The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Velasquez and Santana finish off sweep of whiffing Giants

- By Mike Cranston

PHILADELPH­IA » Vince Velasquez bent over, his hands on his knees, as another home run sailed over his head. But somehow, what looked like a lost afternoon for the Philadelph­ia Phillies turned into another win.

The San Francisco Giants took a three-run lead in the second inning before Velasquez regrouped, beginning a string of five straight strikeouts.

“It’s just a different mentality when you give up three runs,” he said. “You kind of just say, forget it and keep moving on and get more aggressive.”

Velasquez recovered from a slow start to strike out 12 in six innings, Carlos Santana hit a three-run homer and the Phillies rallied past the Giants 6-3 on Thursday for a four-game sweep.

Phillies starters Zach Eflin, Aaron Nola, Nick Pivetta and Velasquez combined to allow four runs in 24.2 innings in the series with 40 strikeouts. The Giants struck out 53 times in Philadelph­ia, obliterati­ng the previous team record of 44 in a four-game series set in 2003, according to Stats LLC.

“They’re all big arms. They’re all hitting 95-plus (mph) and they have good secondary pitches,” Giants manager Bruce Bochy said. “(Velasquez) had a good curveball going. You look at this club, and they’ve been playing good. And if you’re playing good you probably have pretty good starting pitching.”

Odubel Herrera added three hits and drove in two runs, extending his on-base streak to 39 games for the Phillies, who improved to 15-5 at home.

Gregor Blanco and Alen Hanson homered to give the Giants a 3-0 lead in the second. Velasquez (3-4) allowed five hits, with his velocity improving as the game moved on.

Jake Arrieta came into the Philadelph­ia Phillies clubhouse afterward and saw Vince Velasquez surrounded by reporters. “Way to go, Vinny,” Arrieta said.

While Arrieta became the big name when he joined the Phillies pitching staff before the season, he’s been impressed by his young teammates.

Santana, batting .153 entering May, continued his recent tear when he connected off Ty Blach (3-4) in a four-run fourth. Santana, signed away from Cleveland in the offseason, has driven in 15 runs in the past six games.

Herrera doubled earlier in the fourth to give him the Phillies’ longest on-base streak since Bobby Abreu (48) in 2000-01.

 ?? MATT SLOCUM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? First baseman Carlos Santana launches a three-run homer off San Franciso starter Ty Blach in the fourth inning to put the Phillies in front for good Thursday.
MATT SLOCUM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS First baseman Carlos Santana launches a three-run homer off San Franciso starter Ty Blach in the fourth inning to put the Phillies in front for good Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States