Kyle Schwarber's monster blast helps Phils top Padres in NLCS opener
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[October 19, 2022]
SAN DIEGO -- With Zack Wheeler
yielding just one hit over seven shutout innings, Bryce Harper's
fourth homer of the postseason turned out to be the decisive blow
Tuesday night as the visiting Philadelphia Phillies defeated the San
Diego Padres 2-0 in the opener of the National League Championship
Series.
Then Kyle Schwarber made some home run history against Padres
starter Yu Darvish.
Philadelphia relievers Seranthony Dominguez and Jose Alvarado each
threw a hitless inning to complete a one-hitter in Game 1 of the
best-of-seven series.
Schwarber's first home run of the postseason came on the first pitch
Yu Darvish threw in the top of the sixth and travelled 488 feet
after leaving the bat at 119.7 mph. The blast, off a cutter from
Darvish, was the first ever to reach the second deck in right since
Petco Park opened in 2004.
The velocity of Schwarber's home run was the fifth-highest since the
pitch-tracking era began in 2008 and the hardest-hit in a postseason
game. It was also the farthest homer ever hit at Petco Park and the
longest of Schwarber's career.
"I wasn't sure mine was out," Harper said after the game. "That one
was just enough. But Kyle's, that was a bomb."
Schwarber said, "Sometimes you can tell. I knew."
It was the sixth homer allowed by Darvish in the postseason,
accounting for all six runs he has allowed. Darvish (2-1) gave up
two runs on three hits and a walk with seven strikeouts in seven
innings.
Meanwhile, Wheeler (1-1) allowed only two Padres to reach base. Juan
Soto drew a one-out walk in the first, and Wil Myers hit a one-out,
line-drive single to center in the fifth. Wheeler allowed one hit
and one walk while striking out eight. He threw 83 pitches (59
strikes).
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Philadelphia Phillies designated hitter Bryce Harper (3, center)
during introductions before game one of the NLCS of the 2022 MLB
Playoffs against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park. Mandatory
Credit: Kiyoshi Mio-USA TODAY Sports
"That's probably as good a pitching performance
we've seen all year, is my guess," Padres manager Bob Melvin said.
"Was ahead in the count. Was pretty good."
Dominguez struck out two in a perfect eighth. Alvarado got the save
with a scoreless ninth, although he had to survive the lone Padres
threat of the night.
Jurickson Profar drew a one-out walk and was safe at second when
Phillies third baseman Alec Bohm threw wide of second on a possible
game-ending, double-play grounder by Soto. Alvarado retired Manny
Machado on a fly to right then struck out Josh Bell to end the game.
"The plan was for Zack to go six or seven tonight," Phillies manager
Rob Thomson said. "We talked after the sixth before he went out for
one more. I had confidence in the guys behind him."
Darvish had struck out six of the previous eight batters when Harper
came to the plate with one out in the fourth.
After taking a ball, Harper went the other way with an outside
fastball, depositing it into the third row of seats in left just
beyond the leap of Padres left fielder Profar.
"Tomorrow is a big game for us," Melvin said. "I know it's a
seven-game series, but when you start out at home, you'd like to try
to win that first one. If it doesn't happen, you certainly feel a
little more importance on the second game. We need to come out and
swing the bats a little better."
--Bill Center, Field Level Media
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