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The Philadelphia Inquirer
The Philadelphia Inquirer
Sport
Matt Breen

Phillies’ Rhys Hoskins returns with two homers and other observations from 7-4 win over Padres

SAN DIEGO — Rhys Hoskins, playing for the first time in more than two weeks, walked Sunday afternoon through the visiting dugout at Petco Park with a pair of straw hats sitting atop his head. The Phillies had struggled to hit for power while Hoskins was on the injured list and his absence became more glaring with each game he missed. Their offense was missing a punch.

So consider it a welcome sight to see Hoskins wearing two of the team’s homer hats in the fifth inning of a 7-4 win over the Padres. Hoskins wasted little time making his presence felt as he homered in two of his first three at-bats and sparked the team’s offense as they responded after Saturday’s brutal loss. The Phillies hit four homers, which equaled the amount they hit in the previous four games.

While Hoskins was on the injured list, the Phillies had the second-worst slugging percentage in the National League and hit the ninth fewest homers in the majors. Their meager offense was the primary reason the Phils dropped from first place to five games out in one week.

Sunday was just one game against a cast of relief pitchers, but it was easy to see how much better the lineup is when Hoskins is in it.

“We’ve missed him,” general manager Sam Fuld said before the game. “He just changes our lineup. He stretches our lineup and he’s a big part of what we do. A lot of times, he carries this offense and we’re just excited to get him out there and see what he can do for us.”

The Phillies won two of three against the Padres yet lost ground in the division as the first-place Braves swept Baltimore and have won nine-straight games. The Phils trail the Braves by five games but the next two weeks present an opportunity to make a move.

The Phillies play 10 of their next 12 games against the Diamondbacks, Nationals, and Marlins while the Braves play their next seven games against the Yankees, Giants, and Dodgers before four games at the Rockies, who have been tough this season at home. The Phillies have not done a good job this season of cleaning up against bad teams, but they’ll have to do so in order to get to October.

Gibson deals

Kyle Gibson pitched eight strong innings, continuing to prove to be a strong addition at last month’s trade deadline. The right-hander allowed just one run on six hits while striking out three and walking one. He has a 2.36 ERA in four starts since joining the Phillies.

He was an All-Star this season in Texas by finding success as one of the American League’s best ground ball pitchers and that has carried over to the NL. Gibson induced plenty of weak contact on Sunday as he recorded half of his 24 outs on the ground.

Herrera’s rolling

Odúbel Herrera kept his strong August going with a two-run single in the fourth and a homer in the seventh. J.T. Realmuto also homered in the seventh. Herrera went 4-for-5 and his single put the Phillies ahead by two runs after Hoskins tied the game with his first homer.

Herrera is hitting .368 this month with a 1.141 OPS after batting .212 in June and July with a .611 OPS. He started Sunday in left field for Andrew McCutchen, who struck out five times Saturday night and has just four hits in 39 at-bats since returning from the injured list.

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