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Kyle Farmer's solo home run (6)
Kyle Farmer hits a solo home run to left field to put the Rockies on the board in the bottom of the 5th

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Mets celebrate Pete Alonso's home run record with pregame ceremony
NEW YORK — The party continues for Pete Alonso. The Mets celebrated their new all-time home run king on Thursday with a pregame ceremony at Citi Field, two days after Alonso passed Darryl Strawberry with the 253rd homer of his career. Steve and Alex Cohen gifted the fan-favorite first baseman with a painting made from 253 official MLB baseballs that depicts Alonso's record-breaking home run trot. 'It's really difficult to think of the New York Mets without thinking of Darryl Strawberry being one of the major pillars of this organization,' Alonso said during the on-field ceremony. 'It's really just such a privilege.' The 10-minute celebration also featured a tribute video narrated by Strawberry that showed highlights from Alonso's career, including his first home run; his 53rd homer in 2019 to set the MLB rookie record; and Tuesday's historic blast. Alonso set the Mets' all-time record in the third inning of Tuesday night's 13-5 win in Queens with a two-run homer against Atlanta's Spencer Strider. He added another home run three innings later off of reliever Austin Cox for No. 254. The record had belonged to Strawberry since May 3, 1988, when he hit his 155th homer to pass Dave Kingman's prior franchise best. 'I just want to say congratulations on breaking the home run record,' Strawberry said in a video message that aired on the Citi Field jumbotron. 'You have worked hard. You have stood up in the pressure of New York City, and you have played well. It is well-deserved.' Alonso, a homegrown Met in his seventh MLB season, endured a prolonged free agency last winter before re-signing on a two-year, $54 million contract. The second year of the deal is a player option, meaning Alonso could test the open market again this offseason. He was asked Tuesday by moderator Howie Rose how it would feel to spend his entire career with the Mets. 'I've grown up in this organization. It's been a real treat. I have nothing but love and respect because ever since I was a young, 21-year-old kid, this organization has believed in me,' Alonso said, earning cheers from the Citi Field crowd. 'They've continued to believe in me every single day. I have nothing but gratitude for the fans, this ownership, my teammates. It's just been such a treat, and to finish with one club, that's really incredible. That would be really incredible.' Thursday's ceremony was originally scheduled for Wednesday, but rain prompted the Mets to move it back by a day. The artwork from the Cohens is one of several mementos Alonso can take away from Tuesday's feat. Ford, a sponsor of the Mets, gifted Alonso with a truck, while the Mets retrieved the record-setting ball that Alonso hit into the visitors bullpen for home run No. 253. 'It's gonna go right in the man cave,' Alonso said on Tuesday night. A photo shared by the Mets shows Alonso autographed the ball and added inscriptions that read, 'Mets Franchise HR King' and 'Down Goes Straw!' ____
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Phillies plan to use 6-man rotation with Aaron Nola's return from IL, says manager Rob Thomson
Aaron Nola is scheduled to be activated from the injured list and start for the Philadelphia Phillies on Sunday against the Washington Nationals. With Nola's return, manager Rob Thomson told reporters on Thursday that the Phillies will go with a six-man rotation for at least one turn. Jesús Luzardo started the series opener on Thursday with Zack Wheeler scheduled for Friday and Taijuan Walker — who Thomson said was the No. 6 starter — going on Saturday. After Nola starts on Sunday, the rest of the rotation will line up with Ranger Suárez starting against the Seattle Mariners on Monday, followed by Cristopher Sánchez on Tuesday. Thomson's decision might look smarter after Luzardo gave up three runs on four hits and three walks in Thursday's 3-2 loss to the Nationals. Suárez has also struggled recently, allowing five or more runs in three of his past five starts. In Thomson's view, the starters' workload is wearing them down. "Just getting some of these guys some extra rest because we've been grinding on them pretty hard all year," Thomson said, via the Associated Press. "The one downside to it is you've got to take somebody out of your bullpen, so you're a little short there but we'll just have to figure it out." Philadelphia leads MLB with 687 1/3 innings from its starting pitchers. Sánchez tops Phillies starters with 150 2/3 innings, while Wheeler has logged 144 2/3 frames. After Thursday's start, Luzardo is at 139 innings, followed by Suárez with 112 1/3. Nola returning to the rotation should help relieve some of those innings. However, he may take a while before he can build up a higher workload. Nola hasn't pitched for the Phillies since May 14 after suffering a sprained right ankle that he initially tried to pitch through before going on the IL. That may be why he compiled a 6.16 ERA and 1-7 record before being sidelined. In his three rehab starts, Nola collected a 2.19 ERA in 12 1/3 innings with 17 strikeouts — including 11 in his final appearance. At 69-52, the Phillies go into the weekend with a five-game lead over the New York Mets (64-57) for first place in the NL East. The Mets lost to the Atlanta Braves on Thursday, 4-3.