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The Philadelphia Phillies defeated the Atlanta Braves 9-1 on Friday in Game 3 of their National League Division Series. The Phillies now lead the best-of-five set, 2-1, heading into Saturday's Game 4. Another win and Philadelphia will advance to the NL Championship Series for the right to play for the pennant against either the Los Angeles Dodgers or the San Diego Padres.
The third inning proved to be the key to the game. The Phillies had not mustered a baserunner through the first two frames against Atlanta rookie Spencer Strider. Their fortunes changed right away, as Brandon Marsh worked a four-pitch walk. Jean Segura struck out, but his double-play partner Bryson Stott then endured a lengthy, nine-pitch at-bat before hitting a double to right field that opened up the scoring.
The Braves would intentionally walk Kyle Schwarber, a move that would backfire immediately. That's because Strider delivered a lame-duck fastball down the middle that Rhys Hoskins drilled for a three-run home run.
OH MY GOODNESS PHILLY IS ROCKING! HOSKINS 3 RUN SHOT! ?: FS1 and the FOX Sports App pic.twitter.com/dTzCym83M6
Just like that, the Phillies led 4-0. They weren't done there, however. Strider nearly was, as he'd exit after giving up a single to Nick Castellanos on the next pitch he threw. Lefty reliever Dylan Lee would enter and -- wouldn't you know it -- give up a home run of his own to Bryce Harper on the first pitch of his night.
BRYCE BLAST!! ? ?: FS1 and the FOX Sports App pic.twitter.com/5ZKLiTXOPN
The Phillies, up 6-0 at that point, were in complete control. That wouldn't change the rest of the way.
entering 2022, the Phillies had never scored more than 5 runs in a postseason inning they've now had 2 6-run innings this postseason
Here are four things to know about the Phillies' win.
As mentioned in the introduction, most of the Phillies' damage came against Strider. While he had been one of the top young starters in the majors during the regular season, he hadn't pitched since Sept. 18 because of an oblique injury. Strider wasn't even officially named the Game 3 starter until Friday morning.
Strider started the game well enough, but it became clear that he was losing steam as he struggled to put away Stott based on his wavering command and slipping velocity:
Spencer Strider Avg Fastball Velocity by IP Today 1st 98.5 2nd 98.3 3rd 96.4 Strider's pitch on Hoskins' HR was 93.8 MPH, matching his slowest fastball of the year on 1,565 heaters
What's more is that the home-run pitch Strider threw to Hoskins happened to be the slowest fastball of his career, an indication that he wasn't right.
Given that Strider was presumed to be on a tight pitch count, it was surprising to see nobody warming behind him until after the Phillies had gotten on the board. Manager Brian Snitker explained his thinking after the game, suggesting he wanted Strider to get through four innings of work. "As good as he was throwing, we thought we could skate him through."
Who knows, perhaps a quicker hook for Strider would've made no difference and the Phillies' bats would've scorched whomever was on the mound when Hoskins and Harper walked to the plate. But heading into Game 4, the decision to start and stick by Strider on Friday might end up being a regret for Snitker and the Braves if they lose the series.
Strider had a disaster start. How about his counterpart?
Phillies right-hander Aaron Nola threw 6 2/3 shutout innings in his Wild Card Series start against the St. Louis Cardinals, the first playoff appearance of his career. He didn't quite match that effort on Friday, but he did give the Phillies another high-quality start.
Indeed, Nola worked into the seventh inning, departing after giving up a leadoff single to Orlando Arcia. His final line saw him toss six innings of one-run (unearned) ball, surrendering five hits and two walks while punching out six batters on 90 pitches. That means Nola has not allowed an earned run in 12 2/3 innings of October ball.
Aaron Nola, 95mph Two Seamer and 81mph Knuckle Curve, Overlay pic.twitter.com/ShWYWWa2IA
It should be noted that Nola's velocity and spin rates were up on all his pitches compared to his seasonal norms. He generated 15 whiffs on 44 pitches, including eight on his spike curveball. Additionally 11 of Nola's 15 batted balls were grounders.
