Arizona
Defensive gaffe costs Diamondbacks in 10-inning loss to Phillies
PHOENIX — For the third time in four days, it was happening. Again.
The Arizona Diamondbacks were going to rally to a win. Christian Walker’s three-run dinger in the eighth inning on a fairly dull offensive night for the D-backs tied the game after Sunday’s four runs in the ninth to beat Detroit Tigers and eight unanswered runs on Monday to defeat the Philadelphia Phillies.
But instead, another pattern emerged. For the second straight night, the D-backs weren’t themselves defensively, and this time an uncharacteristic blunder cost them the game in a 4-3 10-inning loss to the Phillies on Wednesday.
“With how well we do the little things each night, this one jumps at you and surprises you,” D-backs manager Torey Lovullo said.
In the top of the 10th inning with one out and the Manfred Man on second for Philly, a short fly ball was hit to right field.
D-backs second baseman Geraldo Perdomo was tracking it the whole way, waiving everyone off and shouting over the last few seconds before it landed. Jake McCarthy, the right fielder, was calling for it audibly himself.
He and Perdomo collided, letting the ball drop on what was initially ruled as a double before getting corrected to an error on McCarthy.
What a costly mistake. The D-backs should have escaped the inning without a run scoring. pic.twitter.com/qMcp4Z9wYy
— PHNX Diamondbacks (@PHNX_Dbacks) June 15, 2023
The Manfred Man was waiting at second base to tag up, so no run came across until a sacrifice fly on the next at-bat.
McCarthy confirmed he did hear Perdomo but Perdomo didn’t hear him.
“I just gotta be louder. I take responsibility for it,” McCarthy said.
Lovullo clarified after the game that it’s typically the outfielder’s priority for that ball but also saw McCarthy get a late break, as opposed to Perdomo’s great line on it. He believes Perdomo saw McCarthy early but not late, even though McCarthy was still going to comfortably catch it, like Perdomo. Most will claim they know who to point the finger at but there’s a bit of gray area there.
Regardless, the manager pointed out that’s something the D-backs drill constantly in spring training and the “no man’s land” balls are standard procedure. It’s a play that has to be made and ended up as the difference on Wednesday. And with Arizona’s playoff positioning, if it misses out on a key spot by one game, this will be the one to think of.
“To get to where we want to go and play October baseball, I’ll tell you right now, every stadium that you play in is going to be louder than anything we’ve ever heard so far this year,” Lovullo said.
Arizona’s crack at it in the bottom of the 10th resulted in runners on first and second with one out. Pinch-hitter Gabriel Moreno struck out, leaving star outfielder Corbin Carroll with his latest chance to be a hero in his first at-bat of the game. Carroll initially got the day off before coming in as a defensive substitution in the ninth.
But Phillies left-hander Jose Alvarado, who is now up to just two earned runs in 17.1 innings, threw five straight 100-mph sinkers that eventually brought on the game-ending groundout.
This is one of those games that would have been nice for the D-backs to win because starting pitcher Merrill Kelly grinded through a night where he didn’t have his best while still managing to put Arizona in a winnable position.
The Phillies got a runner in scoring position with no outs for each of the first three innings. The damage was only two runs, thanks to Kelly holding Philly to 0-for-8 with runners in scoring position.
Kelly tossed 58 pitches to get through it and then retired nine straight batters till there was one out in the sixth inning. J.T. Realmuto ended that streak with a no-doubter solo shot to left off a hanging curveball. Kelly sent down the next two hitters, so he’d get six innings out of his start. It’s now the eighth start for Kelly in his last nine when he’s thrown at least six innings.
“I think in this league, anytime you can get a quality start, it’s a win. … Especially with how the game started today, it could have went a lot worse, could have went a lot further south a lot quicker,” Kelly said.
Philadelphia starter Ranger Suarez maintained good form he’s found in the last month while also giving Arizona opportunities.
Suarez missed the first month and change of the season, but in his his last three outings coming into Wednesday, Suarez allowed four earned runs over 19.2 innings.
The D-backs got a runner on in each of Suarez’s six innings. That included a botched double play to put runners on the corners in the third with one out and a one-out double by Evan Longoria in the fourth. Arizona just couldn’t string together a few productive at-bats with small ball to score anyone.
A leadoff double by McCarthy in the eighth inning was the D-backs’ best chance to put runs on the board since the third. The leadoff hitter Perdomo then walked to reach base for the third time on the evening, presenting the heart of the order a chance to right the wrongs of the night.
It initially looked like more of the same. Third baseman Emmanuel Rivera popped up and left fielder Lourdes Gurrierl Jr. flied out to center.
But then a wild pitch to Walker advanced both runners, and maybe that rattled Phillies reliever Seranthony Dominguez a bit to throw a strike, because in a 2-2 count he put a slider right down the middle that Walker crushed 15 rows up in left to tie the game.
In the ninth, Perdomo’s liner to the gap in left-center for a two-out double gave Rivera a chance to end it, but he struck out swinging to send us to extras.
Kelly walked three of his first seven batters and four overall, a flareup of an issue from the start of 2023. In his first five outings, Kelly walked 17 batters. In the next eight appearances, he gave up 13 base on balls.
