The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

IN NEED OF A BREAK

Phillies head into All-Star break after losing 2 out of 3 in Miami

- By Steven Wine

The Marlins’ rally in the fifth lasted so long Phillies first baseman Carlos Santana headed for the dugout after the second out, thinking the inning was over.

Instead Miami scored four more runs.

Brian Anderson hit a three-run homer in Miami’s eight-run fifth, sending the Marlins to a 10-5 victory over Philadelph­ia on Sunday.

Santana took a couple of steps toward the dugout after fielding a grounder and touching first for the second out in the fifth. He might have had a shot at an inning-ending 3-6-3 double play,

but Phillies manager Gabe Kapler said he doubted it.

“It was probably a one-out play,” Kapler said. “Obviously losing track of the outs is something that can’t happen. He’s one of our most locked in and focused players most of the time, so I think he has earned a pass on this one.”

Marlins manager Don Mat-

tingly lost track of the runs in the inning, there were so many.

“We throw the six up there — or it was eight, right?” he said.

Miami totaled eight hits in the fifth against three pitchers. Cameron Maybin homered and singled in the inning, and Justin Bour had two singles, with his second hit driving in the final two runs for an 8-5 lead.

“It was crazy,” Anderson said. “Cam’s bomb got us going. It seemed like we were getting our pitches and hitting them, and nobody was missing anything, and if they did miss, it kept dropping.”

The Marlins began the day with the worst record in the NL East, but they took the series against the division-leading Phils and have gone 21-18 since June 5.

“Guys are playing with confidence,” All-Star catcher J.T. Realmuto said. “The hitters, especially the young guys, are starting to gain a lot of confidence and get a lot better.”

The Phillies (53-42) head into the break with an ugly loss, but still lead Atlanta by a half-game in the NL East.

“I’m going to take away all the positive things we did in the first half,” Kapler said. “We’ve had a really, really spectacula­r first half.”

Cesar Hernandez hit a bases-loaded triple during a five-run fourth for Philadelph­ia. Miami’s rally began with Maybin’s one-out solo homer against Enyel De Los Santos.

Following consecutiv­e singles, Anderson also homered. Miguel Rojas hit a two-out, two-run single off Edubray Ramos (3-1) to put the Marlins ahead 6-5. Bour drove in two more runs against Adam Morgan.

It was the most runs scored by the Marlins and allowed by the Phillies in an inning this season.

Ramos thought he struck out Martin Prado to end the fifth with Philadelph­ia still leading, 5-4. But Prado ended up with a walk.

“It changed the inning completely,” Ramos said. “I thought we were going to be out of the inning with the called strike, but the umpire called it a ball and everything changed.”

De Los Santos, making his second big league start, was charged with five runs in 4 1/3 innings. The righthande­r was recalled before the game from Triple-A Lehigh Valley to start for Zach Eflin, who went on the disabled list with a finger blister.

Ramos was charged with three runs, and his ERA rose from 1.11 to 1.93.

Miami starter Jose Urena allowed five runs and departed after throwing 42 pitches to get through the fourth, matching his shortest outing this year. He came into the game with the worst run support of any NL starter, but for a change his teammates came to the rescue.

Four Miami relievers combined for five hitless innings. Elieser Hernandez (2-5) threw a scoreless fifth.

“Everybody got the right outs,” Mattingly said.

After initially being ruled out, Realmuto reached in the third inning on an infield hit thanks to a replay reversal. Before the next pitch, De Los Santos picked him off . coach Zlatko Dalic said. After Mandzukic scored, “I started hoping again, but it is very difficult to come back against opposition as difficult as France.”

France coach Didier Deschamps became only the third man to win the World Cup as a player and a coach. He joined Mario Zagallo of Brazil and Franz Beckenbaue­r, who capatained West Germany.

Deschamps, France’s captain 20 years ago, was lifted up by his players on the field and flung into the air several teams and caught. The normally staid coach did a few skipping dance steps in the rain before stopping and laughing at himself.

It was that kind of unbridled evening for the French who won with an exuberance not often seen in a mostly efficient, controlled title run.

Back home in France, thousands of fans headed to the Eiffel Tower to watch a broadcast on giant screens that Paris police closed the area more than two hours before kickoff.

Putin watched the game in a VIP section with the presidents of France and Croatia, Emmanuel Macron and Kolinda Grabar-Kitarovic.

Macron paced nervously out of his seat during the video review, and kissed his Croatian counterpar­t on both cheeks to console her after the game. They joined the medal ceremony and both kissed the gold trophy before it got to Lloris.

 ?? BRYNN ANDERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Philadelph­ia Phillies starting pitcher Enyel De Los Santos walks off after being taken out of a baseball game during the fifth inning against the Miami Marlins, Sunday in Miami.
BRYNN ANDERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Philadelph­ia Phillies starting pitcher Enyel De Los Santos walks off after being taken out of a baseball game during the fifth inning against the Miami Marlins, Sunday in Miami.
 ?? BRYNN ANDERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Philadelph­ia Phillies starting pitcher Enyel De Los Santos sits in the dugout during the fifth inning of a baseball game against Miami Marlins, Sunday in Miami.
BRYNN ANDERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Philadelph­ia Phillies starting pitcher Enyel De Los Santos sits in the dugout during the fifth inning of a baseball game against Miami Marlins, Sunday in Miami.
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 ?? BRYNN ANDERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Philadelph­ia Phillies’ Maikel Franco celebrates with teammates after scoring a run during the fourth inning of a baseball game against Miami Marlins, Sunday in Miami.
BRYNN ANDERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Philadelph­ia Phillies’ Maikel Franco celebrates with teammates after scoring a run during the fourth inning of a baseball game against Miami Marlins, Sunday in Miami.

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