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Recap
 
Webb remains perfect; Diamondbacks cruise past Phillies
ARIZONA 8, PHILADELPHIA 3
 

PHOENIX (Ticker) -- Brandon Webb rewrote a page of the Arizona
Diamondbacks' record book.

Webb pitched a six-hitter as the Diamondbacks cruised to an 8-3
victory over the Philadelphia Phillies on Thursday.

Chris Young hit a two-run homer and Chris Snyder added a two-run
double for Arizona, which earned a split of its four-game set
with Philadelphia.

Webb (8-0) yielded three runs while striking out three to become
the first Diamondback to record a victory in his first eight
starts.

"I felt early on that I had real good stuff, even in the pen. I
felt great," Webb said. "It was probably the best I felt in
three games. I went out there with confidence, knowing that my
arm was feeling good."

The righthander surpassed the mark set by current teammate Randy
Johnson, who won his first seven outings in 2000.

"Today, Brandon might have been as good as he has all year,"
Diamondbacks manager Bob Melvin said. "The last couple of
innings, his arm slot got a little lower and his sinker got a
little more lateral, but that's the best sinker we have seen in
three or four outings."

Webb also became the first hurler in the major leagues to start
8-0 since Jon Garland did it for the Chicago White Sox in 2005.

"Brandon is off to a great start," said Arizona catcher Snyder.
"He's been throwing strikes, getting ground balls and
conserving his pitches."

The 2006 National League Cy Young Award Winner, Webb threw 71 of
his 104 pitches for strikes in holding an opponent to three
runs or less for the seventh time this year.

"Brandon is able to win games when he doesn't have his best
stuff, and for me, that is the key to having the type of success
he is having right now," Melvin said.

Webb allowed a run in the first inning, as Chase Utley lifted a
sacrifice fly. But Young responded in the bottom half with his
eighth homer of the season, a two-run blast off Brett Myers
(2-3).

"After the Phillies scored on the sac fly, I settled in nice and
my team gave me a lead, like they have done almost every time
this year, which is amazing," Webb said. "After that, I just
focused and was real aggressive with the fastball."

Arizona batted around against Myers in the fourth inning, which
was highlighted by Snyder's two-run double to left field, to
increase the lead to 6-1.

"Chris (Young) got us off the nice start early on, but Myers has
been tough on us," Melvin said. "In the middle innings, it
didn't seem like we were having good swings. Then all of a
sudden, we got the big inning off of him."

"I definitely didn't give us any opportunity to stay in the
ballgame," Myers said. "I can't put together back-to-back good
starts. I don't know what the problem is. I made some good
pitches they hit. I made some bad pitches they put out."

Myers gave up seven runs - six earned - and nine hits with three
walks and five strikeouts in five innings. The Phillies have
lost each of his last three starts.

Meanwhile, Webb rolled through the first eight innings,
surrendering just three singles. He gave up run-scoring base
hits by Eric Bruntlett and Ryan Howard in the ninth before
wrapping up his first complete game of the season and 13th
career.

After Howard's single drove in Bruntlett from second base,
Melvin began to make his way to the mound. But both Webb and
Snyder waved him off, sending the Diamondbacks manager back to
his seat on the bench.

"I wanted to finish the game, (Melvin) knows I wanted to finish
the game," Webb said. "He told me I had one batter to finish
the game, but he gave me the opportunity to finish it."

Snyder echoed Webb's sentiments.

"I was lobbying for him to stay in," Snyder said. "Complete
games don't come by that often."

Webb then induced Geoff Jenkins to ground into a double play,
just like Melvin suggested.

"I told him he has one hitter to get two outs," Melvin recalled.
"If he wanted to stay out there instead of going 8 2/3, that's
fine, but you better get a double-play ball if you want to end
this game. Snyds was arguing more than Webby. He was begging
to keep him in."

Mark Reynolds, who went 3-for-4, had an RBI single in the fifth
and Justin Upton added a solo homer in the eighth for Arizona.


 
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