Suarez’s line ended up at zero runs on four hits and two walks.
Perdomo in 500 plate appearances last year had 84 hits and 22 walks. In 185 PAs this year, he’s up to 46 hits and 23 walks. With the lack of pop in shortstop bats, he’s got a shot at an All-Star nod.
Catcher Carson Kelly’s debut series has gotten off to a rough start. After the Phillies stole five bases off of Kelly in the first two games of the series (and his first two games of the season), they racked up another pair on Wednesday. Kelly at the plate has started 0-for-11 with four strikeouts.
As far as Kelly starting three games in a row, Lovullo said Moreno has had some “aches and pains” and some fatigue to deal with, so the manager wanted to give the young catcher a decent-sized break while letting Kelly find his flow right away.
KEY ABSENCES
Second baseman Ketel Marte did not start due to some lower back tightness, per azcentral’s Nick Piecoro. He was available off the bench and pinch hit for Pavin Smith in the eighth inning. Carroll got the day off until he replaced Smith in the outfield. With a left-handed reliever in at that moment, Lovullo elected to put up the switch-hitting Marte at the plate for Smith over Carroll.
Arizona
Newest Arizona members of Congress sworn in during opening day in DC
Gary Farmer is an actor, musician, and activist whose made a career in indigenous media. His performances in television and film have received rave reviews. The1989 film “Powwow Highway”, in which he stars, was just inducted into the Library of Congress National Film Registry.
Arizona
Yassamin Ansari, Abe Hamadeh set to become Arizona’s newest members of Congress
Arizona District 3 Congresswoman elect Yassamin Ansari talks victory
Congresswoman elect Yassamin Ansari gives victory speech on Nov. 5, 2024, after being elected to represent Arizona’s 3rd district in Congress.
Arizona’s two newest U.S. House members are set to get sworn into their posts as the 119th Congress gets underway.
Republican Abe Hamadeh, a lawyer, and Democrat Yassamin Ansari, a former Phoenix vice mayor, are expected to take their oaths of office on Friday, shortly after the House resumes session.
Hamadeh will replace Rep. Debbie Lesko, R-Ariz., who is retiring from Congress to serve on the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors.
He will represent Arizona’s 8th Congressional District, an overwhelmingly Republican area that covers parts of Maricopa and Yavapai counties, including Glendale, Peoria, Sun City West and New River.
Propelled by an endorsement from President-elect Donald Trump, Hamadeh defeated a crowded field of other Republicans in Arizona’s July 30 primary election and sailed to an easy victory in the Nov. 5 general election.
Hamadeh, a self-described “America First warrior,” largely echoed Trump’s positions on the campaign trail. He will serve on the House Veterans Affairs Committee and the Armed Services Committee.
Ansari will represent Arizona’s 3rd Congressional District, a stretch of Maricopa County that includes parts of Phoenix and Glendale. She is replacing Democrat Ruben Gallego, who has swapped his House seat for a U.S. Senate seat. Her House committee assignments have not been announced.
During the primary election, Ansari hewed closer to the political center than her opponent, former state Sen. Raquel Terán of Phoenix. Ansari ran on a progressive platform but staked out more centrist turf on issues like policing and U.S. foreign policy toward Israel.
She beat out Terán by just 39 votes, and, like Hamadeh, won her November election in a landslide.
Ansari plans to join the House’s Progressive Caucus, the Democrats’ most left-leaning faction on Capitol Hill.
Arizona
3 arrested in connection with good Samaritan's killing in Arizona
Three people were arrested this week in connection with the death of a good Samaritan in Arizona last month, officials said.
The Pima County Sheriff’s Department identified two of the three people arrested Monday as Jack Upchurch, 40, and Elmer Smith, 19. The third person is 16 years old. NBC News does not typically identify minors accused of crimes.
The trio were arrested in connection with the death of Paul Clifford, 53, whose body was found near a smoldering car northeast of Tucson last month.
Sabrina Vining, a woman who identified herself as Clifford’s daughter in an online fundraiser, said her father disappeared after he left his house at 11:30 p.m. Dec. 23 to help a “stranger with a stranded vehicle.”
NBC affiliate KVOA of Tucson reported that Clifford’s family reported him missing after, they said, a strange man knocked on Clifford’s door and asked for help with his car.
He was later found dead, the sheriff’s department said. It did not provide a cause or manner of death.
Officials said they received information Monday about a possible location for the three suspects.
Detectives searched the area and obtained a search warrant for a property, which the Pima Regional SWAT team carried out.
The suspects barricaded themselves inside a home and eventually called 911 to negotiate a surrender, the sheriff’s department said. They left the residence and were taken into custody.
The sheriff’s department did not release any information about a motive or how it connected the suspects to Clifford’s killing.
The three suspects were booked into the Pima County Adult Detention Center on felony arrest warrants, officials said.
It was not immediately clear whether they have legal representation. Jail records do not list attorneys for any of the three.
Upchurch was being held on a $1 million bond, Smith on $1.025 million bail and the minor on a half-million-dollar bond, according to jail records.
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