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Realmuto doubles in Harper in the 8th as the Phillies beat the Padres 2-1

Realmuto doubles in Harper in the 8th as the Phillies beat the Padres 2-1

Washington Post20 hours ago
SAN DIEGO — J.T. Realmuto doubled in Bryce Harper with the go-ahead run with two outs in the eighth inning and Cristopher Sánchez was impressive for 7 1/3 innings as the Philadelphia Phillies beat the San Diego Padres 2-1 on Sunday to prevent a three-game sweep.
Sánchez (8-2) got a nice ovation from several hundred Phillies fans sitting behind the third-base dugout after manager Rob Thomson lifted him with one out in the eighth. He held the Padres to one run and six hits while striking out six and walking three.
With the Padres ceding most of the left side of the infield and All-Star lefty reliever Adrian Morejon (7-4) pitching, the left-handed Harper sent a hard shot a few feet inside the third base line that rolled into left field. David Morgan came on and struck out Nick Castellanos before Realmuto doubled into the gap in left-center to bring in Harper. Morgan shouted into his glove in frustration.
Harper scored both Phillies runs, the first one coming in the first when the Padres committed two errors. He drew a two-out walk off Nick Pivetta, advanced on All-Star third baseman Manny Machado's throwing error and Realmuto's infield single, and scored on first baseman Luis Arraez's throwing error.
The Padres tied it in the sixth when Jose Iglesias singled off the glove of diving second baseman Bryson Stott to bring in Machado.
Pivetta struck out eight and allowed one unearned run and three hits in 6 2/3 innings, with two walks.
After intentionally walking All-Star Fernando Tatis Jr. to put two runners on in the ninth, former Padres reliever Matt Strahm got Arraez to line out to left for his sixth save.
The teams split the season series 3-3, with each going 2-1 at home.
The Phillies open a three-game home series against the Los Angeles Angels on Friday night. The Padres start a three-game series at Washington on Friday night.
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MLB First-Half Check-In: Biggest surprises, favorite moments from the 2025 season
MLB First-Half Check-In: Biggest surprises, favorite moments from the 2025 season

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MLB First-Half Check-In: Biggest surprises, favorite moments from the 2025 season

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They're 40-51, 13 games behind the first-place Phillies, and 9.5 games back of a wild-card spot. Put another way, Atlanta has fewer wins than the Marlins (42) and just two more than the Pirates (38). That's seriously shocking and terribly disappointing for Braves fans, who expected the club to, at the very least, make it a three-way dogfight with the Phillies and Mets for the division title. But they just continued spiraling after their 0-7 start to the season. The offense is underperforming. Their record-setting performance, when they recorded the highest team slugging percentage in baseball history, was just two years ago, and their core hasn't changed. The rotation is in shambles after Chris Sale fractured his rib, so he's out until late August, and Spencer Schwellenbach fractured his elbow, so he won't return before September. Spencer Strider hasn't reached his pre-injury dominance. Reynaldo Lopez went down after his first start of the season. At this point, it's tough to envision the Braves climbing out of the hole they've dug themselves into, and it's particularly bad timing as All-Star Game festivities take over Atlanta this weekend. The Braves look like they're on the precipice of missing the playoffs for the first time in eight years. Now, which player has surprised you the most in the first half? And will their season keep going the way it has the rest of the way? Kavner: The Javier Báez resurgence is near the top of my list, but it has to be Cal Raleigh. For a switch-hitting catcher to lead MLB in home runs more than halfway through the season is remarkable. This didn't exactly come out of nowhere — Raleigh did, after all, lead all catchers in homers each of the last three years — but what we're seeing this year is something entirely different. He looks like a completely different force from the right side of the box, and we're watching what will likely be the best season from a catcher in MLB history. Can't say I saw that coming, even from the reigning American League Platinum Glove Award just passed Ken Griffey Jr. for the most home runs by a Mariners player before the All-Star break with his career-high 36th home run of the year and is only three away from tying Barry Bonds' record for home runs before the break. Now, I can't expect Raleigh to continue at this same pace all year, but he has demonstrated a special ability throughout his career to handle the rigors of his position without falling off in the second half. So, I do expect him to obliterate Salvador Perez's record for the most home runs by a primary catcher in a single season. Raleigh is already just 12 home runs away from tying Perez's mark. Thosar: Speaking of Cal Raleigh ... it's truly amazing how he's inserted himself into the AL MVP conversation as a strong contender. He matched his home run total from last season on July 4. 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I don't expect him to be very active on the basepaths anymore — he has just one stolen base since he started pitching again — but another 50-homer season could be in the cards, and I expect him to win his fourth MVP trophy. After getting to finally watch him on the postseason stage for the first time last season, I'm looking forward to seeing him in his full form this October, even if his pitching outings remain somewhat abbreviated. Thosar: I'm expecting the Dodgers to continue slowly ramping up Shohei Ohtani, with an emphasis on slowly, on the mound in the second half. They need him to be a two-way threat for a deep playoff push, so there's little reason to push him before then. Coming back as a two-way player after his second major elbow surgery is all uncharted territory for Ohtani and the Dodgers, so they'll continue to heavily rely on him to be up front about how he's feeling both at the plate and on the mound. Still, that he has combined to allow just two hits, one earned run, and one walk across six innings (four starts) is pretty impressive, already. Fans are itching to see him go deeper into his outings, but the way that the Dodgers are handling it is for the greater good. Meanwhile from the dish, Ohtani is leading the NL with 31 home runs, which is the most in Dodgers franchise history before the All-Star break, and he entered Thursday with a .993 OPS that's the third-best in the majors behind Judge and Raleigh. I'm expecting more of the same in the second half from the unicorn, who has barely slowed down since pitching again. What has been your favorite moment of the 2025 season to this point Kavner: This grab, from Denzel Clarke. I mean, just look at everyone's face afterward. No one can comprehend what they saw. It's one of the greatest catches in MLB history, and that's not hyperbole. 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MLB Draft: Landon Hodge of Crespi goes to the White Sox in the fourth round

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He was close, man." For Power and McLaughlin, they could feel more of the same this year with good days and bad days. McLaughlin wrecked in qualifying on Saturday, meaning he had to start at the rear for both races. He worked his way from 27th to fourth in the first race, an incredible run. But his race on Sunday ended on the first lap when Devlin DeFrancesco got loose underneath him and they both wiped out. "It's the story of our year," McLaughlin said. McLaughlin could blame himself, as the crash Saturday put him in that position. Power had an engine issue that Chevrolet will look into. "These things come at such inconvenient times, but everyone goes through it," Power said. "It's just one of those things." It obviously hasn't been a smooth year for Penske, which released its three top INDYCAR executives after a technical issue during Indy 500 qualifying was the second significant violation since the start of the 2024 season. Earlier this month, the organization announced that Jonathan Diuguid had been promoted to President of the INDYCAR and sports car programs while Travis Law was named Competition Director for the programs. Both Diuguid and Law had experience in INDYCAR but had been focusing on sports car roles in recent years. The NASCAR leadership did not change. McLaughlin said Friday at Iowa that things do seem settled with the leadership in place. "I wouldn't want to be with another team in terms of when we're down in this right now," McLaughlin said. "With the resources, the people, I really think we're going to be just fine. "It's going to take some time, but I feel like this is meant to happen and we'll get going." The one thing that is important to realize, McLaughlin said, is that all three drivers, when they haven't had the speed they wanted, are fighting similar issues. So where the team is focusing on getting better is across the board of the three teams. 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