Werth
drives in two in 9th as Nats beat Phillies
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[June 13, 2016]
WASHINGTON -- At the time it
seemed like a curious move - or non-move - by Washington Nationals
manager Dusty Baker.
With the score tied at 3 in the seventh inning, Baker allowed
starting pitcher Joe Ross to bat for himself with two outs and no
one on base.
"That was an easy decision. He can hit," said Baker, who explained
he wanted to save his pinch-hitters for later in the game.
That plan worked, as pinch-hitters Bryce Harper (infield single) and
Clint Robinson (walk) each reached base in the ninth before starting
left fielder Jayson Werth came through with a two-run single with
the bases loaded and two outs as the Nationals beat the Philadelphia
Phillies 5-4 on Sunday.
"As a kid you always want that last at-bat," Baker said.
Ross, who hit a deep fly to left in the second inning, singled in
the seventh but was left stranded as Sammy Solis came in to pitch in
the eighth. Former Phillie Jonathan Papelbon (1-2) gave up a
go-ahead homer to Maikel Franco in the ninth, but Danny Espinosa had
a single and eventually scored the game-winning run in the last of
the ninth as Werth delivered against closer Jeanmar Gomez (2-2)
"It was fun. It took a while to get out there," Espinosa said of the
post-game pileup, which was led by Saturday starting pitcher Tanner
Roark. "I was trying to get a good pitch to hit."
Werth came through with a hard single up the middle on a 2-2 pitch
after he took a strike on the inside part of the plate that Phillies
catcher Cameron Rupp couldn't hold.
"He has been a clutch man," Baker said of Werth. "Clutch men love to
be in that situation."
The winning rally was aided when Harper reached on an infield single
with one out in the ninth. The call stood after a challenge by
Phillies manager Pete Mackanin as first baseman Tommy Joseph, a
former catcher, tried to touch the bag with his foot twice.
"I believe if he didn't go back with his foot to touch it," Mackanin
said. "If the side of his foot was touching the base he was
definitely out, but he went back, it's like when a guy tags a guy
but then goes back to tag him even though he didn't tag him the
first time, it looks like he didn't. I believe, from what I saw on
the replays, if he didn't go back with his foot, I believe they
would've called him out."
"I wasn't sure. It was too close," Joseph said. "I couldn't feel it.
Obviously if I couldn't feel it, that's why I went back and tried to
tag him. I saw the replay on the board. I don't think I need to look
at it. I think they got the call right."
The Nationals (39-24) are a season-high 15 games over .500 and have
won six of their last seven. The Phillies (29-34), now a season-low
five games under .500, have lost the last six to Washington.
The Phillies tied the game at 3-3 in the sixth as Odubel Herrera had
an RBI double and Freddy Galvis singled to drive in Herrera.
Philadelphia's Cody Asche hit his first homer of the year in the
fifth, a solo shot down the left field line to trim the margin to
3-1 against Ross.
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Nationals left fielder Jayson Werth (28) is doused with ice water by
center fielder Ben Revere (9) after the game against the
Philadelphia Phillies at Nationals Park. The Washington Nationals
won 5-4. Mandatory Credit: Brad Mills-USA TODAY Sports
The only hit Ross allowed in the first four innings was a clean
single with two outs in the first to Franco, who had two hits.
Espinosa led off the second with his 11th homer of the season to
give Washington a 3-0 lead against Adam Morgan, the Phillies
starter. The switch-hitter, batting righty against Morgan, went deep
for the eighth time in 15 contests.
Ryan Zimmerman and Wilson Ramos had rare back-to-back sacrifice
flies to give the Nationals a 2-0 lead in the first inning.
Morgan, who entered with a 6.70 ERA, allowed three earned runs in 6
2/3 innings with a career-high eight strikeouts. David Hernandez
came on to retire Michael A. Taylor for the last out of the seventh.
Ross, who lasted just four innings in his previous start, gave up
three runs in seven innings with eight strikeouts and no walks
before Solis took over in the eighth.
"Our pinch-hitters came through big time. That was huge," Baker
said. "Espinosa had a huge at-bat."
NOTES: Mackanin was drafted by the Washington Senators in 1969 in
the fourth round. After his playing career, Mackanin was a manager
for the nearby Frederick (Md.) Keys in 1993 and the Bowie (Md.)
Baysox the following year in the Baltimore Orioles' farm system. ...
The red-hot Chicago Cubs come to Washington on Monday and RHP Kyle
Hendricks (4-5, 2.90 ERA) will pitch against Nationals RHP Max
Scherzer (7-4, 3.57) in the first game of the series. ...
Philadelphia RHP Jerad Eickhoff (3-8, 3.68) will pitch at Toronto on
Monday against Blue Jays RHP R.A. Dickey (4-6, 4.15). ... Washington
got its first home series sweep since taking three games from the
Minnesota Twins on April 22-24.
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