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Eaton, Burrell lead Phillies past Reds
PHILADELPHIA 3, CINCINNATI 2
 


By Vince DiGregorio
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

PHILADELPHIA (Ticker) -- Adam Eaton gave the Philadelphia
Phillies his best start of the season.

Eaton retired 19 of the 22 batters he faced and Pat Burrell hit
a two-run home run as the Phillies defeated the Cincinnati Reds,
3-2, on Tuesday.

The righthander went 6 2/3 innings and allowed one run on only
three hits. He struck out five and did not walk a batter. It was
the first game this season where he did not issue a walk.

"I got a lot of outs early with my changeup and then later in
the game (with) cutters and fastballs," Eaton said. "My stuff
was probably the best I've had."

Eaton (2-3) won his second straight game after going winless in
his first 10 starts. It was his third consecutive quality start
and seventh overall this season.

"I'm way more confident than I was in my first game of the
year," Eaton said. "I feel like I can make a pitch when I need
to and that's huge. Obviously, mechanics have a huge part of
that."

With the score tied 1-1 in the sixth inning, Chase Utley led off
with a double to left-center off Reds starter Aaron Harang.
After Ryan Howard struck out, Burrell blasted a 2-2 pitch deep
into the left field seats for his 14th home run to give the
Phillies a 3-1 lead.

"(The pitch) was a slider or a curveball," Burrell said. "I was
just looking to put something in play. We had a guy in scoring
position, so in that situation, I was just trying to get a hit."

Philadelphia had a chance to break the game open in the seventh
when they had runners on second and third and nobody out.
However, lefthander Danny Herrera, making his major-league
debut, came on for Harang and retired the side.

"We had opportunities to score more runs," Burrell said. "That's
something we can always work on, but to be able to pull these
games out like this is huge. You can only take away good things
from one-run games."

The Phillies bullpen nearly wasted Eaton's effort as Tom Gordon
gave up a leadoff triple to Edwin Encarnacion to start the
eighth and a sacrifice fly to pinch-hitter Javier Valentin that
pulled the Reds within 3-2.

Gordon walked pinch-hitter Ken Griffey Jr., who was looking for
home run No. 600, then retired the next two batters to end the
inning.

"We didn't want (Griffey) to hit (a home run)," Phillies manager
Charlie Manuel said. "The excitement was there, the way (the
fans) were hollering. That's good for the game, but we
definitely don't want him to tie the game right there."

In the ninth, closer Brad Lidge walked two and gave up a single
around a doubleplay grounder before getting Encarnacion on a
flyout for his 15th save in as many chances.

Eaton retired the first six batters of the game before
Encarnacion led off the third inning with a line drive home run
into the left field seats to give the Reds a 1-0 lead.

Philadelphia responded in the bottom half on a two-out, RBI
single by Utley. Utley shattered his bat on the first pitch,
but managed to line it to center to plate Jimmy Rollins and tie
the game, 1-1.

The Phillies had a chance to score in the fifth inning when they
had a runner on third and two outs, but Ryan Freel made a diving
catch on Shane Victorino's low liner to end the frame. Freel
would leave the game in the sixth after straining his right
hamstring running out of the batter's box.

"(Freel) said he heard something pop," Reds manager Dusty Baker
said. "Usually, (that injury occurs when) you're running first
to third or something awkward (happens). It's real tough. That
was just bad luck right there."

Harang (2-8) went six-plus innings and allowed three runs on
nine hits.

"We're not scoring runs for (Harang)," Baker said. "He made one
mistake really to Pat (Burrell) and then he lost it."

 
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