Add it all up, and the Phillies have to be thrilled with Nola's month to date.
According to our Dayn Perry's research, teams who have taken a 2-1 lead in the LDS round have historically won the series around 75 percent of the time. That speaks to the significance of having two tries to close out the series, and it suggests that the Phillies are in good position to advance to the next round, be it in four or five games.
The Phillies will look to eliminate the defending champion Braves and punch their tickets to the NL Championship Series on Saturday with a victory in Game 4. It'll be a matchup of veteran right-handers Charlie Morton will get the nod for Atlanta for his18th career postseason appearance; Philadelphia will counter with Noah Syndergaard. First pitch is set for 2:07 p.m. ET.
Don't have enough words to describe this guy.#RingTheBell x @chevrolet pic.twitter.com/SLiyFNIea9
Also still thinking about this pic.twitter.com/tu7YMxK2Nk
Still thinking about this pic.twitter.com/pLdd2PAMqL
THAT'S A #REDOCTOBER WIN IN PHILADELPHIA#RingTheBell pic.twitter.com/2uxkq2uTTD
It's now 9-1, and the Phillies' chances of winning Game 3 are up to 99.9 percent.
Stay hot, Nick Castellanos!! pic.twitter.com/OM5zRU7FXP
Him. pic.twitter.com/PS2VxpFWMg
Two were via strikeout. Look at this relevant merchandise:
They made t shirts lol pic.twitter.com/D5CNKME11i
The Phillies are still 95.4 percent to win Game 3.
Travis d'Arnaud looked to ground into an inning-ending double play, but an error by Rhys Hoksins allowed the Braves to keep the inning alive before Michael Harris II singled home Atlanta's first run of the game. Nola still has not allowed an earned run in 12 2/3 postseason innings. It's 6-1 in the bottom of the sixth.
Not necessarily because a 6-0 lead is unsafe, but they'd love to get past Odorizzi and into the actual Atlanta bullpen in advance of Game 4.
That's what you would expect, given the 6-0 lead. In terms of win expectancy, they right now have a 97.4 percent to win Game 3.
You keep fighting and fighting, but on the mound, if Jake Odorizzi can just wear this and leave the high-leverage bullpen arms (Jansen, Iglesias, Minter, McHugh) out in the bullpen the rest of this game, the Braves can be best set up for Game 4.
Obviously holding the lead is the most important thing -- and we saw how difficult it can be in Game 1 with this matchup -- but conserving every other arm outside of Nola is also important here. If he can find a way to get through seven or eight, they are even more well set up for tomorrow (again, this is all assuming they hold on).
This reaction is EVERYTHING. pic.twitter.com/C61D3AraIj
What else can we say other than WOW#RingTheBell x @Toyota pic.twitter.com/vrag0QLMQL
My apologies. JT Realmuto singled between the Hoskins and Harper HRs, so they didn't go back to back and it's actually 6-0.
BRYCEEEEEEEEE#RingTheBell pic.twitter.com/q7NelkuVkM
Bryce Harper. Home run. 5-0 Phillies.
BRYCE. HARPER.#RingTheBell pic.twitter.com/gTZ4g0mEpQ
Rhys Hoskins ran around the bases in 2.4 seconds. He heard boos after striking out in the first. CBP hasn't been louder in 11 years after his second. ??? https://t.co/4fTGmplYAV
RHYS HOME RUN AND BAT SPIKE#RingTheBell pic.twitter.com/6AYpGHJwb4
RHYS SPIKE.#Postseason pic.twitter.com/6VYBHIk0AU
Was more of a bat-spike, and it was elite.
Just a bad pitch from Strider: 94 mph fastball down the middle.
Rhys Hoskins three-run shot. 4-0 Phillies. Wow
RHYS TO THE HOSKINSSSSS#RingTheBell pic.twitter.com/IKTQl7rDhi
It's Hoskins with two on and one out
All Bryson Stott needed to do was put the ball in play, but he doubled down the right-field line in doing so. It's 1-0 Phillies and now the top of the order. Spencer Strider can't stay in the game much longer, surely, coming off an oblique injury.
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