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Error allows winning run as Phillies top Giants
PHILADELPHIA 6, SAN FRANCISCO 5
 

By Vince DiGregorio
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

PHILADELPHIA (Ticker) - Taking advantage of some sloppy defense,
the Philadelphia Phillies were handed a walk-off win.

Second baseman Eugenio Velez's fielding error on a grounder by
Geoff Jenkins in the bottom of the ninth inning scored Ryan
Howard with the winning run as the Phillies scored five unearned
runs in their 6-5 victory over the San Francisco Giants in the
rubber game on Sunday.

The miscue was the Giants' third error of the game and reliever
Keiichi Yabu (2-2) was made to pay as a result.

"Overall, I thought capitalizing on their mistakes was a big
thing," Phillies manager Charlie Manuel said. "Today's game
wasn't what you'd call a pretty game but, at the same time, we
won."

"Today, the defense just wasn't there," Giants manager Bruce
Bochy said. "We've got to catch the ball. The ball can't get
by (Velez) there."

Yabu retired the first two batters he faced in the ninth before
walking Howard and Pat Burrell. Jenkins then hit a sharp
grounder in the hole between first and second that skipped
underneath Velez's glove. Howard slid in safely at the plate
just ahead of Randy Winn's throw from right.

"I was thinking to score all the way," Howard said. "I just
tried to get a good jump and go as fast as I could."

"Obviously, Ryan's not the fleetest of foot," Jenkins said.
"But I thought he had a chance to score and he ran his butt off.
It won the game."

It was the second walk-off win in the series for the Phillies
after the first two contests went 10 innings. Burrell won
Friday's game with a two-out, two-run homer while the Giants won
a one-run decision in Saturday's affair.

"Both teams battled this whole series," Howard said. "Every
game came down to the wire. A couple of them went extra
innings."

"We fought hard this whole series," Bochy said. "We were a few
outs from getting a sweep."

Brad Lidge (1-0) pitched a scoreless ninth to pick up the win.

San Francisco had taken a 5-4 lead in the eighth inning on a
two-out, RBI triple by Jose Castillo, but Philadelphia tied it
in the bottom half on a one-out, solo home run by Carlos Ruiz.

"Fortunately, Ruiz hit the big home run that kept us in the
game," Burrell said. "Without that, we're probably gonna lose
the game, so you've got to give him a lot of credit."

The anticipated matchup between two promising pitchers never
materialized. San Francisco's Tim Lincecum and Philadelphia's
Cole Hamels each labored through their six-inning stints,
throwing 110 and 99 pitches, respectively.

Lincecum allowed four unearned runs on six hits with two walks,
five strikeouts and two wild pitches. Hamels gave up four runs
on seven hits with no walks and five strikeouts.

"A win's a win," Hamels said. "Especially being able to take a
series. All that matters is winning."

The Phillies had opportunities to score in the first two innings
with a pair of leadoff doubles, but Lincecum retired the next
three batters in each frame. Philadelphia finally capitalized
in the third with the help of a bad call to score two unearned
runs.

Shane Victorino led off with a grounder to short that Emmanuel
Burriss fielded, but his throw was wide. First baseman Rich
Aurilia tagged Victorino, but umpire Marty Foster called him
safe.

Eric Bruntlett singled and, three batters later, Burrell lined a
two-out, two-run double to left to make it 2-0.

"(Lincecum) just left it up, and I was able to hook it down the
line," Burrell said.

"We got the bad end of a call at first base," Bochy said. "That
lost us a couple of runs."

San Francisco used a pair of two-out hits to tie the score in
the fourth. Castillo had an RBI single and then scored all the
way from first base on Aurilia's second double of the game.

Philadelphia added two more unearned runs in the fifth inning
when a single and a throwing error by Castillo put the first two
runners on. Lincecum uncorked a wild pitch to score one run
before Geoff Jenkins' sacrifice fly made it 4-2.

However, Aurilia responded quickly for the Giants in the sixth
when he belted a two-out, two-run home run to retie the game at
4-4.

 
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