
[ad_1]
PHILADELPHIA — In a sport that often defies logic, Philadelphia Phillies right fielder Nick Castellanos has a simple explanation for the Phillies’ comeback from a disastrous top of the first inning in Saturday’s Game 4 of the National League Championship Series: “It’s tough to play in the jungle, man.”
After the San Diego Padres roared out of the gate with four runs in the first, the Phillies roared right back with three runs in the bottom of the first — on their way to a four-homer, 10-run outburst in a 10-6 victory that put the Phillies one win away from reaching their first World Series since 2009.
“We knew the crowd was going to be a factor,” first baseman Rhys Hoskins said as the Phillies improved to 4-0 at Citizens Bank Park in the postseason while scoring 31 runs and hitting .313 — in a postseason where runs have otherwise been scarce. “We’re confident in that. We saw that in the NLDS. And we feel like it’s a big part of when you get those innings rolling, you get a couple guys on, it gets a little louder. You get the one big hit, it gets louder, and that’s where you can really snowball things.”
The top of the Phillies’ lineup was throwing snowballs all game long. Their top five hitters delivered big nights as they each got at least two hits or scored at least two runs, going a combined 9-for-18 with seven extra-base hits and all 10 runs scored. The biggest hero was Rhys Hoskins, who hit two crucial two-run home runs for a four-RBI game.
Hoskins’ first home run followed Kyle Schwarber’s leadoff single in the bottom of the first, after the Padres had struck for a four-run outburst off Bailey Falter. Hoskins worked the count full against Padres starter Mike Clevinger, who threw a 94-mph fastball right down the middle that Hoskins drilled 384 feet to left-center.
“A lot of us said ’27 outs,’ after the top of the first inning,” Hoskins said. “We’ve been down before. We knew with a bullpen game, the possibility of multiple guys having to be put in…
[ad_2]
Source : espn


