Phillies vs Padres Recap: Daring Comeback Seals 4-3 Win

LitZone is an educational game for young sports fans. Build math and reading skills while managing your very own pro sports franchise. Create your teacher account today!
Phillies Strike First With Three Early Homers
The Phillies rolled into San Diego's Petco Park ready to keep their winning streak alive. They'd just shut out the Padres 3-0 the night before, and now they were hungry for more. Randy Vasquez took the mound for San Diego, and the Phillies' bats woke up fast. Bryce Harper crushed the first pitch he saw hard to right field—a 361-foot bomb that made it 1-0. Two innings later, J.T. Realmuto hammered an 89-mile-per-hour cutter deep to left. The score jumped to 2-0. Then came Trea Turner, whose 434-foot missile sailed over the left-field wall. The Phillies were up 3-0 before the Padres could blink. Alec Bohm added an RBI single to push Philadelphia ahead 4-0.
Vasquez was getting demolished. Aaron Nola pitched for the Phillies, and he looked sharp early. The Padres had to battle back fast or this game was over.
Padres Claw Back With Two Solo Shots
San Diego wasn't ready to wave the white flag yet. In the fourth inning, Manny Machado stepped up and launched a fastball over the left-field fence. The ball rocketed out to 362 feet, and Gavin Sheets raced home with him—making it 4-2. The Padres had life. Aaron Nola kept pitching tough for Philadelphia, striking out hitters and keeping the Padres from breaking through. But in the eighth inning, the home team got another chance. Ramon Laureano crushed a Brad Keller offering over the left-center wall—a towering 409-foot blast that cut Philadelphia's lead to just one run at 4-3. The Padres smelled an opening. San Diego's bats were waking up. Could they tie this game and grab the momentum?
The ninth inning was coming. Everything was on the line.
Phillies Hold On For a Tight Win
The ninth inning arrived and everything was tight. The Padres were down by just one, and Petco Park was buzzing. Orion Kerkering came in for Philadelphia to lock down the middle innings, striking out three batters in one inning of work. Then Jhoan Duran stepped off the mound as the closer. This was his moment. Duran threw absolutely electric stuff—his fastball hit 96 miles per hour and his splitter was sharp. The Padres swung and missed. Swung again and came up empty. One after another, San Diego's hitters couldn't catch up to his velocity. Duran recorded the save. The final score was Philadelphia 4, San Diego 3. The Phillies improved to 29-27 with their third straight win. The Padres fell to 31-24, losing their fourth game in a row. The series was Philadelphia's to keep.
* LitZone has no affiliation with the NBA, NFL, MLB or any other 3rd-party organizations or individuals mentioned on this site or its applications. All logos are the trademark and property of their respective owners. All player images and logos are used purely for educational and editorial purposes. Insights from the Deep Dive Fantasy Football Podcast.


