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Hamels blanks Griffey, Reds as Phillies roll
PHILADELPHIA 5, CINCINNATI 0
 


By Vince DiGregorio
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

PHILADELPHIA (Ticker) -- Ken Griffey Jr. finally appeared in the
starting lineup for the Cincinnati Reds. But his presence
ultimately helped Cole Hamels and the Philadelphia Phillies.

Griffey had one of three costly errors that led to three
unearned runs while Hamels pitched a three-hitter Thursday
afternoon, leading the Phillies to a 5-0 victory over the Reds.

One homer shy of 600 for his career, Griffey was not in the
lineup for the first three games of this four-game series due to
"general soreness." He made a pinch-hit appearance in each of
the last two games, walking both times.

"(Griffey's still) struggling a little bit," Reds manager Dusty
Baker said. "He has a lot of miles on that body."

In this contest, Griffey went 1-for-4 and almost hit his 600th
career home run in his second and fourth at-bats. He settled
for a double when his deep drive to left-center took one hop off
the fence in the third and flied out to deep center in the
ninth.

"I tried to make good solid contact (against Hamels)," Griffey
said. "He's been tough on everybody since he came up. You just
try to get a pitch you can hit and hit it hard. I hit pretty
good, (but) I didn't hit them high enough."

Coming into the game, Griffey had only batted against Hamels
three times previously. He struck out twice and walked.

"Growing up, I was always a really big fan (of Griffey)," Hamels
said. "It was one of those things if I would have given up (his
600th home run), I just would have been on a really long list
with a lot of people.

"I'm glad he missed by inches instead of it going 500 feet over
the fence."

The Phillies were leading, 1-0, in the fifth when with one out,
Reds starter Homer Bailey (0-1) committed an error when he threw
wildly past first on an infield single by Pedro Feliz, who
advanced to second.

With runners on first and second and two outs, Eric Bruntlett
hit what appeared to be an inning-ending flyout to Griffey in
right field. But at the last instant, Griffey flinched and
dropped the ball, allowing Feliz to score and make it 2-0.

"I tried to move away, (but) I lost it in the lights," Griffey
said. "I tried to keep from getting hit in the lip."

Griffey appeared to lose the ball in the lights, which were on
due to cloudy conditions. Chase Utley followed with an RBI
single that made it 3-0. Geoff Jenkins added a solo home run
and Ryan Howard had an RBI single to complete the scoring.

The run support was more than enough for Hamels (6-4), who
recorded his second career shutout. The lefthander walked three
and struck out four, rebounding nicely from a two-start stretch
in which he allowed 13 runs.

"The past couple of starts, I really didn't feel like myself
just because of the amount of runs I was giving up," Hamels
said. "(I used) the past couple of days to gather myself. I'm
not a power power pitcher who throws 98 (miles per hour).

"You can't stay up in the zone with fastballs, and that's
something where I was getting in trouble with a lot. In this
game, I was trying to work down in the zone."

Bailey did his job in his season debut by holding the potent
Philadelphia offense in check. The righthander went 6 1/3
innings and was charged with five runs - two earned - and four
hits.

"It's tough losing games like that," Bailey said. "A couple of
tough plays for our defense didn't work out. Stuff like that
happens. I don't care if it's daylight or not, those lights are
pretty bright. I kept seeing green, little dots."

"It was a pretty good outing actually," Baker said. "(Bailey)
threw strikes. His pitch count was down. We gave
(Philadelphia) the first three runs."

Philadelphia scored its first run when Cincinnati rookie
shortstop Paul Janish dropped a popup by Jimmy Rollins with two
outs in the third.

Rollins, who only made it to first base on the error, was pulled
from the game an inning later by Phillies manager Charlie Manuel
for not hustling on the play.

"(Manuel) has two rules - be on time and hustle," Rollins said.
"I broke one today. It's my fault."

The Phillies took three out of four games from the Reds and
completed their 10-game homestand with an 8-2 mark. The last
time Philadelphia went 8-2 during a homestand was in August
1995.

"It's huge for us to establish what we want to do this summer,"
Hamels said.

 
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