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Sailors swept by Philadelphia, ending East Coast road trip

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Philadelphia – The sailors were unable to leave town quickly enough on Wednesday afternoon.

The Phillies, who blocked the shots at Citizens Bank Park, lost 11-2 on 2-7 roads in Seattle, was three games at Citizens Bank Park.

Despite their starter’s outing, they hang out, which made it late for a game but ended up being plagued by some key bullpen decisions that left Philadelphia passing multiple daggers in the seventh inning out of control.

That said, the final score is more indicative of performance for most of the game, with Philadelphia pulling its series to 48 with 20 hits.

“I think the key is our response as a team,” said Julio Rodríguez. “It’s easy to go through a relaxing period, everyone is doing well and all of that.

Tayler Saudedo, who clung to a 3-2 deficit, was deployed to the lowest leverage rescuers on the list to face the bottom of the order. But he surrendered five times out of seven batsmen, and he recorded only once.

Saucedo walked Brandon Marsh on four courts and then hit Harrison Bader 1-1, but it was awful, but the situation was worse for the red hot Bryson Stott, who slammed a counterfield, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), defeated Eugenio Suárez, who moved back to third base in contact.

Trea Turner followed by a chopper, chopping Saucedo's head off and standing out on the gloves of Cole Young at second base, before Kyle Schwarber tugged over Josh Naylor and pulled a huge throw from right fielder Luke Raley.

Bryce Harper went to the Blade with JP Crawford of JP, who headed to second base to cover Schwarber and protect the shift.

It is at this point that Dan Wilson (managed in his 162nd Pro Competition) released Saucedo for Sauryn Lao, who was selected from Triple-A Tacoma on Tuesday.

“It's their series of waving bats, and you have to give them some credibility,” Wilson said. “It seems like they have a hard time hitting some balls, but a lot of the things they didn't hit also found holes, just making it difficult.”

There is a lot to be freed from the seventh of that fate, but it is done by pitching decisions. Much of the burden on the bullpen fell on Luis Castillo's game, lasting just four innings after 85 courts, and he surrendered only three times despite allowing 22 basemen. His speed dropped by 1.1 mph on each of his fastballs.

“But as the game goes on, I’m able to tick it,” Castillo said through an interpreter, while reiterating that he is totally healthy. “But I keep saying it's a long season and you don't always come out the fastest. Sometimes you'll have some on these days.”

The seventh may be reserved for Matt Brash, but Brash was called twice, one of which was summoned in sixth, working from the jam started by Caleb Ferguson. Brash had only 10 goals, but he also shot 22 on Tuesday.

Wilson then chose Sasdo instead of Gabe Spear, which imagined deployed with Schwarber and Harper. Speier was seen warming, but by those shaky times it was a three-round match.

“Since he came back, he really threw the ball for us [from Tacoma on Friday],” Wilson said of Sasto, “especially for the left, getting some contact and having a lot of contact on the ground. But many of their stuff found the hole again. ”

Apart from Speier and Lao (to perform their duties), the only other option for seventh place is Carlos Vargas, who were not able to get after covering three innings on Monday, while Andrés Muñoz was used in the eighth or ninth innings.

“That was a tough call,” Wilson said. “And it seems they can add a little bit there.”

Aside from Castillo, it was a tough situation for Seattle’s rotation, which was Bryce Miller’s first full season since returning from Illinois on Tuesday. During their first turn, the group had an overall score of 8.42 ERA, part of a five-game winning streak in the season.