in scoring position. What's more, they did a poor job with situational hitting, especially during a second-inning threat that screamed for a fly ball but resulted in a flurry of grounders to third base. One was misplayed into a run.

Two Phillies runners were cut down at the plate in that inning, one on what Manuel called a base-running mistake by Howard.

In the field, rightfielder Jayson Werth misplayed a catchable ball into a generously scored triple in the fourth inning, and his replacement, Geoff Jenkins, later lost one in the sun.

That's not even the bad news. Starting pitcher Kyle Kendrick was abused for seven runs in 41/3 innings. He gave up three homers, which accounted for six runs. The Marlins (138 long balls) lead the Phils (136) for first-place in the league in that department.

"They want to mash," Marlins outfielder Cody Ross said. "We can mash with them."

Kendrick (8-4) does not have an overpowering fastball, but he has a chance when it is sinking and moving. Today, there was no sink. Almost everything was up in the nitro zone. All three Florida home runs came on fastballs, and two of them - John Baker's three-run shot and Dan Uggla's two-run blow - came on first-pitch fastballs.

"They hunt fastballs to hit," Manuel said of the Marlins. "When you make a mistake, they hit it."

"No excuses," Kendrick said. "I just didn't have my stuff. All I can do is flush this. I can't dwell on it."

Flush it. Not a bad idea for the team considering how ugly this game was.


Contact staff writer Jim Salisbury at 215-854-4983 or jsalisbury@phillynews.com.

  • Jobs
  • Cars
  • Real Estate
  • Rentals
 
SEARCH JOBS
Find a Car | Sell a Car | Research | Loans
Spotlight Deal

Glanzmann Subaru
(888) 260-9396
'05 Mercury Mountaineer Convenience
$15,990
'05 Lincoln Aviator Luxury
$20,990
'03 Lincoln LS
$12,990
'03 Hyundai Santa Fe LX Sport
$11,999
SEARCH CARS Used  New 
Spotlight Deal
Bustleton 19115
Spotlight Deal
Ardmore 19003
SEARCH REAL ESTATE
Spotlight Deal
Manayunk 19127
Spotlight Deal
Rittenhouse Square 19103
SEARCH RENTALS
REGIONAL SCOREBOARD
TOP STORIES
Matt Stairs, who has played for 11 teams in 16 years, looks as if he belongs in a beer league. He turned 40 in February. He's what you'd call a situational hitter. The situation last night: tie game, eighth inning, with a need for a lefthanded bat.
Green
Edward E. Cohen, whose family has been a prolific producer of publicly traded companies, started investing in natural-gas production as a tax shelter in the 1960s.

Today he answers questions on Pa.'s natural gas boom.