Baseball
Add news
News

Phillies’ season ends with NLDS Game 4 loss to Mets

0 7
Trea Turner went 0-for-4 with strikeouts in Game 4’s loss. (Peter Joneleit/Icon Sportswire)

The Phillies walked the tightrope all Wednesday night. It is not a sustainable way to win a baseball game — in October, June or March. They asked for one more Houdini Act in the sixth inning of Game 4.

Francisco Lindor denied it and ended the Phillies’ season.

The Phillies are going home, staring down an offseason that will feel even longer than the last two — and not just because it actually will indeed be longer, the team continuing a 2009-2011-style devolution that’s seen them get eliminated one round earlier with each progressive October. Their bats once again could not muster anything, chasing and whiffing and wasting their way to one run on three hits and this core’s third loss in three elimination games.

The game swung when Jeff Hoffman, who’d just gotten two high-stress outs in the fifth, went back out the following inning, loading the bases with a single, walk and hit by pitch, spiking two wild pitches in the process. He lacked velocity and, to an even greater extent, command, perhaps in part because he sat through a lengthy top of the sixth that included two pitching changes, all after warming up three separate times throughout the ballgame. Many aspects of the Phillies’ meltdown this October have not been Rob Thomson’s fault, but Hoffman’s leash was questionable at best.

It all set the scene for Lindor. Carlos Estévez came on for Hoffman and served up a grand slam on his fourth pitch.

Speaking of wasting, the disaster inning negated one of more improbable outings you’ll see in the postseason. Ranger Suárez danced around danger throughout 4 1/3 innings of scoreless baseball — a line that stayed scoreless because Hoffman escaped disaster himself in relief of Suárez in the fifth.

A run already in, the Phillies had runners on the corners in the fourth with one out and could not score. Bryce Harper led off the fateful sixth with a double and did not reach third. They threatened in the ninth; Edwin Díaz walked the first two Phillies before the next three came up empty. The offense fell flat on its face for the third time in four games.

It’s exactly how they crashed out a win shy of the World Series in 2023. And so a second straight postseason ends painfully early.

This time, it was earlier.

MORE FROM PHILLIES NATION

  1. Phillies 2024 Walk-Up Songs
  2. Nick Castellanos: “Closest To Death As We’re Ever Gonna Get, So In A Way We Should Feel The Most Alive”
  3. Game 3 Was Over When Bryce Harper Came Up Short
  4. Alec Bohm Speaks After Getting Bumped From The Lineup In Game 2
  5. Nick Castellanos’ Eventful Day At The Park Bookended With Father-Son Memories
  6. Bryson Stott Rewards Phillies’ Faith With Clutch Triple In NLDS Game 2
  7. Bryce Harper, Kyle Schwarber Climbing Up The All-Time Postseason Home Run Leaderboard
  8. Phillies Battle The Sun, Themselves And Lose Game 1 In Tragic Fashion
  9. Rob Thomson On Roster Decisions And Why Phillies Will Prioritize Defense
  10. Dave Dombrowski Not Over Phillies’ 2023 NLCS Loss: ‘They’ll Linger For The Rest Of My Life’

Subscribe To Phillies Nation On Youtube

Comments

Комментарии для сайта Cackle
Загрузка...

More news:

Mets Prospect Hub
Mets Prospect Hub

Read on Sportsweek.org:

Other sports

Sponsored